Timothy Keller Sermons Podcast by Gospel in Life

How To Find the Way

24 min
May 18, 202613 days ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Tim Keller examines Jesus's teaching on the narrow and broad ways, arguing that the Gospel's exclusivity is actually the most inclusive truth available. He contrasts two fundamentally different approaches to spirituality: one based on grace through Christ, and one based on self-righteousness and works, showing how the seemingly restrictive Gospel path leads to true freedom while the broad path of self-justification leads to spiritual bondage.

Insights
  • The Gospel's exclusivity (narrow gate) paradoxically offers greater freedom and spaciousness than pluralistic approaches because it removes the burden of self-justification and earning God's favor
  • Both the broad way and narrow way may involve identical external behaviors (charity, prayer, obedience), but the fundamental difference lies in motivation: self-advancement versus love of God
  • Pride and spiritual superiority are more dangerous when unrecognized; a person aware of their narrowness is less constrained by it than someone claiming to be open-minded while holding rigid doctrines
  • Christians can lose their spiritual spaciousness not through sin but through forgetting the Gospel and attempting to re-earn God's favor, creating anxiety and judgment of others
  • The judgment day distinction is not about a numerical cutoff of good works but about relational choice: whether one lives for self-advancement or for love of God
Trends
Growing cultural discomfort with exclusive truth claims in spirituality, preferring pluralistic 'spiritual searching' over definitive faith commitmentsConflation of doctrinal neutrality with open-mindedness, masking underlying rigid belief systems about salvation through worksPsychological impact of self-justification frameworks: increased anxiety, judgment of others, and loss of freedom in high-stakes life situationsDistinction between acknowledged limitations (which reduce their constraining power) and unacknowledged ones (which operate invisibly)Relationship-based versus performance-based spiritual frameworks as fundamental dividing line in religious worldviews
Companies
Gospel in Life
Podcast network distributing Tim Keller sermons and theological teaching content to audiences
Redeemer Presbyterian Church
Church where Dr. Tim Keller served as Senior Pastor when this sermon was recorded in 1998
People
Timothy Keller
Primary speaker delivering theological sermon on Gospel exclusivity and the narrow/broad ways
Jesus Christ
Central subject of sermon; teachings on narrow gate and broad way are analyzed and expounded
C.S. Lewis
Referenced for Narnia tale illustrating the paradox of interior spaciousness within apparent exterior narrowness
Elizabeth Elliot
Cited for fictional parable about carrying stones to illustrate judgment day and motivation for spiritual practice
Paul
Referenced for Galatians teaching contrasting grace-based salvation with works-based approaches
Quotes
"It's okay to say I'm searching for God, but to say I found God is not. Why not? Because it's narrow."
Timothy KellerEarly in sermon
"The broad way is the way to narrowness, and the narrow way is the way to spaciousness."
Timothy KellerMid-sermon
"The gospel on the outside looks incredibly small and cramped, and when you get inside, it's unbelievably spacious."
Timothy KellerMid-sermon
"A proud person who knows he or she is proud is not all that proud, but a proud person who doesn't know he or she is proud is incredibly proud."
Timothy KellerMid-sermon
"Who were you carrying the stones for? That's the question on Judgment Day."
Timothy KellerLate in sermon
Full Transcript
Welcome to Gospel and Life. Why does the truth of the Gospel make some people uneasy? Most are comfortable talking about spiritual searching, but when Jesus claims that He is the only path to salvation, many people view that as oppressive. Today, Tim Keller shows us how the Gospel is not arrogant, but instead is humble, gracious, and available to anyone. It is an exclusive truth, but it is the most inclusive exclusive truth in the world. Ask and it will be given to you. Seek and you will find. Knock and the door will be open to you. For everyone who asks receives. He who seeks finds and to him who knocks the door will be open. Which of you, if his son asks for bread, will give him a stone, or if he asks for a fish, will give him a snake? If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give good gifts to those who ask him? So in everything, due to others, what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the law and the prophets. Enter through the narrow gate, for wide is the gate, and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it, but small is the gate, and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it. This is God's word. We're going to do a brief series by Jesus, of sayings by Jesus on finding. And you see, though it's actually acceptable nowadays to say I'm spiritually searching, it's not acceptable to say I found. It's okay to say I'm searching for God, but to say I found God is not. Why not? Because it's narrow. We see, we want to search, but we're afraid to say we found it because it's narrow. Now in this text, Jesus frontally confronts the issue of spiritual finding and the implication of narrowness. And what he does is he says all spiritual approaches basically break into two categories, two ways, two paths, two roads that can be translated in any one of those ways, two ways or paths or roads. And what he does here, what we're going to do is very briefly look at what he says, where they lead, the two paths, where they lead, then secondly, what they are, then thirdly, why they lead there, and lastly, how you can be on the true way, how you can find the true path. Okay, where they lead, what they are, why they lead where they do, and how to be on the true path. Okay, first, first of all, where they lead. Now Jesus uses the most shocking language. First of all, the word narrow, not just in today, but even in the Bible, the word narrow has very negative associations and references. And the word broad has very, very positive associations and references. The word narrow literally means to be squashed or crushed. If I step on a bug, what does it die of? Narrowness. Because the bug needs, your physical being needs a certain amount of spaciousness, so you can't breathe, you can't work, you can't live. Remember the little girl that fell into the pipe in Texas, Jessica, something? And it was a little pipe like, was it 10 inches wide or something like that? She was stuck way down underneath the surface, you see? And of course, just the very thought of it just gives you the screaming meemies to think about being like that because you see, and if they hadn't rescued her, she would have died, she would have died of narrowness. Whereas the word broad means spaciousness, and in the Bible it has the ramifications of freedom, like the psalmist and the psalms. The psalms is always saying, you have led me into a broad place, or the psalmist says, I walk at large, and so forth. And it's shocking that Jesus would use such a negative word for the right way and such a positive word for the wrong way, but beyond that he goes even further. Jesus doesn't only say that, but he says the broad way leads to what? Destruction. The narrow way leads to what? Life. And that means Jesus is saying, the broad way is the way to narrowness, and the narrow way is the way to spaciousness. What he's actually saying is, is the thing that looks superficially very spacious leads into suffocating deadly narrowness, and the thing that superficially looks incredibly narrow is the thing that leads to eventually incredible vastness in breadth and freedom. There's one of the Narnia tales, which is the C.S. Lewis' series for children. At one point, a man gets into a stable, it's a little stable, and when he looks into the stable, he goes inside, he looks up and he sees this incredible high blue sky, and he sees forests and lakes and everything, and he says, in the text, he says, it seems the stable as seen from the outside, and the stable as seen from the inside are two different places. And a person next to him says, yes, its inside is bigger than its outside, and that's what Jesus is saying here. Jesus is saying that the gospel on the outside looks incredibly small and cramped, and when you get inside, it's unbelievably spacious, and the alternatives to the gospel look incredibly broad and spacious and free and tolerant, but on the inside, they're incredibly cramped and narrow. In fact, they lead into a hole. They lead to suffocation. They lead to death through narrowness. Now, that's where they lead. But what are they? Now, most people, when you read about the broad way and the narrow way, you say, well, what are those two ways? That's where they lead, but what are they? What does it mean to be on the broad way? What does it mean to be on the narrow way? And it's normal for people to say, because it is possible, and sometimes the translations talk about the broad and easy way, and the narrow and hard way. Some translations talk about the easy way. Wide is the gate, and easy is the way that lead it to destruction, I think, the King James says. And so people say, oh, I know what that means. And the narrow way is the way of the people that take the hard, disciplined approach. You see, self-denial. They're the good people. They're the people who care for the poor. They're the people who obey the Ten Commandments. They're the people who pray all the time and go to church. They're the people who follow the golden rule. But the broad way, that's for people who want the easy life. They don't want to do that. They don't want to care for the poor. They don't want to pray and go to worship. They don't want to live by the Ten Commandments. They don't want to live lived by the golden rule, that's the easy way. But is that what's going on here? Not a bit. I'll tell you one thing. Everybody, I mean, listen, first of all, the idea, look at verse 12. Verse 12 is sort of the end of the Sermon on the Mount before the final summary and conclusion that begins with the narrow and broad way. And that summarizes everything in the Sermon on the Mount, the golden rule. Love as you want to be loved. Is it really fair to say, is it possible that the broad way are people who don't go by the golden rule? Dear friends, everybody thinks they're going by the golden rule, and most people are trying, and there are some bad people, there are some really bad. There are people who get up in the morning and say, I want to trample on somebody. I want to break the golden rule everywhere I can, but there's not many of them. You could never fill up a broad way with them. And if you want to understand what the broad narrow way is, you have to do a little bit of, you need to do some interpretation, and you have to understand the context. This comes at the end of the Sermon on the Mount. And at the end of the Sermon on the Mount, verse 13 to the end, suddenly Jesus concludes the Sermon on the Mount by saying, there are two ways, one narrow, one broad. Then he goes on, I don't have it printed here, he says there's two trees, one rotten, one good. And then he says, there are two houses, one built on the rock, one built on the sand. Now if Jesus Christ is summarizing and concluding his Sermon by saying there are two ways, that can't mean that he was just introducing the idea. It means that those two ways must have been contrasted to the Sermon. In other words, I don't preach a Sermon, you know, I don't say, you know, fathers love your children. And I don't preach a whole Sermon, fathers love your children. And then in the end I say, and in conclusion, you better keep your car fixed, because it could break down when you're out in the middle of nowhere. I wouldn't do that, because I don't, you don't, in a conclusion, you don't start a new subject, unless you're an idiot. And therefore, assuming Jesus is not an idiot, or Matthew his editor is not an idiot, then we have to say, if Jesus at the very end says, now in conclusion, there are two ways. Now that must mean all through the Sermon there are two ways. And if you go back in there, you'll suddenly realize something. The Sermon does contrast two ways all the way through when you start to understand it like that. When you go back and look, it's there. It's so clear, but it is not bad people versus good people. If you go through, you'll see it right in the beginning in chapter five, it says, I want to show you a different kind of righteousness than that of the scribes and the Pharisees and the teachers of the law. And then he goes on and he says, you've heard it said, don't murder, but I say don't even have it in your heart, hatred. So all the way through, he's saying, I want to show you two kinds of ways. Then he gets to chapter six and he says, some people care for the poor and they pray all the time, but they do it so people will honor them and so they will be heard for their many words. And then at the very end, chapter seven, he begins to say, one group of people are judgmental, but I don't want you to be. You're not. This group of people, they try to take a speck out of other people's eyes, but they don't see the plank in their own eyes. And this is what Jesus is saying. Jesus is not contrasting bad people with good people. Both of these groups take care of the poor. Both of these groups pray all the time. Both of these groups obey the Ten Commandments and both these groups obey the Golden Rule, but they do it for utterly different reasons. Now this is frightening, isn't it? The people on the broad way are doing all the same things, but for a completely different reason. What are they doing? They are doing it to get leverage over other people so they feel superior and to get leverage over God so that he owes them so that they'll be heard for their many words. In other words, there's two ways. In one way, you're using God to get things and the other way, you're using things to love God. In the one way, you're trying to save yourself. Everything you're doing, you're doing in order to say, see, now God will have to hear me, now God will have to bless me. But in the other way, what do you have? Well, if you look at verse 14, you'll see it's very interesting. Jesus does not say, hard is the way and narrow is the gate into life. Oh, no. He says, narrow is the gate and then comes the way. And now we have Galatians all over again. Those of you who were here last year, in the book of Galatians, Paul says, other religions say, try hard and you'll be saved. But Christianity says, be saved and then out of that, live a good life. In other words, other religions say, first the road, then the gate. Other religions say, the way is hard, but you can take the gate and you can get into salvation. You have to be fast, you have to be hard, you have to fight your way in. But Christianity says, no, you enter the gate now. Why? Because there was one who fought our fight. There's one who won the gate. There's one who died outside the gate so we could come in. There's one who's done all the fighting for us. Jonah is one of the most widely known stories in the Bible. But it's so much more than a simple account of a prophet who runs from God and gets swallowed by a great fish. In his book, Rediscovering Jonah, Tim Keller uncovers the deeper message of this familiar story, revealing how Jonah's resistance to God exposes our own reluctance to trust and obey him and how Jonah's experience ultimately points us to Jesus in his saving work on the cross. During the month of May, we'll send you a copy of Rediscovering Jonah as our thanks for your gift to help Gospel and Life share the transforming love of Christ with more people. So request your copy today at gospelandlife.com slash give. That's gospelandlife.com slash give. Now, here's Dr. Keller with the rest of today's teaching. And you see, the Broadway and the narrow way are two very different kinds of people. One are very judgmental. The Broadway, the Broadway are the judgmental people. The Broadway are the people who always think that their sins are not as bad as the other person's sin. The Broadway are the people who feel superior to the people who oppose them. That's the reason why liberals and conservatives are on the Broadway, because the liberals say the real problem are the conservatives and the conservatives say the real problems are the liberals, but the people on the narrow way say the real problem is me. I'm a sinner. Now, do you see why one leads now? So first of all, we've seen where the two ways lead, and secondly, we've seen what the two ways are. There are two kinds of good people. On the surface, they look completely the same, but under, well, not completely, because there's a pride, there's an anger, there's a grumpiness, there's a superiority, there's a feeling like people owe me, God owes me. But on the surface, they seem to have the same behavior, but underneath the goodness is for two different reasons. Now, thirdly, can I show you why this narrowness, this gospel narrowness actually leads to spaciousness, and why this spaciousness seems to lead to narrowness? First of all, here's how the narrowness leads to spaciousness. If you believe that the only way I can be saved is through Jesus, that's narrow, right? But it's the only way to believe in grace. If you believe you're saved by grace, you have to be somebody else. Thought and won the gate for me, that's why I can just enter. Jesus doesn't say, heart is the way, but you can enter the gate. He says, you enter the gate first, and then you live your life. Whereas, broad-minded people say, oh, I'm broad-minded, I would never believe you have to believe in Jesus. All good people can go. All good people can find God. And that is very broad sounding. But what it means is, you're saved by your works. Whenever somebody says, you know, I hate this, when I hear people say, doctrine doesn't matter, I don't believe in doctrine. All I believe is, good people can find God. It doesn't matter what you believe, doctrine doesn't matter. What matters is that you live a good life, but that's the doctrine of justification by works. When you say doctrine doesn't matter, that's a doctrine. When you say I'm broad-minded, that's a certain kind of narrowness. But it's a different kind of narrowness. Christians know that there's a narrowness about the gospel. We know it. We struggle with it. We hate it. We get upset about it. But you see, the opposite side is also narrow, but they don't know they're narrow. And listen, a proud person who knows he or she is proud is not all that proud, but a proud person who doesn't know he or she is proud is incredibly proud. A narrow person who struggles with narrowness can't be that narrow, but a person who says, I'm very open-minded. I would never believe in doctrine, which is a doctrine. That's the narrowness that dare not speak its name. In other words, it doesn't know it's narrow. Let me go a little further. Not too much further, because we have to kind of pull this together here quickly tonight. When you believe you're winning the gate by your life, when you're out there, you know, here's two people, a Christian, a person on the narrow way and a person on the broadway, and they're both out there, and they're both trying to be good, and they're trying to live their life, and they're trying to do the right thing. But if you're on the broadway, every event, every incident in your life, every incident in your day is fighting for your very life. If somebody robs you of your reputation, that's the only reputation you've got. You're not sure that God loves you. You're not sure he's your father. You're not sure that he loves and accepts you. You can't if you believe you're winning the gate with your good deeds. And here's what that means. You know, Jesus continually, inside the sermon, says, when he's contrasting the two ways, and he talks about the people who are winning the gate by their good deeds, he says they already have their reward. Over and over, he says, they have the reward. You know what that means? Your spaciousness, your broadness, that says, I don't believe you have to believe just in Jesus. I don't know that I believe in all that. I just believe you try to live the best you can. If somebody comes along and takes away your reputation, or if somebody who says they're going to marry you jilts you, or if somebody hurts your career, that is the only worth you've got. That is the only honor you've got. That is the only love you've got. God is remote. You don't have anything else. And you're going to hate that person. You have to hate that person. You're going to hate yourself, and you have to hate yourself. Why? It's narrowness. The broadness is the narrowness. See? You're chained. You can't stop it. But when a Christian who's been willing to be narrow enough to say, I'm saved by grace, someone else has won the gate for me. When someone comes along and takes something from you, but you know he loves you in heaven, you know what he means, what you mean to him, you know what he's done for you, you know what you look like to him, you know what's in store for you, then it's like somebody can only, with a Christian, can sort of pick their pocket of 25 cents. When all of your wealth, a billion dollars, is in a trust fund somewhere. You see, the narrowness leads to spaciousness, and the spaciousness leads to narrowness. Now lastly, how can you make sure you're on the right way? Well, I have something to say to both non-Christians and Christians here, all right? If you say, I'm not a Christian, okay? In other words, people who say, I'm not a Christian, I know that. Here's what I would say to you. What Jesus is trying to say here is, you need to make a decision. If salvation was by works, it would be absolutely wrong to make a cut-off. You know, one of my children recently, if he had gotten a certain grade point, if he'd gotten a something point O, he could have had a free period or some kind of honor or something like that. But he got a something point, you know, nine, six, eight. He was just like that far away, but he was just as out of that privilege as somebody who was getting Cs and Ds and Ss. That's unfair. Well, you know, you have to have a cut-off somewhere. But when it comes to hell and heaven and stuff like that, judgment day is impossible. The whole idea of judgment day is horrible if it's really true that we're saved by our works and God has put a cut-off someplace. Where would it be? Who the poor slob that would, you know, the cut-off is 3.0 and the poor slob gets a 2.9998. He goes to hell. But if salvation is a matter of relationship, if salvation is who you're living for, who you're doing this for, whether I'm doing this for myself to get God to do good things for me or whether I'm just simply doing this to love God because I know he saved me, who are you doing it for? Then that is an absolute difference. And on judgment day, you're going to be judged as to whether you've made that choice or not. You know, Elizabeth Elliott tells the story this way. It's a fictional story. It's not a true story. It's a legend. I promise it's not in the Bible. Don't go looking for it, but it's interesting. Jesus Christ comes along and says to his disciples, carry a stone for me. Remember this story? And Peter looks around. He takes the smallest stone he can. And they walk along and at lunchtime Jesus says, OK, get out your stones and he waves his hand and they all turn into bread. He says, now let's eat. And Peter's looking at his little munchkin or derv, you know, sort of like when he eats and he's very hungry and then afterwards Jesus says, now, carry a stone for me. And Peter says, I've figured it out. So what he does is he finds his boulder. He puts it on his shoulder and they're going along and he's crushed, but he can't wait for supper. And when they get to supper time, they walk to the river side and Jesus says, now everybody throw your stone in and they all throw their stones in. And then he says, now follow me and they all look at him. And Jesus looks and says, who were you carrying the stones for? You see, that's the question on Judgment Day. If you say, I am a Christian, let me just remind you of this. You can lose your spaciousness. You see, only Christians have the spaciousness of not feeling superior to the people who they're opposed to. There's a spaciousness about Christians. They don't look down, they're not condemning, they're not judgmental. Jesus says, you're not a judgmental person if you're in my way. Isn't that weird? The mark of the broad way is you feel superior and judgmental to other people on the other side and the mark of the narrow way is that you're not judgmental at all. That's what the Sermon on the Mount says. And there's a spaciousness of freedom. It doesn't matter what people do to you because you're not chained to that. My life is hid with God and Christ, but you can lose your spaciousness not so much through sin, but forgetting the gospel. If I wake up on Sunday morning and I look at my sermon and I say, I don't think this is very good. Nobody's going to like it. I'm losing my spaciousness. I'm losing my freedom. Why? Not through sin so much is because I'm forgetting to rejoice in Jesus. You see, and everybody in this room has got something like that. You're losing your spaciousness. Broad is the way that leadeth to deadly narrowness. Narrow is the way that leadeth to glorious spaciousness. And few there be that find it. Pray with me. We now ask that you would help us to see these great truths. And we ask that you would help us as we come to your table and we see the broken body and we see the poured out cup. We see that Jesus Christ won the gate for us. He was crushed. He experienced narrowness. He was squashed so that we could have spaciousness. He died at the gate so we could enter. Help us to rejoice in what he did so we can regain our spaciousness. Help us to rejoice in what he did so that we can enter. In Jesus' name we pray. Amen. Thanks for listening to today's teaching. It's our prayer that you were encouraged by it. And that it helps you apply the gospel to your life and share it with others. For more helpful resources from Tim Keller visit gospelandlife.com. There you can subscribe to the Life in the Gospel Quarterly Journal. When you do, you will also receive free articles, sermons, devotionals, and other great gospel-centered resources. Again, it's all at gospelandlife.com. You can also stay connected with us on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and X. Today's sermon was recorded in 1998. The sermons and talks you hear on the Gospel and Life Podcast were recorded between 1989 and 2017 while Dr. Keller was Senior Pastor at Redeemer Presbyterian Church.