Sunday, 26 October 2025
and cast them into the furnace of fire. There will be wailing and gnashing of teeth.” Matthew 13:50
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“And they will cast them into the furnace of the fire. There, it will be the lamentation and the gnash of the teeth” (CG).
In the previous verse, Jesus, still explaining the parable of the seine, noted that at the end of the age messengers would come forth and separate the evil from the righteous. He now completes the parable, beginning with, “And they will cast them into the furnace of the fire.”
It was noted in the parable of the darnel that it could not be referring to the church age. This parable is the same. There is nothing recorded in Scripture that says there will be a separation of the good and the bad at the end of the church age as described in this parable.
Rather, there will be a separation of the saints from the unbelieving world. They will be taken in the twinkling of an eye. After that, the tribulation will come upon the world. It is only after the tribulation that those who survive that ordeal will be separated.
This will be done to ensure the millennium begins on a better note, being populated with those who are acceptable. Once the bad have been separated out and chucked into the fiery furnace, Jesus finishes with, “There, it will be the lamentation and the gnash of the teeth.”
As before, the words speak of great sadness and agony. Pursuit of the temporary pleasures of this life while neglecting the things of God will be rewarded with what the people deserve. There is nothing arbitrary, unfair, or capricious about this. Man will receive his just due for the things done while in the body.
God has offered a better hope to the people of the world in the giving of His Son. What we do with Jesus will be an eternity-defining decision.
Life application: By placing the conclusion of the parable of the darnel next to the conclusion of this parable, one can see how the two parallel –
“Therefore, just as it is gathered, the darnel, and fire – it consumed, thus it will be in the age’s consummation. 41 The Son of Man, He will send His messengers and they will gather from His kingdom all the snares and those doing lawlessness. 42 And they will cast them into the furnace of the fire. There it will be the lamentation and the gnash of the teeth.”
“…they gathered the good into vessels, and the bad they cast out. 49 Thus it will be in the age’s consummation. The messengers, they will go out and they will separate the evil from the righteous’ midst. 50 And they will cast them into the furnace of the fire. There it will be the lamentation and the gnash of the teeth.”
The parables repeat the same essential information. One may ask, “Why would the Lord bother doing this? Wasn’t one parable sufficient?” The reason is because He is making a point that we should accept as certain and sure to come to pass.
There isn’t one gospel book, but four. And three of them more closely parallel in their presentation while providing new or different aspects of the information presented in the others. This is true with the Old Testament books of Kings and Chronicles to some extent.
In the case of these two parables, Jesus ensures us that what He says about the end times is not to be taken only as a spiritual teaching, but one that is just how things will be at the end of the age. The separation of the wheat from the darnel and the good fish from the bad does not only apply to Jews who enter the tribulation, but the whole world.
For Israel as a nation, though, the point of the tribulation is to bring them as a nation to realize that they missed the coming of their Messiah the first time. It is to bring restoration to the nation in order to fulfill the promises made to them in the Old Testament.
But the whole world of people, Jew and Gentile, must be separated. Those who are deemed worthy will enter the millennium. Those who are not will be cast into the furnace of fire. This is just how it is going to be. The repetition of the same general information in these parables ensures us that it is so.
Lord God, may we carefully evaluate Your word, holding fast to its truths and thoughtfully consider when You are giving us literal information that is to be accepted as such. May we not spiritualize those things that are intended to be taken literally. Help us to more rightly understand and process this wonderful word so that our thinking is mature and proper. Amen.

