Monday April 10, 2017
NO TURNING BACK
– by Andreas
Köstenberger & Justin Taylor
"“I will surely consume them,” says the
LORD.
“No grapes shall be on
the vine,
Nor figs on the fig tree,
And the leaf shall fade;
And the
things I have given them shall pass away from them.” ’
(Jeremiah 8:13)
"Even them I will bring to My holy
mountain,
And make them joyful in My house of prayer.
Their
burnt offerings and their sacrifices
Will be accepted on My altar;
For My house shall be called a house of prayer
for all nations.”"
(Isaiah 56:7)
The sun
rises just before 6:30 a.m. in Bethany, the small village on the southeastern
slope of the Mount of Olives, just a mile and a half east of Jerusalem. It is Monday
morning, March 30, a.d. 33. Jesus of Nazareth is staying in the humble home of
his friends Martha (whose anxiety-driven hospitality had received his gentle
rebuke), Mary (who chose the good portion), and Lazarus (whose body would still
be in the grave apart from the wonder-working of the Christ). Just the day
before—the first day of the last week of his life—Jesus had made his Triumphal
Entry into the Holy City, riding on a donkey over a royal “red carpet” of palm
branches and cloaks, hailed by his disciples and the Galilean pilgrims as the
messianic king. But Monday would be different than Sunday. Jesus knew the heart
of man (John 2:24–25). He knew the acclaim of the disciples and the crowd was
built on a messiah of their own imagination. Despite his many efforts at teaching
them otherwise, they couldn’t shake their wrong expectations. They were excited
about a national savior who would overthrow the despised Romans once and for
all. They had no categories for the idea that victory would come through
experiencing, rather than inflicting, wrath and degrading shame.
Judgment Begins at Home
As Jesus and
the Twelve awoke the next day, gathering at their appointed meeting place in
Bethany to make their short trek back to Jerusalem, Jesus’s agenda was the same
as it remains today: to strip away misunderstandings of who he was and what he
was going to accomplish so that our expectations could be confounded. This was
not going to be a meek and mild Monday. Jesus was about to show them that
judgment begins at home, with Israel. As they walked together over the rocky
terrain of the Mount of Olives, and as the hunger in Jesus’s stomach grew, he
spotted a fig tree off in the distance. From external appearances, it looked
healthy, the perfect place to grab some fruit and to meet his need. But on
closer inspection, the tree was barren of fruit, with nothing on it but
inedible leaves. The disciples could not have expected what Jesus did next. He
called down a curse on the fig tree, declaring that it would never bear fruit
again (Matt. 21:18–19; Mark 11:12– 14). Jesus would expound on this visual
parable tomorrow. But if the disciples were viewing the tree through spiritual
eyes, they would remember that in the Old Testament, Israel was often referred
to as a “fig tree” (Jer. 8:13; Hos. 9:10, 16; Joel 1:7). Judgment must begin at
home.
Cleansing the Temple
They
continued walking, the disciples undoubtedly unnerved by this unexpected
behavior. But Jesus was just beginning. When Jesus entered the Temple Mount
later that day, he was surrounded by pious Jews who had made the pilgrimage to
Jerusalem for Passover. Not only would they have to pay the Temple tax (a
Tyrian shekel), but they would also have to purchase an unblemished sacrificial
animal in the Court of the Gentiles. As Jesus looked at the moneychangers and
merchants, a holy zeal and righteous indignation welled up within him. They
were turning his Father’s house of prayer for the nations (Isa. 56:7) into a
den of thieves to prey upon the poor Passover pilgrims and to pervert true
worship (Jer. 7:11). Jesus began overturning the tables and chairs of the
moneychangers, throwing out the merchants and their scurrying customers,
refusing entrance to any who carried goods for sale.
Face Like Flint
From the
perspective of the chief priests, scribes, and Jewish leaders, it was one thing
for this teacher from the backwaters of Nazareth to share his stories and make
his claims and do his miracles with his followers. But now he was inside the
Holy City. He had entered the gates like he was the new David or the new
Solomon. And now he has the audacity to declare that the Temple in essence
belongs to him and his Father? Who is he to suggest that the Jewish system was
enabling sin rather than worship? And how dare he argue that the Jewish
authorities were ignorant of true godliness and piety?
From this
point forward, there would be no turning back. Jesus is not shrinking back. In
fact, he is accelerating the sentence of death. Evening approaches. The sun
will set around 7:00 P.M., beginning the new day according to the Jewish
calendar. Jesus and his disciples make their return to Bethany. Tomorrow will
be a new day to confound, to turn things upside down, as Jesus continues to
fulfill the eternal plan that will take him to Calvary.
Bible
Reading Plan: (52 weeks; 5
days a week)
Week 15
– Judges 9-11; Psalm 17; Luke 23
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