161. By What Authority? Matt. 21:23-32; Mark 11 :27-33; Luke 20:1-8.

Next morning—Wednesday—Jesus was back in the temple again. Mark says he was walking in the temple; Luke describes him “teaching the people and preaching the gospel.” How can we reconcile these details.? Was he taking a “breather” between teaching spells? or teaching a small handful as they walked?— when an official deputation from the Sanhedrin came aggressively upon him (s.w. Acts 4:1; 6:12; 17:5; 22:20): “chief priests and scribes with elders.” The two parties—Sadducees and Pharisees—were now once again glad to make a concerted attack on Jesus.

These rulers were still fuming about the highhanded action of yesterday. Surely on the strength of it they could throw Jesus into prison. But the Galileans now in the city were so much on his side that action against him would mean riot unless Jesus were first shown openly to be lawless and deserving of punishment. Overnight they had gone into committee about it (Lk.19 :47), and this was the course they had decided on.

Aggressive question

So, in the presence of the people, they formally and repeatedly demanded an explanation: ‘Where is your authority for behaving like this?’ Did he have either civil or ecclesiastical sanction for his high-handed actions? How could he behave thus in the temple of God without explicit warrant from God. Then, by what right?

These evil men sought to catch Jesus on the horns of a dilemma. If he asserted a royal right for his actions they could immediately hand him over to Pilate. If he disclaimed royal privilege, he would find himself discredited among his nationalistic followers.

Immediately Jesus saw what they were at. The charges which were actually to be made at his trial were already crystallizing out-blasphemy, for assuming divine right; and insurrection, for taking the law into his own hands.

Aggressive answer

His answer was another question—not at all an evasion, although at first it smacks of that: “I will ask you one question, and answer me, and I will tell you by what authority I do these things. The baptism of John, was it from heaven, or of men? answer me.” This question told them immediately that he saw through their tactics; in itself it would suffice to discomfit them. Yet by and by Jesus was confounding them with another (Mt.22 :41-45). His urgent challenge: “Answer me!” presents a Jesus who knew he had no need to be defensive. So, here was no red herring, but a counter-question strictly relevant to their enquiry.

Whenever some new prophet or teacher arose among the people, it was the solemn duty of the religious leaders to investigate his claims and message, and then to make a pronouncement pro or con for the benefit of the nation. Two tests were to be applied. First, if he claims to be a prophet do his prognostications come true (Dt.18 :10-22)? In the Old Testament nearly all the prophets begin with a short-term prophecy the truth of which would be verified by events within a year or two; e.g. Am. l:1,2; Is. 2 :10-22; Jer. 1 :1-14; Ez. 4; Mic. 1:1-4; Mal. l :l-5; 1 Kgs.13 :3. Second, does he teach sound wholesome doctrine (Dt.13 :1-5)?

Actually, the rulers had made careful investigation of John’s qualification as a prophet (Jn. 1:19-28), but had not dared to accredit him as a man of God. His brusque censure of themselves had left them no option. Yet his prophecy of the coming of One greater than himself had been proved true. But how could the rulers agree that it was true without conceding also the divine authority of Jesus? (Lk.3 :4,16,17). And John’s call to repentance and baptism – a baptism, which pointed forward to “the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world”—was the very essence of God’s Truth but repugnant to these proud men. They had “rejected the counsel of John against themselves, being not baptized of him” (Lk.7 :30). So the challenge of Jesus implied the taut rejoinder: ‘You made no public pronouncement concerning John, as you should have done; then, if I provide my own unmistakable credentials, will you do any better this time? Will you declare my divine mission to the nation? Of course you won’t!’

In particular, if the validity of John’s teaching was conceded, then did they not recall the sign of Messiah which John had bidden them look for?: “Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending, and abiding on him, the same is he …” (Jn. 1 :33). It was obvious to the entire nation that all through the ministry of Jesus marvellous works of Holy Spirit power had flowed from him. That very week they had had further witness of this.

Also, what about Malachi’s word fulfilled in John?: “Behold, I send my messenger, and he shall prepare the way before me: and the Lord, whom ye seek (note the strong irony here), shall suddenly come to his temple . . . and he shall purify the sons of Lev!” (3 :1,3). Jesus had done precisely that, the day before. Moreover John’s public witness to “the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world” had established the right of Jesus to drive both offerers and offerings out of the temple court. So nothing but wilful blindness prevented these men from recognizing the unbroken chain of witness—God, Malachi, John, Jesus.

Defeated

Not daring to provide an unprepared answer, these men of high intellect moved off to go into conference about it. They knew themselves forced into a bad position. To admit the divine mission of John was to concede heaven’s authority to all that he had said about Jesus. “Then let us say, From men . . .,” but immediately they shied away from such a declaration, for it could only be made at the expense of their own popularity and even of their own lives: “All the people will stone us to death (for blasphemy; Lev.24 :14), for they are unbudgably convinced (Gk. perfect tense) that John was a prophet.” Not truth but self-interest was their dominating concern. In this they were unanimous (Lk.).

So they played for safety with the lame answer which was a palpable lie: “We do not bow.” (The true answer was: “We know, but dare not say”). Thus they openly declared their lack of qualification to make assessment of the claims of Jesus. Nevertheless only two days later they reckoned themselves competent to judge and condemn him!

Jesus shrugged off their challenge: “Neither do I tell you by what authority I do these things.” But if they stayed to listen to the rest of his teaching that morning, they soon had their answer (Mk. 12:6).

Reproachful parable

The embarrassment of these adversaries was not eased by a short parable which supplied the Lord’s own answer to the question they had evaded.

A man came to each of his two sons and bade them work in his vineyard. The first said bluntly: “I don’t want to,” but then he had second thoughts and went to the task. The other promptly agreed—but did nothing. His sprightly and polite affirmative—literally: “I sir!’—was framed apparently to express both respect for his father and by his own willingness an implied censure of his brother’s surly attitude.

“Whether of them twain did the will of his father?” There was no side-stepping this question. They gave him the obvious answer, and in the ineluctable interpretation found themselves condemned.

The man is God. The two sons are like the two sons in the parable of the prodigal. The first represents the publicans and sinners with their strong disinclination to godliness, who nevertheless heeded the Baptist’s call to repentance. The other typifies the Pharisees and scribes whose outward piety masked stubborn refusal to do the work which God really wanted from them, namely,/b;//i in the message of John and of his successor, Jesus. The emphatic repetition of the word “believe” (Mt.21 :32) is very eloquent. “The publicans and harlots are going into the kingdom of God before you” does not mean that Pharisees also will go into the kingdom but with inferior status. Rather, the idea is: “These sinners are now going before you” in the sense that “they are showing you the way.”

“The baptism of John—from heaven, or of men?” receives its answer here, for since the man in the parable is God, His call to the two sons must have been made through John. Who else?

There is an obvious wider reference of this parable to Jews and Gentiles, for this was a theme never long out of the mind of Jesus at this time. From the very first Israel had proclaimed its own devotion to the God of Abraham: “All that the Lord hath said will we do, and be obedient” (Ex.24 :7). But alas, “this people draw near me with their mouth, and with their lips do honour me, but have removed their heart far from me” (ls.29: 13). Within a few short years all the religiosity of Israel was to be shamed and censured by the faith and sincerity of a growing ecclesia of Gentile belivers.

Notes: Lk.20 :1-8

1.

On one of those days. Possibly a Hebraism for the outstanding day in that week of witness; in that case Thursday, not Wednesday.

Preach the gospel. What gospel? — after his cleansing of the temple, the end of animal sacrifices for the forgiveness of sins?

2.

These things. Riding in triumph into Jerusalem? failing to silence the crowd acclaiming him as king? cleansing the temple? bringing the blind and the lame into the temple? forbidding sacrifices?

3.

One thing. The Hebraism again, (v.1)? — one decisive question. Or did he mean: I shall not need to ask another!?

8.

Neither tell I you . . . There is here the implication: John told you the truth about himself and about me, and yet you say you don’t know! Then if I tell you plainly, will the outcome be any different, any better?

163. The Wedding Garment (Matt. 22:1-14)*

“A certain king made a marriage for his son.” The opening words of this parable surely set a scene for joy and jollity. Yet, in truth, few of the lord’s parables are more sombre in tone, more grim in warning.

It appears to have been intended primarily as an answer to those who perceived that “he had spoken his (previous) parable-about the wicked husbandman-against them” (Lk.20 :19). Was the kingdom indeed to be “taken from them, and given to a nation bringing forth the fruits thereof”?

Betrothal

This marriage of the king’s son is really a betrothal feast. To attempt to equate it with the “marriage supper of the Lamb” is to reduce this symbolism to an incoherent shambles. But let it be read as a representation of the preaching of the gospel, when the Son of God was gathering those who are one day to be his glorious Bride, and no inconsistency remains (cp. Lk.12 : 36; Jn.2:l).

It is to be noted, also, that the parable makes no mention of the Bride. Had there been such mention, a consistent interpretation of the allegory would have been difficult to the point of impossibility.

Those called to the feast are the people of Israel. The invitation, first issued through the prophets, was now renewed by other servants (cp. Esth.5 :8; 6 :14)—John the Baptist and the apostles working with Jesus during his ministry. But there was no willingness to attend. So the king, demeaning himself as no other king would do, sent other servants, more urgent than the first to add their exhortations: “The dinner is prepared; oxen and failings are killed; all is completely ready; lose no time in coming” (cp. Pr.9 :2ff). That phrase “oxen and fatlings” gives an indication of the immense scale of the preparations, and the word “killed” is, literally, “sacrificed.” Thus the parable includes a hint of the need for sacrifice before men can share the joy of God’s redemption.

Was refusal rebellion?

In Zephaniah 1:7,8 there is a remarkable anticipation of certain aspects of this parable: “The day of the Lord is at hand; for the Lord hath prepared a sacrifice, he hath bid his guests. And it shall come to pass… that I will punish the princes, and the king’s children, and all such as are clothed with strange apparel.” That Jesus was building on Zephaniah seemsalmost certain, but a close correlation between these Scriptures is by no means easy. In an attempt to resolve the problem that in so many respects the details of this parable come away from verisimilitude, the suggestion has been made that the betrothal of the king’s son was the occasion also of his being designated heir to the throne, thus making rejection of the invitations tantamount to a refusal of loyalty to the new king. This would explain the pressure brought to bear on those invited. It would also explain the ill-treatment of the servants and the drastic action taken against those scorners of the royal invitation. They were, in effect, rebels acting in concert against the authority of the king.

But it is rather remarkable that such an extension of the theme of the parable is not given specific mention. The only alternative is to see Jesus readily sacrificing the “true-to-life” element of his parable in order to make it true to the desperate spiritual situation which his manifestation in Jewry had created.

So, like its predecessor, this parable is also a prophecy. It foretells that the appeal of the apostles, after the sacrifice of their Lord, would be abortive. Is not a royal invitation a command? Nevertheless many of those receiving invitation “made light of it’—were quite unconcerned—and went about their own affairs. Banquets normally began in the last hour or two of daylight (v.9), and went on after dark (v.13). What good would a man accomplish going to his farm at such a time of day? (See Notes). Transparent excuses! Others invited even showed rancorous opposition and violent antipathy: “The rest took his servants, and entreated them spitefully, and slew them” (e.g. Acts 7:58).

Drastic retribution

This in turn would bring down condign punishment on their heads. The angry king “sent forth his armies, and destroyed those murderers, and burnt up their city” (cp. Dan.9:26). This is a clear anticipation of the fearful hardships and afflictions endured by the Jews during the Roman war of A.D.67-70.Those Roman armies were God’s armies, all unconsciously meeting out judgment to a people whose cup of iniquity was filled to the brim.

This is so plain and accurate a prophecy of what happened in A.D.70 that many modern commentators insist that this gospel must therefore have been written after the fall of Jerusalem—the implication being that Jesus was no prophet (in this sense) and that these words were never spoken by him!

The appeal made by Josephus to his own countrymen during the siege of Jerusalem has this remarkable commentary: “It is God, therefore, it is God himself who is bringing on this fire, to purge that city and temple by means of the Romans, and is going to pluck up this city, which is full of your pollutions” (B.J.6.2.I.). Earlier in his ministry Jesus had spoken a similar prophecy (Lk.14 :24), milder than this because spoken earlier, before he had been so emphatically rejected by the rulers.

The parable’s frightening prophecy of Jerusalem’s travail interrupts the normal sequence of the story. Of course, the equipping of the feast with quests did not wait until the wrath of the king had been poured out. Verse 7 b,c,d should be read as in parentheses.

A new policy

Those invited had proved themselves “not worthy’—a dramatic understatement! They were unworthy in the first instance, but now openly and shamelessly so (note the allusion in Acts 13:46). The servants were therefore bidden go out into places of concourse and gather together people of all kinds (Pr.9 :2-4), no matter what their quality, to occupy the empty places at the feast. This they promptly did, bringing in the morally good and bad alike This is worth noting. The only qualification was, and is, a willingness to come. Those who invited were given no mandate to vet the guests for suitability.

It is implicit in the story that at the feast all were suitably equipped by the king’s provision of robes appropriate to the occasion, Otherwise would there not be something morally questionable about denouncing a man who has been brought in from the highways for wearing raiment unsuited to an important royal ceremony?

These guests represent the Gentiles brought into the ecclesia of Christ through the zealous unremitting efforts of the apostles and especially of Paul. And still that work goes on, for not yet has the fulness of the Gentiles come in (Rom.11:25).

The second half of the parable begins with the king coming in to see the guests. This corresponds to the day of judgment as the sequel very clearly shows. It is easy to understand how such details as this led the early church to believe that in their lime the day of judgment was nigh at hand. What betrothal banquet could with any seemliness represent a period of two thousand years? Of course these inspired apostles, writing with such urgent expectations, were right. (For more on this, see “Revelation.” appendix H.A.W.).

No Wedding garment

There at the banquet the king picked out one, soiled and unkempt, an unpleasant contrast with the rest who had decked themeselves out in true wedding style with the fine garments provided (ls.61 :10) for their use. (Is there here a certain resemblance to Samson’s abortive betrothal feast? Jud.14 :13).

The king apostrophized the man before them all: “Comrade!”-a strange mode of address from a king to one of his least important subjects brought in from anywhere, yet LXX usage applies it to those honoured with royal friendship (Dan.5 :1,2; 1 Kgs.4 :5; 2 Sam.15 :37)- “Comrade, how earnest thou hither not having a wedding garment?” Art thou not a spot in my Love Feast? (Jude 12).

Interpretation of this detail is not easy. The man is a member of the ecclesia of Christ and therefore has made a confession of faith and been baptized. But he lacks the covering of God-provided righteousness which the wedding garment plainly symbolizes. This is only possible when a man seeks baptism for a wrong motive. The early church suffered seriously from the machinations of certain “false brethren unawares brought in, who came in privily to spy out our liberty which we have in Christ Jesus, that they might bring us into bondage” (Gal.2 :4; cp.Jn.10 :1). This is only one of a number of New Testament passages which point to a concerted evil attempt to destroy the new sect called Christians by the classic methods of infiltration and subversion from within (see “The Jewish Plot”, H.A.W.). Such men would certainly fill the role just indicated. But so also would others who, more innocuously, come to baptism for unworthy reasons such as family pressures, or seeking a wife (or husband) without having any real personal conviction, or for safety in wartime. Since justification is by faith in Christ and no other way, it is difficult to see how such are truly covered by Christ’s righteousness, even though there is respectable ecclesial membership.

Yet another possibility is that the man thought his own garment quite good enough, and despised the one provided. This is surely the individual who believes in salvation through one’s own goodness. But are such speechless in the Day of Judgment? (25:44; 7:22). The question to all such is itself an exposure: “How earnest thou in hither . . .?” The only possible honest answer is: “On false pretences” of one kind or another. So, in the parable, “he was speechless”, literally: “gagged”. The day of judgment will be the first occasion in the history of the race when human ingenuity finds itself unable to cook up a plausible excuse.

Royal indignation

Then there was curt instruction to ministers standing by: “Bind him hand and foot, and cast him into outer darkness.” The word here is not the same as for the “servants” of v.3-10. These “ministers” are angels. At the judgment there is to be a rejection in shame of those for whom God has no use. Very clear scriptures (e.g. Ps.37:38) assert that the final end of the rejected will be the oblivion of an eternal grave. But these words seem to imply an individual conscious experience of shame and deprivation. It is not unlikely that the real punishment of the wicked will involve living on for some time in the kingdom of God but in such a state of dereliction as to make every hour of it an experience of woe (ls.65 :20; Rev.22 :15).

This would appear to be the meaning of “weeping and gnashing of teeth.” The first of these is unquestionably an expression of sorrow, but the other signifies anger (Acts 7:54; Ps.112 :10)—in this instance anger with one’s self for having been such a fool as to treat lightly the gracious kindness of the king.

In the parable there is only one individual of this kind to come in for heaven’s reprobation. So, lest the false conclusion be drawn by his hearers that hardly any will fall into that evil category, Jesus added the caveat: “For many are called, (some respond), but few are chosen” (Jud.7:3,7; Rev.17:14). Those who are ultimately accepted constitute only a small proportion of those to whom the call of Christ comes.

Notes: Mt. 22:1-14

2.

The kingdom… like unto a certain king. A literal reading of this is untenable. The king is not the kingdom. Here ,{ is a standard introduction equivalent to: This is another parable about the kingdom; cp. 25 :1 (foolish virgins do not represent the kingdom); 13:24 (the man is not the kingdom); 13:47 (the net is not the kingdom); so also 13:31,33. Failure to note this usage has led to some crass errors in interpretation.

A marriage. Bethrothal was regarded as a legally binding tie. Hence the apparent New Testament confusion between marriage and betrothal. Joseph and Mary were betrothed but, apparently, never formally married (Mt. 1 :20). She was already his wife. And so also the Bride is called “the Lamb’s wife” even when being brought to him(Rev. 19:7).

3.

Would not come. Literally: They did not want to come.

5.

His farm . . . his merchandise. A contemporary invitation illustrates the timing of the feast: “Chaeremon invites you to dine… tomorrow, the 15th, at 3 o’clock”

7.

His armies. The same idiom in ls.10:5-7; 29 :3; 8 :7; 13 :5; Ez. 16 :40,41; 29:18-20; Jer.22 :7; 25:9; Dt.22:19.

9.

The highways. In LXX this unusual word describes “the issues from death” (Ps.68 :20), the waters of death, healed (2 Kgs.2 :21), the tree “planted by the rivers of water” (Ps.l:3), the dry ground blessed with watersprings (107:35). These people, then, were brought from places where they went to draw water, that they might enjoy a much greater blessing. There is more symbolism here.

160. The Second Cleansing of the Temple (Matt. 21:12-17; Mark 11:15-19; Luke 19:45-48)*

“Because thou knewest not the time of thy visitation.” At the time of the Triumphal Entry Jesus visited the temple in warning, “looking round about upon all things.” Now, next day, he visited in anger. Yesterday “thy king came unto thee, meek, and riding upon an ass.” Today he comes with the wrath of heaven on his brow.

During these few days before Passover all Jews everywhere were busy spring-cleaning their houses. It was their formalised fulfilment of the Passover commandment: “Seven days there shall be no leaven found in your houses” (Ex. 12 :19). This instruction was generalised, as it is to this day, to include all kinds of dirt and dust.

So Jesus set about the spring-cleaning of his Father’s house. This had been done with anger, vigour and efficiency at the first Passover of his ministry. But most of the old abuses had crept back again after a while. This racket meant so much money for the chief priests that it could not be lightly let go. There was one period when Annas and Co. actually succeeded in driving the holy prices so high that the poor had to pay a piece of gold for a pigeon!

Spring-Cleaning

It was a big task Jesus now repeated (Gen. 41:32), and it required time, even though the twelve were very willing helpers. A guard would have to be set at each of the gates (Mk. 11:16; Ps. 84:10!) This detail is in the prophets: “I will encamp about mine house as a garrison, that none pass through or return: and no exactor shall pass through them any more; for now I have seen with mine eyes” (Zech.9 :8). Every phrase here fits this incident. And the next verse is the prophecy of the triumphal entry. Now the Lord whom they pretended to seek had come suddenly to his temple (Mal. 3:1). Forthwith all who were in any way concerned in this nefarious traffic were unceremoniously cleared out of the temple area. It is known that at one time the market for the sale of animals for sacrifice was sited on the slope of the Mount of Olives. The pointed mention of pigeons only (Mt. Mk.) suggests that the Lord’s earlier onslaught had not been without its effect and that the animals were no longer in the temple court itself.

But there were abuses enough. So, vigorously, Jesus began to drive out these profiteers who made such a good thing out of the piety of the people. Mark’s word “began” perhaps implies that as soon as these mercenary fellows realised what was afoot they moved off as fast as they could. It was no good attempting to stand up to Jesus of Nazareth. They could have called the temple guard. Perhaps some of them did. Yet no man raised a finger to oppose Jesus. In this mood he, this king who only yesterday had meekly come to the holy city on an ass, was to be feared, and all the more because the sympathies of the people were solidly behind him. So, tables, market-stalls, and cash desks were unceremoniously “overthrown,” as though they were a spiritual Sodom (s.w. Gen. 19:21,29; 2 Pet. 2:6), and their owners cleared out. And all this at Passover when, because of the rush of overseas visitors, trade was at its busiest!

But this time Jesus introduced a new development in his campaign. Those also who were buying with a view to sacrifice were also turned out of the temple area with the rest (Mk.). It was Christ’s open declaration that the time for the abolition of Mosaic sacrifices was at hand. But what alternative did they have? (It is useful to note, in passing, that this turning away of those who were there to offer sacrifices was not insisted on at the earlier cleansing of the temple (Jn.2 :15), for then the time for such prohibition was not yet come. But now was the time to assert the truth of Malachi 1:10, 11.

The Lord now took his spring-cleaning operation a stage further. The temple area occupied a considerable part of Jerusalem. For those making their way from one part of the city to another, avoidance of the sanctuary enclosure often meant an appreciable detour. So the practice had grown up of using the outer court as a short cut. The temple was become a thoroughfare.

Stationing his disciples at the various gates Jesus now forbad this demeaning of the holiness of his Father’s house. Water carriers, people going shopping, and all such, he now rebuked for their sacrilege. The court of the Gentiles was as holy as the rest of the temple. Let them recognize that very soon Gentiles would be called to worship God on equal terms with the seed of Abraham.

Thus, in effect, instead of clearing the land of Gentiles (as the nation would dearly wish him to do), he cleared the temple of unworthy Jews and welcomed godly Gentiles in their stead (see John 12 :20-23, which happened only a couple of days later).

Prophecy fulfilled

Next, Jesus held a massive “open-air meeting in the temple court to explain to the multitude just what he had been doing, and the prophecies about it: ‘The Word of God declares this temple to be a place of prayer and of reconciliation for all nations—Gentiles as well as Jews.’ The Hebrew text of Isaiah 56 :7, just quoted, has the word normally used for the tribes of Israel, thus implying that the “strangers” (v.6) are to become Jews; but with a flash of insight the translators of the LXX turned it into the Greek word for Gentile nations. Jesus quoted it verbatim. “But (he went on) you, the Chosen Race, have turned it into the headquarters of a gang of brigands and plunderers.’

The chief priests and Pharisees were there on the edge of the crowd, their eyes smouldering with hostility, and Jesus directed his accusation specially at them.

There must have been some among these rulers who had the wit to see the force of the ‘context of that prophecy. There the leaders of the people are excoriated as “blind watchmen . .. dumb dogs . . . greedy dogs which can never have enough, shepherds that cannot understand, every one looking for gain” (10,11). And that word “dogs” turns Jews into Gentiles. But the same context offers a warm welcome to “the sons of the stranger, that join themselves to the Lord, to serve him, and to love the name of the Lord . . . taking hold of his covenant” (v.6).

It is surely probable that Jesus also quoted them the prayer of Solomon when he dedicated the temple: “Moreover concerning the stranger, that is not of thy people Israel. . . when he shall come and pray toward this house, hear thou in heaven thy dwelling place . .. that all people of the earth may know thy name . . .” (1 Kgs.8 :41-43). It was on that day of dedication-the only other comparable day in Israel’s history?-when the court of the Gentiles had been sanctified for the offering of sacrifice (v.64)! Thus was foreshadowed the day when “the middle wall of partition” would be broken down, making Jew and Gentile one before God (Eph.2 :14).

Echoing with redoubled contempt and anger the searing scorn and trenchant arraignment spoken by Jeremiah, Jesus denounced these holy peculators who stood there glowering at him: “You have made my Father’s house a den of robbers, and you still use it in that way (Mt.).” (Jer.7 :11)—and in A.D.70 the words became quite literally true. Again it is important to observe that this Jeremiah allusion was not made simply because the phrase happened to fit, in the way that a modern politician might quote Shakespeare. The context is marvellously right: “Behold, ye trust in lying words that cannot profit. . . and ye come and stand before me in this house which is called by my name, and say, Deliver us; that ye may do all these abominations . . .Behold, I, even I, have seen it (the Lord’s inspection of the temple abuses; Mk.ll :11). But go ye even now to Shiloh, where I set my name at the first, and see what I did ton for the wickedness of my people Israel… And I will cast you out of my sight. . . even the whole seed of Ephraim. Therefore pray not thou for this people.. .”(Jer.7:8-16).

There was not only hatred but also the furrow of anxiety on the faces of the religious rulers. After all this interference with the offering of sacrifice and so much else of the temple routine, what next? Was this Jesus set on taking over the priesthood as well?

The blind and the lame

But for all his indignation against these unholy abuses, Jesus was beset by a yet stronger emotion—his overmastering compassion for the afflicted.

Since the time of the capture of Jerusalem from the Jebusites, “the blind and the lame that hate the soul of David” (2 Sam.5 :8 LXX) had been forbidden the sanctuary of the Lord. Right up to the time of Jesus this rule was observed. So there were plenty such in Jerusalem who, because of their disability, had never known the privilege and pleasure of entering the temple area.

But now Jesus, having “cast out” (excommunicated?) the spiritually blind and lame, brought the physically decrepit into the holy court. They would have to be invited and urged to enter, or they would not dare defy the ancient ban. And there in the precincts of the House these Gentile Jews, the blind and the lame who loved the soul of the Son of David, had fellowship with him and were healed.

Little children

These wonderful works (s.w.Ps.9:l) prompted some of the little children, brought by their parents, to take up once again the Hosanna cry which they had heard from the excited crowd the previous day.

For the chief priests it was provocation piled on provocation. First, the high-handed interference with their temple market. Then, his prophetic denunciation of themselves before all the multitude. After that, a constant demonstration of gracious healing power. And now to be acclaimed by mere infants as the Messiah: “Hosanna to the Son of David” (Dt.31 :19). It was the last straw, the very limit in unseemliness. It also gave the best handle for criticism of Jesus himself. So they let Jesus know what they thought about it.

‘Do you hear that?’ they asked him, all righteous indignation. ‘Why don’t you shut them up?’

‘Yes, I hear them,’ replied Jesus with warm approval. ‘Haven’t you realised he added, ‘that they too are fulfilling Bible prophecy?’ And he went on to quote the splendid words of Psalm 8: “Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings thou didst fashion praise.” What a lightning mind Jesus had, and so superbly stocked with perfectly understood Scripture, to be able to go within a second to words so apt; for the continuation is: “that thou mightest still the enemy and the avenger.” And the same short psalm goes on to celebrate the exalted authority of the Son of man, made a little lower than the angels, yet given dominion over the works of God’s hands, including even sheep and oxen, the cattle of the field, and the birds of the air (Ps.8:2,5-8). So, of course, he as Son of David had every right to put an end to sacrifice of birds and animals in His Father’s house!

One is tempted to wonder whether in his teaching Jesus added here an allusion to another superbly appropriate prophecy in Isaiah 28, for the gospel writers are very selective from the inexhaustible wealth of material available to them. First, there is the spiteful mockery of the unworthy rulers in Jerusalem: “Who shall he (Jesus) teach knowledge? and whom shall he make to understand doctrine? them that are weaned from the milk, and drawn from the breasts (the praise of little children) … for with stammering lips and another tongue will he speak to this people (the scornful despising of uneducated apostles with a coarse Galilean dialect being used to preach the gospel!)… Wherefore hear the word of the Lord, ye scornful men, that rule this people which is in Jerusalem . .. Behold, I lay in Zion for a foundation, a tried stone, a precious corner stone, a sure foundation (the new altar of reconciliation—Christ himself) . . . And your covenant with death shall be disannulled, and your agreement with hell shall not stand . . .” (ls.28:9-19).

Hatred and plotting

For these scornful men in Jerusalem the whole day was one long vexation. What were they to do with this man Jesus? Somehow they must get rid of him! Must!! They went off to go into consultation as to what might be done. But all their combined cleverness failed to come up with a water-tight scheme for destroying this pestilent prophet. Always they were up against the obstacle of the Nazarene’s popularity with the crowd. Just as, earlier in his ministry, the people had marvelled at his miracles, so now at Passover his teaching in the temple court likewise carried them away. They were soaking up every word. “For all the people hung upon him, listening.” Here Luke uses a remarkable word found in only one other place: “the life of Jacob is bound up in the lad’s life (the life of Benjamin)” (Gen.44:30).

There was only one thing for it—to come on him when there was no multitude about. But even if they managed to lay hands on him in that way, wouldn’t there be a riot when the word got round? Their exasperation and frustration were almost comical.

Jesus knew well enough how great the danger was. To attempt to stay the night in the city was to invite trouble prematurely. This night there was no safety for the King in his own capital. So once again, as darkness fell, he. and the twelve made their way out to Bethany.

Notes: Mt. 21:12-17

12.

The temple of Cod. An unusual mode of description. But in 23 :38 it is “your house.”

The money changers. The normal rake-off was 12-16% (Century Bible)

13.

Shall be called. Here Lk. reads “is’—to empasize the fulfilment of the prophecy. But why is it that Lk. the non-Jew, fails to mention the several special details in this incident which concern Gentiles?

Thieves. Not surreptitious picking of pockets, but open unashamed roguery.

16.

Mouth. Singular, not plural! It is only when there is one mouth that praise is perfected!

Perfected praise. This verb also means: “to lay a foundation” (of a new temple!). Mk. adds here: “all the people were astonished at his doctrine.” Cp. Mt. 7 :28; 13 :54; 19 :25; 22 :33; Mk.1 :22; Lk.4 :32.

154. Pounds and Talents (Luke 19:11 -28; Matt. 25:14-30)*

Jesus fold his disciples two parables which are marvellously alike in many respects, but which are nevertheless quite certainly not the same. They definitely belong to different occasions in the last week of the Lord’s ministry—the one was spoken in Jericho or on the last leg of the journey to Jerusalem, whilst the other belongs unmistakably to the Olivet Prophecy. It is because of the considerable similarity between them that they are now considered together. These parables provide an excellent demonstration of the fact that in the course of his ministry Jesus must often have repeated his teaching, with minor variations.

In Matthew the immediate context is the parable of the fen virgins. There, the emphasis goes on being alert for the Lord’s coming, here on diligent service. One parable features women, the other men.

Great Expectations

The introduction to the Pounds provides a link which is not without its difficulty: “And as they heard these things he added and spake a parable . . .” But immediately before these words is the story of Zaccheus. The connection is not obvious. If, however, the incidents concerning Bartimaeus and Zaccheus, both at Jericho, be omitted, the reference of “these things” is to the plain warning which Jesus gave to the disciples concerning his rejection and suffering at Jerusalem.

But the minds of the twelve, encouraged by the increasing fervour of the Galilean pilgrims, were running on other things: “He was nigh to Jerusalem and they thought that the kingdom of God should immediately appear.” New Testament usage of this verb dokeo (thought) has much more of confidence that the common version usually indicates (e.g. John 5 :39; 16 :2; Acts 15 :28; 26 :9; 1 Cor.8 : 2; 10:12).

There was a growing conviction that Jesus was soon to make public proclamation of himself as king. So in the parable of the pounds he sought to emphasize that first he must leave them for a far country, and that when he did return their promotion and glory in his kingdom would not be automatic.

Historical background

The main features of both parables are very clearly based on familiar and comparatively recent Jewish history. Herod the Great, and Archelaus and Herod Antipas, his sons and successors, all made special journeys to Rome to solicit confirmation of their authority over the Jews; the last-named was to make a second journey for the same purpose. The details fit the story of Archelaus especially, for he did specifically entrust his business affairs to certain of his servants; and the Jews, detesting the idea of having him as their king (for at his first Passover he had already had 3000 of their fellows massacred; Jos; BJ.2.1.3), sent a deputation of fifty citizens to Rome to protest to Caesar about him; but Archelaus was given jurisdiction over Judaea (as ethnarch, not as king), and on his return to Jerusalem he did honour his favourites by assigning them to be governors of certain cities.

But in both parables the man represents Jesus, There the contrast with Archelaus could hardly be greater.

In Matthew the kingdom is not specifically mentioned, but “ruler over many things” (v.21) very plainly implies it. Luke has explicit mention often servants, whereas Matthew says “his own servants,” meaning his personal officers out of the entire household, and of these only three are specifically mentioned. Again, in Luke all alike receive a mina (pound), that is about £1500 sterling; but in Matthew the man hands overall his existing wealth to their stewardship, the servant with one talent having about £100,000 in his care and the others proportionately more.

The pound which all have in common represents “one Lord, one faith, one baptism’-the knowledge of the Truth in Christ which all Christ’s servants enjoy. But the varying talent, “to each according to his several ability,” probably indicates that whilst there are “many members in one body, all members have not the same office;” there are “gifts differing according to the grace given to us.” (Rom. 12:4,6], Here, then, is emphasis on varying degrees of responsibility and opportunity, or on differing degrees of truth received (1 Cor.4 .7), And since natural ability has usually a good deal to do with this, it is understandable that the modern meaning of “talent” should be derived directly from the parable.

Neither parable includes any instruction to the servants as to how they were to operate. The mode of trading or investment was left entirely to their own judgement. It is a point of some importance when the practical lessons of these stories is under consideration.

“After a long time the Lord of those servants cometh and reckoneth with them.” The inference is often made that here the parable requires long centuries of delay before the Lord’s return (the problem presented by this “long time”, which in the parable must obviously be within a man’s lifetime, is dealt with in the appendix to “Revelation”, by H.A.W.).

The phrase “a long time” clearly could not refer to the Lord’s going away into the far country of the tomb for the short time of less than three days. His description of that was “a little while” (John 16 :17). Even so, in their excitement and enthusiasm the apostles did make precisely that mistake, saying to Jesus after his resurrection: “Lord, wilt thou at this time restore again the kingdom to Israel?” (Acts 1 :6).

Called to account

The journey successfully completed, the master of the servants “commanded to be called onto him those servants to whom he had given the money.” Here, very appropriately, there is strong implication that others who had not been given responsibilities were not called. The judgment of Christ will be for those who are answerable to him. The fact that those called are all designated servants should not be interpreted as signifying that only confessed disciples of Christ will be called to the judgment. The rest of the story makes this very clear.

The servants come into the presence of their master, now designated king. He is one “who both will bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and will make manifest the counsels of the hearts: and then shall every man have praise of God” (1 Cor.4 :5). The new king is seeking capable and trusty governors for his provinces.

Those with the pounds are found to vary considerably in the degree of success achieved: “thy pound hath gained ten pounds . . . thy pound hath made five pounds’—they speak as though all the virtue resided in what their master had left with them, and not in their own dutiful efforts (lCor.3:6; Acts 21 :19; 15 :4,12).

The man with five talents “brought” five more, he with two “brought” other two. Matthew’s word (v.20) normally describes the offering of sacrifice.

These all gave their lord great pleasure. “Good and faithful servant (there is a double meaning in this word “faithful”), thou hast been faithful regarding a few things; will make thee ruler over many things. Enter thou into the joy of thy lord” (ls.53 :11; Heb.12 :2). Here “enter” contrasts strongly with the casting out of the unprofitable servant (Mt.25 :30).

Ten pounds, ten cities; five pounds, five cities; a city for a pound! Such is the absurd disproportion between present achievement for Christ and future reward. Even so, it should not be overlooked that essentially, the reward for good service is to be much greater opportunity for further service! (cp. Jer.17 :24,26).

There are also varying degrees of reward. In some important respects these are according to diligence and faithfulness: “One star differeth from another star in glory” (1 Cor.15 :41). “He which soweth sparingly shall reap also sparingly; and he which soweth bountifully shall reap also bountifully” (2 Cor.9 :6). The Book of Revelation speaks of “the time of the dead, that they should be judged, and that thou shouldest give reward unto thy servants the prophets, and to the saints, and they that fear thy name, small and the great” (11 :18). Is there special meaning here in the mention of the “small” before the “great”?

The one-talent man

The servant with only one talent (though, indeed, £100,000 is no small responsibility!) had laboured only to dig a hole in which to bury his lord’s money safely out of sight (contrast Ps.40 :8,10). And one of those with a pound decided that the best thing he could do was to lay it up, carefully wrapped in a napkin— literally, in a sweat rag. Thus he put both money and sweat rag out of action! In neither case was there anything of profit for master or servant in the attitude adopted.

What led him to follow such a timid policy? He had excellent examples to encourage him. Was his declared assessment of his lord’s character an honest one, or an invented excuse?

One suspects that he was motivated by a spirit of cowardice, which of course is the very opposite of faith.

What a warning there is here! For, in modern times, how often has the brake been put on endeavour and progress by expressed fears that problems may be encountered. “Strengthen the things that remain” is a popular text, for it is so often made to mean. “Do little, or nothing.” But the nobleman’s instruction was: “Get busy till I come.” Experience shows over and over again that it is the one-talent man who is most given to timidity and self-excuse. Yet, strangely enough, most disciples of the Lord seem eager to set themselves in this category. They tend to assume that others are so much better placed than they themselves to serve Christ!

“Lord, I feared thee because thou art an austere man (harsh, rough); thou takest up that thou layest not down, and reapest that thou didst not sow . . . there thou hast that is thine.” Here in marvellously few words is accusation, trepidation, self-justification, and just a hint of defiance (contrast 1 Jn.5 :3), whilst “Lord, behold . . .” (Lk.19 :20) even seems to claim credit for keeping the pound safe.

Concerning both the Father and the Son the words stand true: “With the pure thou wilt shew thyself pure; and with the froward thou wilt shew thyself froward” (Ps.18 :26). And so here: ‘You knew, did you, that I am that harsh kind of master? Then why at least didn’t you put my money in the bank to gain a bit of interest?’

“If the mere keeping unused was so grievous a fault, what would it be to squander or destroy?” (Plummer).

“Wicked and slothful servant!” He was both of these. Most certainly slothful, for had he not spent “a long time” in complete idleness (or about his own affairs)? But how came he to deserve the epithet “wicked”, inasmuch as he had not done anything?

His wickedness lay in the estimate he expressed of his master’s character. “I knew thee” was about as far from the truth as it could be! Whenever any man finds himself speaking or thinking of God’s way of holiness as too exacting a life, whenever one who has learned the way of the gospel shrugs it off with the self-excuse: “No, its not for me, I just couldn’t live the life ,” he identifies himself with this one-talent evasion which slanders the character of the Holy One of God. “If only he may roll off a charge from himself, he cares not for affixing one on his Lord.”

It is the self-centred, self-righteous attitude of the elder brother of the prodigal as he accused his father and excused himself: “Lo, these many years do I serve thee . . . yet thou never gavest me a kid, that I might make merry with my friends” (Lk.15 :29). A frame of mind very much to beware of!

Then what is the spiritual counterpart to putting out the money at banker’s interest, this least duty of al! that the Lord’s servant should take on himself? One of the few sayings of Jesus preserved outside the pages of the New Testament is this: “Shew yourselves tried bankers” (cp. 1 Tirn.6 .20} , Here two ideas are involved—keeping safe that which is valuable, and also the slow steady accretion of added value. Probably the counterpart to this lies in the dutiful support of the ecclesia by the individual who deems that he has nothing of special worth to add to the Lord’s service. Personal appreciation and regular attendance can do much to strengthen the hands of those who carry greater responsibility—these things at least can be a worthwhile contribution to the well-being of the Body of Christ (cp, Num.31 :27).

Rejection

If even such a modicum of dutiful service is withheld, the parable holds out an ominous alternative: “Take from him the pound, and give it to him that hath ten pounds.” Here is the mind of one whose Father took from Esau to give to Jacob, from Saul to give to David, from Judasto give to Matthias, and from Israel in order to lavish His blessing on Gentiles.

In the parable this decision provoked on immediate interruption: “Lord, he hath ten pounds” (cp. Mt.21 :41; 2 Sam.12 :5,6). The unnamed interjectors were probably members of the crowd, fascinated by the story, who alia) once found themselves disagreeing with this standard of fairness, so that Jesus had to explain very simply that in the world of spiritual values God’s principles may not necessarily be the same as men’s.

But if the interruption is part of the parable, there is a nice little problem of interpretation, Who makes the objection? Whom do “they” represent (in the symbolism)? And what spiritual idea is the interjection intended to convey?

The Lord’s simple comment is: “Unto every one that hath shall be given.” In the sphere of activity that he speaks of, nothing succeeds like success: “He giveth wisdom unto the wise, and knowledge to them that know understanding” (Dan. 2 :21). But also, alas, nothing fails like failure: “From him that hath not, even that he hath shall be taken away from him” (Lk.8 :18) — the words would verge on foolishness if they did not underscore a solemn truth and a weighty warning. And since there can be remarkably few, if any, whose personal endowment of ability and opportunity does not even qualify them for the one talent class, the Lord’s reminder leaves hardly any exempt from its scope.

But the unworthy servant, who was so much more ready to blame his lord rather than himself, now finds that he loses not only his talent but his own soul: “Cast ye the unprofitable servant into outer darkness . . . weeping and gnashing of teeth.” It was Christ’s much-repeated contrast with the radiant Glory of God and the song of the Lamb on mount Zion reserved for those who “enter into the joy of their Lord.” “Cast out” and “Enter in” are words spoken by the same royal master.

The tale has another sombre chapter: “Those mine enemies (they are no longer “citizens”!), which would not that I should reign over them, bring hither, and slay them before me. The primary reference—who can doubt?—is to the point-blank rejection of Jesus by a Jewish nation, crying: “We have no king but Caesar,” instead of conceding that this Nazarene deserved their humble allegiance. But the principle behind this grim judgment spreads its louring shadow far beyond the hills of Judaea. How many others who have learned of the authority given to Jesus by Almighty God choose in their perversity to say; “We will not have this man to reign over us”! Will their fate be any different? (cp. Ps. 2:2-6).

The story told, Jesus separated himself from the throng. Resuming his loneliness he went on ahead of them, going up to the holy city which had already declared: “We will not have this man to reign over us.” Another week, and it would repeat the words yet again, this time in tones of strident cruelty.

Notes: Mt.25: l4-30

24.

Strawed. A reference to winnowing at the threshing floor.

26.

Wicked and slothful servant. The attitude of the others, by contrast, implies a faith in their lord that if, making a venture, they came to grief, he would be understanding and not censorious.

17.

Thou oughtest. Literally: it was necessary (for your own sake).

Interest. The Gk. is, literally, “offspring”, a word not without significance in the interpretation with reference to support of the ecclesia.

30,

Unprofitable.Gk. (root meaning): not needed.

Lk. 19:11-28

11.

He added and spake = LXXof Dt. 18 :16 (without the negative); Is.7 :10; 8 :5. 20.

20.

Another. Gk: one of a different sort.

25.

He hath ten pounds. This is the voice of democracy which would fain put every man on the same level. Christ has no use for this philosophy.

156. The Chronology of the Last Week *

No documents have been more assiduously studied than those which describe the last week of the Lord’s mortal life. Yet, regarding the timing of events differences of interpretation are considerable. So it is needful to remember that dogmatism as to the pattern of events is hardly justifiable.

There are two important issues which will have to be given special separate attention later on. One of these is the question: Was the Last Supper a normal Jewish Passover? On this the balance of evidence will be found to favour the view that it was not. The interpretation that will be argued for is that it was an ordinary supper transformed, by special symbolism which Jesus imparted to it, into a new Passover celebrating a better deliverance than Israel’s release from Egyptian bondage. See Study 181.

The other tricky question is: Did Jesus lie in the tomb from Friday to Sunday or for a full 72 hours: “three days and three nights”? Regarding this (and again it is necessary to anticipate the full-length study which will come later), the conclusion reached is that the long-accepted tradition—Good Friday to Easter Sunday—is correct. The alternative view misinterprets Jewish idiom, has to turn a blind eye to one or two of the plainest simplest statements in the gospels, and piles up for itself a whole series of chronological difficulties. See Study 182.

This present study simply aims at summarising the time-table of events during that momentous week preceding the passover.

It was on a Friday that Jesus had his encounter with the rich young ruler; and it must have been late that afternoon when Bartimaeus made his unsuccessful appeal to Jesus as he was entering Jericho. Almost immediately after that: “Zaccheus, today I must abide at thy house” — “must” because in an hour or two the sabbath would begin.

So Jesus spent the Friday and Saturday nights at the house of the chief publican.

On the Sunday morning he set out for Jerusalem. Bartimaeus and his friend were healed of their blindness as Jesus left the city. Bethany was reached by the end of the day. It was at the supper table that night that Mary anointed Jesus and heard the Lord’s great commendation. This was now the 10th Nisan, “six days before the passover” (which was eaten on the following Friday evening, the 15th).

Monday morning was taken up with receiving the great crowd of influential Jews who came out to Bethany to see Jesus and Lazarus.

The Lord’s trimphal entry into Jerusalem followed in the closing hours of the day (Mk.11 :11). For details why “Palm Sunday” should really be “Palm Monday”, reference is invited to Study 155.

After spending the night at Bethany, on Tuesday morning Jesus again went into Jerusalem. This was the occasion of the cursing of the fig tree and the second cleansing of the temple. Time was also spent in the temple court instructing the multitude (Lk.19 :48). Then he returned again to Bethany for the night (Mt.21 :17).

Next day—Wednesday—there was much preaching and disputation in the temple. His authority for cleansing the temple was challenged by the chief priests, and he replied with three incisive parables: the two sons, the vineyard, and the wedding garment. Unable to make any effective reply, “they left him, and went their way” (Mk.12:12).

That night was spent, apparently, in the garden of Gethsemane (Lk.21 :37). There is a certain amount of doubt as to just where the division should be made between Wednesday’s and Thursday’s activities.

Much of Thursday was similarly spent in the temple. The rulers’ conspiracy to defeat Jesus in argument led to the great disputation in which he routed them completely. “And no man after that durst ask him any question” (Mk.12 :34).

Jesus rounded off this encounter with his great denunciation of “Scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites.”

The appeal of the Greeks, through Philip and Andrew, that they might see Jesus, marked the end of the Lord’s public ministry.

It was in the closing hours of that hectic day (Thursday) that Jesus made his great Olivet prophecy to a handful of his disciples, Immediately after that, after sun-down in the first hours of the 14th Nisan, Peter and John were sent ahead to prepare the upper room.

An hour or two later, Jesus and the rest returned into the city to the upper room. There the Last Supper took place, followed by a return to Gethsemane for the last time.

The Lord was arrested probably about midnight. During the rest of the night he was privately interrogated by Annas and by Caiaphas, then tried before the Sanhedrin, and at first dawn formally condemned.

The next two hours or so (Friday morning) were taken up with his appearance before Herod and his trial by Pilate. Crucifixion tool place at about nine o’clock, and the agony of the Son of God ended at the very time-mid-afternoon—when the priests in the temple court began the slaying of the paschal lambs.

Interment in Joseph’s tomb was completed before sundown when the Passover sabbath, which this year coincided with a normal sabbath, began. That Friday evening the multitude of Jews in Jerusalem ate their Passover whilst Jesus lay in the tomb.

All next day, Saturday, a sabbath calm lay on the holy city. Then as the sun set business was resumed. The guard of soldiers was posted at the tomb. The women who had seen Jesus crucified now made their purchases and preparations for further care of his body.

Early next morning, Sunday, Mary Magdalene and the others went to the tomb, as they had planned, only to find it empty. Jesus was already risen. And all the excitement of Resurrection Day began.

158. The Triumphal Entry and the Old Testament

Few incidents in the New Testament have such a wealth of Old Testament associations as the Lord’s entry into Jerusalem. The commentary of Law, Psalms and Prophets on this remarkable episode is rich and varied in its scope. In an attempt to illustrate (and elucidate) this feature of the record it is not possible to do more than pull together a sequence of brief disjointed paragraphs, leaving not a few blanks still to be filled in.

1.

Central to the entire operation is the familiar Scripture from Zechariah 9:9, quoted in part by both Matthew and John, and with subtle variations from the original text. One of the omissions—the A.V. phrase: “having salvation’—may seem strange, since it was for this purpose that Jesus had made his journey to Jerusalem. But the Hebrew verb (in Niphal) really means “having been saved” (the AV mg, would require Hithpael). The reason for the omission is now obvious: “Jesus Christ is come in the flesh” (1 Jn.4 :2). The phrase in Zechariah would only be appropriate after the Lord was risen from the dead. So the Triumphal Entry was really only a “dress-rehearsal” for the real thing which is yet to come. Then, “by the blood of his covenant the prisoners will be sent forth out of the pit wherein is no water” (v.10). Then, he will “speak peace unto the nations (another keyword in the Triumphal Entry; Lk.19 :37,41), and his dominion shall be from sea to sea, and from the River even to the ends of the earth.” Yet even in the first century this part of the prophecy had its primary fulfilment in the preaching of the gospel of peace to the Gentiles.

Verse 8 is also marvellously appropriate: “And I will encamp for the sake of thine house as a garrison (or, because of the image of false worship) that none pass through or return; and no exactor shall pass through them any more: for now I have seen with mine eyes.” Is this the lord’s inspection of the temple (Mk.ll :11), and his purging of its abuses (11 :15), and his forbidding of traffic across the temple court (11 :16)?

John’s gospel (12 : 16) declares specifically that at the time the disciples did not understand the relevance of this Old Testament prophecy to their Lord’s unusual action, “but when Christ was glorified, then remembered they that these things were written of him.” So this commentary is a typical and important example of the Holy Spirit “bringing all things to their remembrance” and “guiding them into all truth” (Jn.l4:26; 16:13).

The days are yet to come when this prophecy will find further fulfilment, much more vivid than its prototype, for its true reference is to the Second Coming.

2.

It can hardly be accident that in both John and Matthew the opening phrase of Zechariah 9 :9: “Rejoice greatly,” is changed. The Galileans did rejoice greatly, because they thought they were about to witness the ultimate fulfilment of all their great Messianic aspirations. But the “daughter of Zion” did not share the rejoicing then. In the city there was either cynical indifference or open hostility. So, guided by the Spirit of truth, Matthew has written: “Tell ye … ,” and this the excited disciples did. But John has substituted: “Fear not, daughter of Zion.” How ironically apt was this change, for the rulers of Jerusalem were shaking in their shoes. But this modified quote was also intended to recall the similar scripture in Zephaniah 3 :14-18 where once again a prophecy of Messiah’s kingdom has many expressions singularly appropriate to the present occasion. “The Lord hath cast out thine enemy (this is the cleansing of the temple): The King of Israel, even the Lord, is in the midst of thee (the cry of those lining the road) … In that day it shall be said to Jerusalem, Fear not .. The Lord thy God in the midst of thee is mighty .. . Behold, at that time I will deal with all them that afflict thee (the cleansing of the temple): and I will save (this is the name Jesus) her that halteth (the healing of the lame in the temple: Mt.21 :14).” The LXX of this passage has two allusions to the Feast, the solemn assembly (the Passover was just coming on).

There is much more fascinating detail, especially in LXX, in the earlier section of this prophecy (3:8-13).

3.

But Matthew’s quote of the Zechariah prophecy is introduced differently: “Tell ye the daughter of Zion .. .”This is Isaiah 62 :11, which continues thus: “Behold, thy salvation (Jesus) cometh;” and the immediate context is: “Go through, go through the gates; prepare ye the way of the people; cast up, cast up the highway; gather out the stones; lift up a standard for the people.” All this is remarkably appropriate to Christ’s Triumphal Entry.

4.

The synoptic gospels are all careful to mention that the Lord made his approach to the city via the Mount of Olives—this, surely, in anticipation of the familiar prophecy of the Last Days: “His feet shall stand in that day upon the mount of Olives” (Zech.14 :4). Also, Ezekiel foretold that the Glory of the Lord which moved from the temple to the Mount of Olives, and thence departed, would also return by the same route (Ez.10:4,19; 11 :23;43:2,4).

5.

When the disciples put their garments for Jesus to sit on as he rode the ass, there was deliberate imitation of the coronation of Jehu: “They hasted, and took every man his garment, and put it under him” (2 Kgs.9 :15). Forgetting that Zechariah describes the coming king as “lowly”, they were inviting Jesus to be a ruthless destroying Jehu.

6.

When the people saw Jesus riding into the city on an ass, how many of them recalled that the very Scripture which lays down how Passover shall be observed also pauses to assert that the Lamb redeems the ass (Ex.13 :13)? One of the early fathers, with a nice insight into Old Testament prophecy, went so far as to assert dogmatically that when the disciples went for the ass and colt, they found them, tethered to a vine (Gen.49:11)

7.

The shout of the multitude: “Hosanna, blessed is he that cometh in the name of the lord,” was conscious appropriation of another familiar Messianic prophecy (Ps.118 :25,26); and the proceeding verse describes the intense but mistaken rejoicing of the multitude (Lk.19:37). It is not within the scope of this study to explore all the Messianic foreshadowings of this psalm. But some of them have a close bearing on the Triumphal Entry; e.g. “Open to me the gates of righteousness … this gate of the Lord into which the righteous shall enter” (v. 19,20) anticipates the Lord’s inspection of the temple. And in verse 27, where the A.V. has “bind the sacrifice with cords, even unto the horns of the altar”(words appropriate enough to the Lord’s final visit to Jerusalem), the LXX has “celebrate the feast (Passover) with garlands (or, branches),” which is precisely what the people did. And the Greek text of verse 28: “thou art my God, I will exalt thee,” is very close to the cry of the crowd: “Glory to God in the highest.” Normally the psalm was used at the climax of the Feast of Tabernacles. That the people, in both word and action, should deem it suitable now shows that they thought Messiah’s kingdom, foreshadowed by that feast, was about to be set up.

8.

There is yet another dramatic irony about that “Hosanna” cry (which Hebrew word actually comes from the same root as the name Jesus), because it probably reminded the Son of …man, sick at heart, of a very different Hosanna, in a psalm of suffering which on two other occasions he was to apply to himself: “Return, O Lord, deliver my soul: oh save me for thy mercies sake” (Ps.6:4;Jn.l2 :27; Mt.26:38).

9.

Can there be any doubt that the Lord’s action this day was intended to set the people and rulers thinking about Jeremiah’s solemn words: “If ye do this thing indeed, then there shall enter in by the gates of this house (the temple?) kings (probably an intensive plural, meaning a great King!) sitting upon the throne of David, riding in chariots and on horses (the cherubim?), he and his servants, and his people. But if ye will not hear these words, I swear by myself, saith the Lord (thus putting the Promise to Abraham in reverse; Gen.22 :16), that this house shall become a desolation” (22 :4). Compare also Jeremiah 17 :24-27.

10.

“If these should hold their peace, the Stones would immediately cry out.” The Lord’s allusion to Habakkuk 2:11 is surely one of the most puzzling Bible references ever made: “The stone shall cry out of the wall, and the beam out of the timber shall answer it.” The primary reference of these words to a prophetic rebuke of the oppressor’s ruthlessness (if indeed that is the idea) is left far behind. Did Jesus envisage the very stones of the temple protesting because the Stone destined to be the head of the corner was rejected by the builders (Ps.118 :22)?See also Study 157 on this.

11.

The picture of Christ weeping over Jerusalem is one of the most moving in the gospels. Yet, noted by his enemies, or reported to them afterwards, it became an occasion for their jibes and mockery; “When I wept, and chastened my soul with fasting, that was to my reproach . . . They that sit in the gate speak against me; and I was the song or the drunkards” (Ps.69 :10,12). The words are found in a psalm which has copious links with the sufferings of Messiah (v.4,8,9,21,22,25).

12.

“Peace in heaven, and glory in the highest,” shouted the people, praising God will) a loud voice. But Jesus wept because Jerusaem “did not know the things which belong unit peace.” Both used the word “peace” in its specialised Bible sense of “peace with God.” The multitude probably had in mind the high-priestly blessing on the Day of Atonement: “The Lord lift up the light of his countenance upon thee, and give thee peace” (Num.6 :26). It meant God’s full acceptance of the people, and His forgiveness of the nation’s sins. But there can be no peace with God whilst there is hostility or indifference to the Son of God. “The things that make for peace” are, quite simply, total surrender, as in the parable of the king at war (Lk.14 :32), where precisely the same phrase is used. This expression also supplies an illuminating link with a wide range of Old Testament prophecies. First, and most obviously, with Zechariah 9 once again: “He shall speak peace to the Gentiles” (v.10). Also, the familiar words of Isaiah 53: “A man of sorrows and acquainted with grief… the chastisement of our peace was upon him” (53 :3,4). But Jeremiah 8 was surely the Scripture which Jesus had specially in mind: “They have rejected the word of the Lord . . . from the prophet unto the priest every one dealeth falsely. And they have healed the hurt of the daughter of my people, saying Peace, peace; when there is no peace … in the time of their visitation (Lk.19 :44) they shall be cast down . . . there shall be no grapes on the vine, nor figs on the fig tree (Mk.ll ;13,14)… We looked for peace, but no good came… Is not the lord in Zion? is not her king in her? (Lk.19:38)… For the hurt of the daughter of my people I am hurt (Lk.19 :41).” The words need no commentary. Could anything be written more aptly anticipating this unique day of triumph and sorrow?

13.

“The days shall come upon thee, that thine enemies shall cast a trench about thee, and compass thee around, and keep thee in on wry side, and shall lay thee even with the ground.” This, too, was plainly anticipated by the prophets who, in turn, illuminated the mournful expectations of the dejected Son of God. The prognostications of Ezekiel (4 :l-8; and Jer.6 :6) were by no means exhausted when the siege of Jerusalem took place in his own day. But Isaiah 29 is perhaps the most pungent of all: “Woe to Ariel, to Ariel, the city where David dwelt:… let the feasts come round …there shall be mourning and lamentation … And I will camp against thee round about, and will lay siege against thee with a mount, and I will raise forts against thee. And thou shalt be brought down, and shalt speak out of the ground (Israel dead, yet alive)… the Lord hath closed your eyes the prophets: and your rulers, the seers, hath he covered.” (v.1-4, 10).

The sequence of testimonies cited here does not exhaust the list of those Scriptures which could have borne witness with the Son of God to the multitudes, both cheering and scornful, at Jerusalem. But in their excitement or their hatred they heard neither Moses nor the prophets.

One other contemplation forces itself on the mind. If so many Old Testament prophecies cluster round this particular incident in the ministry of Jesus, is it not likely that the same is true of many another significant event in that short three-and-a-half years? Then how much other Old Testament exposition of gospels i*’ being missed by disciples today?(Jn.12 :16).

155. Jesus Anointed (Matt. 26:6-l 3; Mark 14:3-9; John 12:1-11)*

Three of the gospels describe an anointing of Jesus at Bethany in the last week of his ministry. But there are certain differences of detail which have led many to conclude that the anointing described by Matthew and Mark was a different occasion from that in John 12:

  1. The timing is different—”after two days was the Passover” “six days before the passover.”
  2. The place was different —”the house of Simon the leper,” “Bethany where Lazarus was.”
  3. The anointing was different-“she poured it on his head” “she anointed the feet of Jesus.”
  4. The source of the grumbling was different-“when the disciples saw it, they were indignant,” but in John it is Judas Iscariot who complained.

On the other hand, in the two incidents there is such an accumulation of similarities —and these of an exceptional kind-that it is difficult to believe that they happened all together twice over within a day or two of each other:

  1. Both at Bethany.
  2. In each case an anointing of Jesus whilst he was at the meal table.
  3. Mark and John use the same highly unusual word to describe the ointment.
  4. There is the same disapproval, and for the same reason.
  5. In reply Jesus makes the same defence: “it is for my burial.”
  6. And he adds the identical extenuation: “The poor ye have always with you.”

Can these extraordinary resemblances be explained as sheer coincidence?

Discordance reconciled

When the earlier list of discordant details is examined afresh, it turns out that they are by no means as serious as might appear at first. Thus the conclusion becomes highly probable that John’s record describes the same incident as that in Matthew 26 and Mark 14.

  1. Both Matthew and Mark set their record of the anointing as an immediate prelude to the betrayal: “And Judas Iscariot, one of the twelve, went away unto the chief priests, to betray him unto them” (Mark 14 :10). Thus, verses 3-9-the anointing, culminating in the rebuke of Judas —can be regarded as a deliberate chronological dislocation inserted in parenthesis at this place in order to supply the final decisive reason why Judas should decide to betray his Master.
  2. The place. Simon the leper was obviously a healed leper, or his home would have been no fit place for Jesus and the twelve to be accorded hospitality. And how could he have been healed except by Jesus? The home at Bethany is called Martha’s (Lk.10 :38). Then is there anything impossible about the simple conclusion that Simon was Martha’s husband? or, alternatively, that Simon was the father of Martha, Mary and Lazarus? The name Lazarus may be Hebrew for “belonging to the leper.”
  3. It is possible to show that, both the head and the feet of Jesus were anointed. John’s careful time note: “six days before the passover” identifies the date (by inclusive reckoning) as the tenth day of Nisan, for the Passover feast was eaten on the fifteenth. But on this day, according to Exodus 12 :3, the paschal lamb was set aside for sacrifice. Thus in his record John was hinting at the identification of Jesus as the true Lamb of God. More than this, when prepared for the feast, the lamb was to be roasted whole: “his head with his legs” (Ex.12 :9). So with evident understanding of this typical detail Mary anointed both head and feet of Jesus. “To anoint my body” (Mk.14 :8) implies more than the head only. Thus she marked him out as the one fully consecrated to fulfil God’s great redeeming work. A further detail chimes in with this: “Let her alone,” said Jesus, “against the day of my burying hath she kept this” (Jn. 12:7). The usual idea, of ointment specially saved up or set aside, is quite mistaken. With hardly an exception this word is used in John’s gospel and Apocalypse with reference to the keeping of commandments-in this case, the Passover commandment, now turned from type to yet more poignant symbolism.
  4. Who did the complaining? What more natural that this?- that Judas was the first to speak his mind about this, and promptly found support from some of the others. Probably Judas spoke up because he was a member of the family! —”the son of Simon” (Jn.6 :71). Of course Judas was right in his criticism, but Mary, pulled in two directions (as happens with many a disciple) had to make a choice. Of course her decision was the right one.

It follows, then, that the three records should be studied together as accounts of the same incident.

The six days

If the time note just discussed has been correctly interpreted, it is possible to calculate backwards from the crucifixion in this way:

15th Nisan was Friday night (when the passover was eaten by the Jews) and Saturday

14th Nisan: Thursday night and Friday (the day of crucifixion).

13th Nisan: Wednesday night and Thursday.

12th Nisan: Tuesday night and Wednesday

11th Nisan: Monday night and Tuesday.

10th Nisan: Sunday night and Monday (“six days before the Passover”).

So it would seem that Jesus rested during the sabbath (Saturday) at the home of Zaccheusin Jericho, and then spent the Sunday on the twenty mile walk to Bethany, “where Lazarus was, whom he raised from the dead.”

The repeated emphasis on the fact of Lazarus’ resurrection (Jn.11 :45,47; 12 :1,9,10,17) is rather striking. It continues to underline the reality and purpose of the miracle-“for the glory of God, that the Son of God might be glorified thereby.”

The anointing

It was now Sunday evening, supper-time at that Bethany home. The tenth day of Nisan had just begun. Martha, intensely domestic and practical as ever, had made all preparation, and she actually served Jesus, even though it was a wealthy household and there was certainly no need for her to do this. It was her act of homage and thanks to the Master.

Of course, Lazarus was there-and Simon, too, doubtless—reclining at the meal table. The close connection between the resurrection and food is not to be missed. It finds too frequent emphasis in Scripture to be unimportant. (Mk.5:43;Mt. 26:29; Lk. 24:41-43; Jn. 12:1,2; Acts l:4RVm; 10:41. And also Lk. 22:16; Rev. 2:7; 3:20; 19:9; Ex. 24:11; Jn. 6:33,40-1,50,51,54,58).

As the meal was in progress, Mary came up behind Jesus carrying an alabaster container holding nearly a pound weight of a rare and precious ointment. This nard was prepared from a plant which is said to grow only in the Himalayas. So its use signified an anointing as distinguished in the sight of God as that of the high priest (see Ex.30 :23; Ps.133 :2).

Mary, who goes unnamed by Matthew and Mark until the crucifixion (Study 74), broke the neck of the jar open, and poured a quantity of its fragrant contents on the head of Jesus. This was a wonderful gesture of devotion, for the value of that ointment was something like £4000-more than double what was paid to Judas. (A week later Mary was to have ointment of yet greater fragrance to break; Jn. 20 :16,17).

Not content to express her homage by so singular an action, she now knelt at his feet and poured the rest of the spikenard over them-those travel-worn feet which had tramped hundreds of miles on the rough roads of Galilee and Judaea. Next she proceeded to wipe them with her hair, so that by the same action she was herself anointed.

“And the house was filled with the fragrance of the ointment.” Like a similar act of generous devotion by which the ecclesia at Philippi expressed its love for Paul, this was “an odour of a sweet smell, a sacrifice acceptable, well-pleasing to God” (Phil.4 :18).

Why did Mary express her love for Christ in such an unusual fashion? On an earlier occasion she had achieved the same result by simply sitting and listening to his teaching (Lk.10 :39). Then why this extravagant gesture?

In Study 73 evidence was offered for equating Mary of Bethany with the sinful woman who anointed Jesus in the house of Simon the Pharisee(Lk.7). If the conclusion reached there is correct, Mary was now, in a deliberate recapitulation of that earlier experience, expressing her thanks, otherwise inexpressible, for her redemption from a sordid past into a life of gracious discipleship.

The resemblances between the two incidents are considerable:

  • the host Simon;
  • an alabaster box;
  • anointing of the feet;
  • at the meal table;
  • the wiping of feet with her hair;
  • unvocal indignation;
  • the Lord’s awareness of this, and his rebuke;
  • “Forgive her!”

Some have puzzled over the fact of Mary, a devoted disciple of Jesus, having such an expensive cosmetic. The character of the old life, mentioned in Luke 7, is more than adequate explanation. The breaking of the valuable alabaster was thus specially eloquent!

Over and above all this, she now had added reason for silent worship-her brother Lazarus, whom she had seen borne to his rock-hewn tomb some weeks before, was there with Jesus at the table.

Nor was this all. In anointing the head of Jesus she proclaimed in matchless fashion her conviction that he was the Messiah, the Anointed One of God. But when in addition, she anointed his feet, on this tenth day of Nisan (Ex.12:9), she declared also her faith in him as the Lamb of God through whom would come a release from a greater bondage than that of Egypt or Rome. No wonder that the gospels describe her offering as pistic nard-faith ointment (Gk: pistis).

The gospel writers, and the early church instructed by them, saw all kinds of eloquent symbolism here. “While the king sitteth at his table, my spikenard sendeth forth the smell thereof” (S. of S. 1 :12). That lovely smell filled the house just as the glory of the God of Israel had filled the temple when first His people offered worship to him there (IKgs.8 :10,11).

Perhaps there was also symbolism of a more melancholy character. For the only other place where the Bible speaks of alabaster is in the prophecy when God foretold “such evil upon Jerusalem and Judah … wiping Jerusalem as a man wipes a dish (alabaster), wiping it, and turning it upside down” (2 Kgs.21 .-12,13). Is that why the gospels are careful to mention, contrary to all expectation, that Mary broke the container, making it fit only to be discarded?

Murmuring

The disciples witnessed Mary’s extraordinary act of homage in amazement. Why should she do such a thing? Was their Master a fop or court dandy to take vain delight in cosmetics like an empty-headed woman? —the Son of man who often had not where to lay his head and who for months past had driven himself almost past endurance in his last earnest intense appeal in every city and village! They failed to recognize that the affection and understanding behind Mary’s action could not have been expressed without action itself!

Judas especially resented the fantastic waste involved. All through the Lord’s mission he had been responsible for their common fund. The gifts of well-wishers and thankful beneficiaries came into his care. During the past year (Jn.6 :70,71) he had become more and more disaffected. So as an insurance policy he had steadily misappropriated the funds. Some of these were already invested in real estate (Acts 1 :18). Yet Jesus continued to tolerate such a man in his ecclesia!

The high-minded protest which he now made to Mary as she was moving away clothed a disreputable motive: “Why was not this ointment sold for three hundred pence (he knew the value of it!), and given to the poor?” After all, care of the poor was a well-recognized expression of Passover piety (Jn.13 :29). And was it not only a day or two before this that they had heard Jesus himself address such an exhortation to the rich young ruler (Lk.18 :22)? Judas may even have added a pointed rhetorical question such as: “Why ever was this ointment bought in the first place?”

Some of the other disciples backed Judas up in this. Even so they were careful to make their criticism direct to Mary and out of earshot of Jesus (Mk.). They had forgotten the marvellous power which their Lord had—that uncanny awareness of what was going on in the minds of those around him.

Reproof and vindication

As Mary’s tears began to flow, Jesus took the disciples to task, and no doubt directed his rebuke specially at Judas: “Let her alone;” or, more probably, this should read, ironically: “Forgive her!” “Why trouble ye her? (Jesus went on). She hath wrought a beautiful work in me. Against the day of my burying hath she observed this rite. (Yet, applied to a living Jesus, it was also “an holy anointing oil” fit for a high priest; Ex.30 :25). For always ye have the poor with you (Bethany means the town of the poor?), and whenever you wish you may do a kindness to them, but me ye do not have always.”

“For my burial.” These were sombre words, yet Jesus spoke of “this gospel, this good news.” What were his disciples to make of it? And it would appear that this was the only anointing for burial that Jesus got. Spices were put, in quantity, between the rolls of his burial linen (Jn.19 :39), but evidently there was no opportunity for anointing. And when the women would make this good on the morning of the third day (Mk.16 :1) Jesus was already risen.

Judas and his fellows needed the rebuke. True, the Law of Moses gave them pointed reminder that “the poor shall never cease out of the land” (Dt.15 :11). Thus it impressed the need for unfailing big-hearted charity. But at this moment Jesus, the Son of Almighty God, was the most needy of all. What a week lay before him! So it was not waste. Not only did Jesus benefit (and he so sublimely!) but also Mary, in the expression of her faith and in the commendation that followed; the disciples also, then and in every age, from the rare example before them and in the needful lesson which Jesus quietly but firmly urged upon them; and even the poor have gained blessing as the words of Jesus have come echoing through many stricken generations.

Jesus spoke his thanks to Mary as no other man could have spoken them: “Verily I say unto you, Wheresoever this gospel shall be preached throughout the whole world, this also that she hath done shall be spoken of for a memorial of her.” To be spoken by any man but Jesus these words would be the most reckless of all reckless prophecies. Yet they have been literally and stupendously true.

John’s gospel does not have this gracious saying, but instead John records: “And the house was filled with the odour of the ointment,” And so it has been, from that day to this. There is no corner of the House of God where that fragrance has not given surpassing pleasure.

How Mary deserved this warm acknowledgment! For, wrapped up in that one action was her personal conviction that Jesus could not only redeem from a life of worthlessness, he was God’s appointed High Priest and promised King; yet he must, and would, suffer as a Lamb of sacrifice to save his people from their sins and deliver then permanently from its bondage. At this time was there any other person with half the insight of Mary of Bethany?

It is worth while here to note the sustained contrast between Judas and Mary. His money box (Gk.) is set over against her box of ointment. He received thirty pieces of silver; she gave more than three hundred pence. He was covetous and a thief; she was liberal. He expressed “care” for the poor; she told her love for the Lord. He came to a most miserable end; her fame has never been dimmed.

Public interest

To the story of the anointing of Jesus John’s gospel adds a highly informative appendix. A great crowd of “the Jews,” hearing that Jesus had reached Bethany, came out from Jerusalem to see him. Since in this gospel “the Jews” invariably means “the Jewish scribes and rulers”, there is here an intimation of a strong movement in sympathy with Jesus among the influential classes in Jerusalem (v.42). It must have been on the Monday morning when they came out to Bethany.

They were drawn there also by a compelling curiosity regarding Lazarus. Not that they expected a man raised from the dead to look drastically different from normal, but they wished, of course, to question him about his experience and to check the accuracy of the reports they had heard.

The outcome was that many of them “were going away (from loyalty to the chief priests) and were believing on Jesus.” This only served to intensify the hostility of the ruling caucus. It put point to their earlier resolution to be rid of Jesus. So now, “they consulted that they might put Lazarus also to death.” Presumably the only thing which saved Lazarus (humanly speaking; was the fact that the Bethany family was so well known and of such high character that no charge of any kind could possibly be brought against any of them.

Notes: Jn. 12:1 -8

1.

Came to Bethany It is easy to trace ‘he Lord’s travel: Ephraim in Peraea (Jn. 11:54), Jericho (Mt 20:29), Bethany (Jn. 12:1)

2.

Martha served. There is an undesigned coincidence here; see Lk, 10:38ff

3.

His feet. It is an unanswered problem why there is here no mention of the anointing of the Lord’s head.

6.

The bag Literally, box; s.w. 2 Sam.6 :11. where Uzzah died, but Obededom was blessed. So also here — .Judas and Mary.

Bare.This is the normal meaning of the word. But 20 15: “takeaway” supports the idea of theft here, see RV.

8.

Me ye have not always Contrast Mt.28 :20, after his resurrection

Mt. 26:6-13

8.

Mk. says “she break the box.” How did she do this? It wouldn’t be easy.

This waste. Jn.17 :12 applies the same word to Judas himself!

13.

For a memorial of her. “My burial . . . her memorial.” Christ was to have his own special memorial; Lk.22 :19, Ex.12:14.

153. Blind Bartimaeus (Matt. 20 :29-34; Mark 10 :46-52; Luke 18:35-43)*

There are certain difficulties in harmonizing the synoptic records about this miracle. Luke says: “as Jesus was come nigh to Jericho.” In Matthew and Mark, he was leaving Jericho when he healed Bartimaeus.

Various explanations have been offered. The one which makes “drew nigh” as equivalent to “when he was in the vicinity of Jericho” has the weakness of ignoring the most usual and most obvious meaning of the Greek word (a glance at the concordance demonstrates this).

Another suggestion is that at that time there were two separate cities of Jericho—the old, rather squalid Jewish city, and the fine new town lately built by the Herods. Thus Matthew and Mark describe Jesus as leaving the former, whilst Luke has in mind the approach to the latter. This is possible, though there seem to be doubts whether Old Jericho was inhabited at all at this time.

The solution proposed by Bullinger is to take the three records as describing entirely different incidents: “it will be readily seen that there were three separate miracles on the Lord’s visit to Jericho.” This stretches the long arm of coincidence just a bit too far. That three healings so marvellously similar in detail should happen at almost the same place at nearly the same time is not impossible, but is a trifle improbable. And it becomes all the more unlikely when the same commentator proceeds to apply the same method over and over again, duplicating and triplicating one gospel incident after another.

A better solution

A much more likely solution is on these lines: The blind man appealed to Jesus as he entered the city (Lk.) but had no response. Later when Jesus was leaving Jericho (Mt.), Bartimaeus had already planted himself by the Jerusalem gate, this time accompanied by a fellow sufferer (Mt.); together they pleaded to be healed, and had the reward of their faith. This simple suggestion explains also how Matthew’s mention of two blind men is no contradiction of Mark and Luke.

A careful examination of some of the Greek verbs provides a certain amount of supporting evidence for this view. In Luke 18:36 the multitude is “passing through”—not passing through Jericho, for there had been an overnight stay. It must be: passing through the city gate. In Matthew he is “leaving” (in the New Testament this word usually has the idea of departure)

It has to be assumed, of course, that Luke, having begun the story of the blind man in connection with the Lord’s approach to Jericho, goes on to complete it, even at the expense of getting the rest of the story chronologically dislocated by putting the conclusion of it before the encounter with Zaccheus. This is no serious difficulty. Matthew does exactly the same thing with the cursing of the fig tree (21:18-22, and parallels), and with the anointing of Jesus at Bethany (26 :6-13; cp. Jn.12 :l-8). Very probably, another example is Luke’s placing of the argument amongst the disciples in the upper room(22:24;cp.Jn.l3:4ff).

This Bartimaeus may have been a Gentile. Certainly Timaeus has a strong Greek flavour about it. But another suggestion, not too well supported, is that the name links with an Aramaic word for “blind.” The prefix “bar” is the Gentile equivalent of the Hebrew ben.

His first appeal

Passover time was a good season for all mendicants. They did well out of the piety of the many pilgrims passing through to Jerusalem. The unusual crowd and noise set beggar Bartimaeus wondering whatever was afoot. Mention of the name Jesus (in response to his repeated enquiries: Lk.), immediately told him everything, for by this time every soul in Palestine had heard of the man of Nazareth. Perhaps he knew of the close association of the name Nazareth (Branch-town) with the great Messianic prophecies about “the Branch out of the stem of Jesse” (Is. 11 :1 etc.), for immediately he began a fusillade of entreaties, shouting out at the top of his voice: “Jesus, Lord, Son of David, have mercy on me.” He had heard enough stories about the power and the compassion of Jesus to feel confident that this heir to David’s throne both could and would come to his aid. His words were a great confession of faith, the more so that they came from a Gentile.

Alas, there was no response out of the darkness which enfolded him. The crowd, and Jesus with it, moved on, and he was left in a depressing, faith-testing loneliness.

A year before this a Canaanite woman, equally convinced that Jesus was the Messianic Son of David, had clamoured for his healing aid on behalf of her stricken daughter. Yet for long enough her importunities both to Master one disciples had gone unheeded. Not to be gainsaid, she had persisted in thrusting her desperate need before him, and all at once faith had its reward. It is hardly likely that this blind beggar had heard the story. Yet his reaction to present discouragement was just the same

Soon he heard-who in that busy populous place didn’t?—that Jesus was to stay over the sabbath at the sumptuous home of Zaccheus. needed no extraordinary powers of deduction to conclude thai at some time in the morning after the sabbath Jesus and his party would be passing through the Jerusalem gate en route for the holy city.

A second attempt

Accordingly, soon after dawn that day Bartimaeus posted himself there. It was, in any case, the most lucrative pitch he could hope to have for his begging. On this occasion he was joined by another poor fellow, afflicted as he was. Over the weekend the robust faith of Bartimaeus had infected this blind friend also. Now with ears alert for the crowd of Galilean pilgrims, with Jesus in their midst, they waited.

Matthew’s fondness for reporting two blind men where Mark and Luke have only one is not to be written off as due to a penchant for exaggeration. If he says two blind men, then there were two. This is just one of Matthew’s devices for preparing his Jewish readers for the accession of the Gentiles into the ranks of Christ’s ecclesia (8:28; 9:27; 21 :2; 15:38).

By and by expectations were realised. It needed only quick enquiry of a passer-by, and they knew that Jesus and his men were approaching. Thereupon their clamant importunity began. Two lusty voices kept up a ceaseless cry: “Lord, have mercy on us, thou son of David.” There is too much similarity here to Mt.9 :27 to be written off as coincidence. Then had they heard of the earlier miracle and were now attempting deliberate imitation?

Again, that cry: “Son of David” invites comparison with the account of David’s conquest of Jerusalem (2 Sam.5 :8). There the blind and the lame, who vexed David’s soul by their self-confident taunts, brought a ban on all blind and all lame from entering the temple (“the House”). But now there was a blind Gentile who believed that the Son of David would make Jerusalem his capital. So for him there was only blessing.

Some who were at the head of the throng (Lk.) were annoyed at their loud shouts. Perhaps Jesus was teaching as he went, and so the interruption was resented. Or perhaps they were indignant at what they considered a crude use of a Messianic title in addressing Jesus. If Bartimaeus was known or seen to be a Gentile, their annoyance would be the more evident, In any case, some of them had probably noticed the way in which Jesus had ignored the cries of Bartimaeus when he entered Jericho on the sabbath eve. Then why could not this beggar learn that Jesus had no time for a dog of a Gentile such as he? So, roughly, the two noisy fellows were told to shut up.

But they knew that this was the greatest opportunity which would ever present itself in all their pathetic wretched stricken existence, and they re-doubled their efforts. The crowd was now abreast of them, and still no sign of response to their pleading. A few seconds more, and they could tell from the receding sound of feet that again Jesus had apparently passed by without any notice being taken of them in their misery.

Their cries continued, more urgent than ever, but now there was a note of piteous disappointment in their voices at the prospect of being left for ever in their darkness and poverty.

Importunity succeeds

All this time, and on the earlier occasion also, Jesus had known of the clamant need of these men of faith. And all the time that he had seemingly ignored with stony indifference the cries they sent after him, he had been torn between deep compassion for their wretchedness and a solemn responsibility to give his efforts to “the lost sheep of the house of Israel.”

But now that note of bitter disappointment in their voices was too much for him (Mr.). He stopped and bade those, who a minute before had been scolding them, to bring them to him (Lk.). But they didn’t need to. For someone called out: ‘Cheer up! Bestir yourself; he’s calling for you’ (Mk.).

Bartimaeus needed no further exhortation, He was on his feet in a moment, simultaneously shrugging off his outer garment and flinging it from him (s.w. Heb.10 :35; cp. Mt.3 :44,46; Phil.3 :7), so that he might move more freely. Thus he expressed his conviction that by and by he would be able to see to retrieve it. There was no waiting for someone to take him by the hand. Without a second’s hesitation he began walking towards the voice of Jesus.

“What do you want for yourself?” Jesus asked, “I will do it.” Perhaps he was merely asking for money, as he normally did.

“Rabboni,” he answered (Mk.), choosing carefully a title of high honour, “I want my sight back” (NEB) “Yes, Lord,” added the other, “let our eyes be opened” (Mt.).

They felt his fingers moving gently across their eyes (Mt.), and heard quiet words of pity break from his lips. Then he said firmly: “Yes, have your sight back” (Lk.). And they did. With their first moment of renewed vision each looked straight into the eyes of Jesus, and they heard that wonderful double entendre which he loved to use: “Your faith has saved you” (Mk.5 34; Lk.750;8:48; 17:19; 18:42).

“And now, away you go,” Jesus bade them (Mk.), only to be met by point-blank disobedience. They stayed in the crowd, glorifying God with their ceaseless ejaculations of wonder and thanksgiving, and they followed the Son of David to Jerusalem. No doubt they thought it the road to a throne, but instead they found it the way to a cross.

Witnessing the miracle, and thoroughly assured of its truth, the people in the throng gave voice to enthusiastic praise of God for such a work of lovingkindness. Did they sing Psalm 146?. “Happy is he that hath the God of Jacob for his help, whose hope is in the Lord his God . . ,The Lord openeth the eyes of the blind . . . The Lord preserveth the strangers . . . The Lord shall reign for ever, even thy God, O Zion. Hallelujah.”

Or was Isaiah 35 their theme?: “Be strong, fear not: behold your God, even God with a recompense (= Bartimaeus?); he will come and save you. Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf unstopped . . . And a highway shall be there . . . The way of holiness… and he shall be with them walking in the way .. . And the ransomed of the Lord shall return, and come to Zion with songs and everlasting joy upon their heads.”

Acted parable

In this healing of Bartimaeus there is a remarkable foreshadowing of the gospel to the Gentiles.

The poor man’s blindness and begging are to be seen as a picture of the Gentile’s need for light, a need only to be met by the help of Jews, the chosen people. Their cry for help, disregarded by Jesus, is the counterpart to the Lord’s ministry to his own people—”I am not sent but to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.” And as they were a people under the curse of the Law, so also was Jericho a city of curse (Josh.6:26;l Kgs 16:34).

Jesus rested at the home of Zaccheus from Friday afternoon to Sunday, precisely the time that he lay in the tomb a week later. Thus leaving Jericho corresponds to the resurrection of Jesus. After this there was even more intense eagerness on the part of the Gentiles to enjoy the light of the gospel. The rebuke of Bartimaeus by those going before appropriately prefigured the reluctance of the early church to share their spiritual blessings with the Gentile God-fearers. But the compassion of Christ was not to be inhibited—the Gentiles were called to come to him, and this they did with alacrity. The filthy garments of their own unrighteousness were readily cast aside. The greeting “Rabboni” shows a Gentile who has become a Jew-and more than this, one believing in the risen Christ (see Jn.20 :16, the only other occurrence of the word). Nor is it accident that “Have mercy on us” is the Old Testament phrase for the forgiveness of sins. Touched by the finger of power (the Holy Spirit in the early church; see Lk.ll :20), the Gentiles gained a new spiritual sight, and, glorifying God, they gladly followed Christ, knowing themselves to be saved not by their own intrinsic merit but by faith in the Son of David and his Messianic Kingdom.

Notes: Mk. l0:46-52

46.

Jericho was also “the city of palm trees” (Dt. 34:3) — and palm trees are (in almost every mention) a symbol of Gentiles (Study 157).

47.

Son of David. Note the striking occurrences of this Messianic title: Mt. 9:27; 12:23; 15:22; 21:9,15.

Bartimaeus, the son of Timaeus. An obvious pleonasm. Why? 49. There is a dramatic emphasis on “call . . . call . . . call.”

51.

That I might receive my sight. Not subjunctive, but (in Gk.) a future indicative-a subtle expression of faith in Jesus. The NEB reading is very graphic, but not necessarily correct; e.g. Jn. 9:11,15,18.

52.

It is only Mt. (not Lk.) who mentions here the touch with healing power.

See also: Mk. 1:41;7:33;8:15;9:29; 17:7;20:34;Lk.7:14;22:51. It is Lk. who adds: ‘glorified God,” a reaction which was always the result of a miracle: Lk. 2:20; 5:25,26; 7:16; 13:13; 17:15; 18:43; 23:4

157. The King and his City (Matt. 21:1-11; Mark 11:1-11; Luke 19:29-44; John 12:12-19)*

It was Monday mid-day, or even later, when Jesus left Bethany with a group of his disciples to go into Jerusalem. The arrival of a considerable number of citizens of Jerusalem prevented his making an early start. Word had gone round about Jesus’ return to Bethany. So there came also a multitude of Passover pilgrims bearing palm branches and expressing with loud cries their conviction that the Messianic age was about to begin.

Excitement was all the greater because Lazarus was there. Evidently Jesus had perceived that angry Jewish leaders, eager to destroy the evidence that a man had risen from the dead, were set on destroying Lazarus. So when it became necessary to find sanctuary east of Jordan, Lazarus went also, for safety’s sake (Jn,12:10).

Now that Lazarus was back, there was intense eagerness to see a man who had died and had been brought back to life four days Inter. And besides Lazarus there were plenty of witnesses to talk to about that amazing sign.

So “the whole multitude of disciples began to . . . praise God with a loud voice for all the mighty works which they had seen” (Lk.19 :37). What other “mighty works” besides beholding Lazarus alive and Bartimaeus seeing?

As Jesus and his followers approached Bethphage, he commissioned two of the twelve to go forward into the village. Almost certainly one of the two was Peter, for Mark (Peter’s amanuensis) gives a specially detailed description such as could hardly have come from any but an eye-witness. He was probably accompanied by John, for these two were to be given a similar errand together later in the week (Lk.22:8).

Borrowing two animals

Their task now was both unusual and menial—to fetch an ass and its colt, and bring them to Jesus. Was the Lord using this practical method of impressing on two of his leading disciples the lesson of humility and service about which he had spoken so weightily a short while before?

Their instructions were very precise, and everything transpired exactly as Jesus said. As soon as they came to the village they found the two beasts tethered out in the open street by the door of a house. Those who had responsibility for the animals and saw the disciples untying them naturally questioned their authority to do this. The reply, according to instructions, was: “The Lord hath need of him.”

It is known that Herod had a palace on the Mount of Olives (see Notes), and that he was “in residence” for that Passover, so since the wife of Chuza, Herod’s steward, was a faithful disciple (Lk.8 :3), there is fair probability that it was with her help that arrangement had been made beforehand for Jesus to have the use of the ass and its colt.

Should the reading of this unusual incident be taken a step further by enquiring whether it was necessary for Jesus to borrow the animals in this way? Would not that wealthy family at Bethany have an ass to put at his service, or at least be able to borrow one for his use somewhere in their village? Then why should such an unusual means as this be adopted?

The explanation may be that, with connivance, it was king Herod’s own royal beast that was brought to Jesus. If so, there is close parallel with the coronation of Solomon, for it was on King David’s own mule that he rode to Gihon (1 Kgs.1 :33), thus declaring to all who witnessed that he was the true heir to the throne. Here now the same truth was to be made evident: not king Herod, but king Jesus.

This would also explain why the two disciples were to give the assurance: “The Lord hath need of them; and he will send them back again immediately”(Mk.), words which also carried an indirect intimation that the “triumphal” procession into the city was to be only a dress rehearsal, and not the real thing.

The password spoken by the disciples removed all objections, and they were allowed to bring the animals away.

When the throng realised that Jesus intended to ride thus into Jerusalem, their delight and enthusiasm knew no bounds. This was surely his way of proclaiming himself King of the Jews, in accordance with the familiar Messianic Scripture in Zechariah 9. So, eagerly falling in with the idea, they became the first to pledge their loyalty to King Jesus by throwing their garments on the back of the ass and the colt, that Jesus might sit on them. This was in imitation of the old custom, exemplified when usurper Jehu seized the reins of government (2 Kgs.9:13). Were they wanting Jesus to show himself a Jehu?

From Matthew’s text it would seem that Jesus rode the grown ass and then chose to change to its colt; or else (and this is more likely) the ass— which must have been well used to being ridden — unaccountably proved restive when he mounted it, so he transferred to the unbroken untrained colt, which normally would have been exceedingly troublesome; and this, although without saddle or bridle, now quietly carried Jesus amid all the excitement and hubbub in the multitude. There is much significant symbolism in these details (see Studies 158,171). Comments one writer: “The dumb ass rebukes the madness of the apostle (Judas).”

Jesus rode quietly on, intent on making a last unmistakable appeal to Jerusalem, not in all the panoply of royal pomp but by the quiet claim of a “still small voice”, the method which, centuries before, heavenly wisdom had commended to Elijah (1 Kgs.19 :11,12; contrast Jer.l7:25).

Lament over the city

As they turned the shoulder of the Mount of Olives, a large part of the holy city came suddenly into view. There, at a spot which today is quite definitely identifiable, the Lord paused and with eyes filled with emotion surveyed the place which had no use for him. Then suddenly he burst into tears, openly lamenting the sad fate which he knew Jerusalem had stored up for herself. But his hostile critics in the crowd curled their lips at the sight of such emotion (Ps.69:9-12).

What was the reaction of the disciples at the awesome sight of their strong Leader reduced to woman’s tears at a time when they would fain see him with a resolute glint of conquest in his eye and hear him urge them forward with a bold shout of encouragement? But instead:

“If thou hadst known, even thou—the Greek kai ge seems to imply: ‘if indeed that were possible-in this thy day the things which make for peace’ (Jer.8 :11; Ps.122 :5-9). He meant, of course, as he always meant, peace with God. But in all the land was there to be found a city more unresponsive, more truculent, than this City of Peace? “But now”, he went on, “they are hid from thine eyes” (as in Ex.9:12,16). Already it was obvious enough that, whatever else Jesus might attempt in the way of appeal to this city of God’s choice, nothing would change their indifference or hostility into humble faith and obedience. Retribution was now inevitable.

“The days shall come upon thee, that thine enemies shall cast a trench about thee, and compass thee round, and keep thee in on every side, and shall lay thee even with the ground, and thy children within thee (Lk.23 :28,29); and they shall not leave in thee one stone upon another.”

It was the terrible tale of A.D.70 told beforehand, all made inevitable by stonyhearted wilfulness. Jerusalem refused to acknowledge the one who came with tokens of authority far surpassing any of the prophets. It had thrust him aside. This week it would crucify him. And by these deeds it wrote its own doom in large capitals. Twelve times (in the Greek text) Jesus used “thee, thou, thy” with dreadful emphasis as he wept over this city of golden splendour, which a generation later was to become a scene of savage tumult and carnage. All this horrific progression to ruin, Titus, commander of the besieging Roman army, foresaw, and he set himself to save the city. Yet in spite of himself and against his own inclination he and his men did all that was now foretold, to the last syllable: “not one stone upon another.”

This, “because thou knewest not (refused to know!) the time of thy visitation” (Dt.32 :29; Lk.13 :34; Rom l0:19a,21). That crucial word carried a double meaning-the visitation of God in blessing and salvation (e.g. Ex.3:16)or, in judgment (e.g. Jer.8 :12; Is. 10 :3). Jerusalem recognized neither. “The Lord will not do good, neither will He do evil.”

Jerusalem means “Jehovah will cause peace (reconciliation) to be seen.” But this Jerusalem had shown no inclination to see such a peace, So now it was hidden from the nation’s eyes.

The rabbis had a saying: “If Israel be worthy, Messiah comes with the clouds of heaven (Dan.7 :13); if unworthy, riding upon an ass” (Zech.9:9).

The tumult and the shouting

Shrouded in sorrow, Jesus rode on down the hill to the Kidron and past the garden of Gethsemane. Every minute the crowd grew bigger. A really exciting situation was now building up. Many of the people cut branches from the trees, especially from the luxurious leafy date palms. These they waved with acclamation and cast in the road before Jesus to adorn his triumph. In their excitement many of them pulled off their garments and spread them in tribute before him.

But in truth their ovation was for a different Jesus from the one who now slowly and sadly passed on before them. The Jesus who intoxicated their imagination was one made in their own image—a man of power and resolution who right soon would restore to then afresh all the ancient glories of the kingdom of David. The Galileans, ever restless under the hated iron hand of Rome, were now ready at any moment to erupt into violent action-an almost uncontrollable mixture of religious zed and political inflammability.

They were the main, but not the only, element in the crowd. The gospels carefully distinguish the various reactions to Jesus as he now approached the city.

Close to him there were, of course, his own committed disciples (Mk.11 :9), now probably in grave danger of being swept away by the seething effervescence around them, for they were strongly infected with the same nationalistic spirit.

“Hosanna to the Son of David,” they all shouted. They may have meant: “Salvation by the Son of David. Hosanna! Save now!” They knew not what they asked. Their prayer was indeed answered, and before the week was out—but how differently from what they meant.

Their cry and their waving of palm branches were alike more appropriate to the Feast of Tabernacles (Lev.23 :40). But many of them, in a surge of genuine religious fervour, saw in the coming of Jesus a fulfilment of all which that feast foreshadowed: “They praised God with a loud voice” (Lk.).

It is not an easy matter to assign a precise idea to some of the acclamations reported in the gospels. What does “Hosanna in the highest” (Mt.) mean? And why the cry: “Peace in heaven” (Lk.)?

If the first of these is read (as the Greek text certainly allows): “(Grant) salvation now by means of those who are in the highest (heaven)”, the words are an eager prayer that by the exercise of angelic power God would bring in the Messianic kingdom.

“Peace in heaven” chimes in with this idea, when it is realised that God, the author of both good and “evil” circumstance in human experience (ls.45 :7; Am.3 :6), chooses to operate through the ministrations of not only angels of good but also angels of evil (Ps.78:49; Ex.12 :23; Acts 12 :7,23). Thus “peace in heaven” means the abolition of evil in the kingdom of Messiah, all the angels of God brought into one harmonious ministration of good for the blessing of Christ’s redeemed people.

“Blessed be the coming kingdom, the kingdom of our father David” (Mk.).

“It is probable that not a few who cried ‘Hosanna’ took part in crying ‘Crucify’ a few days later. This would be all the more likely to happen, because those who had shouted in the Messiah’s honour believed that they were escorting him to a throne which would restore the ancient glories of Israel. When they saw that nothing of the kind was going to take place they would visit their disappointment upon the object of their previous enthusiasm” (Plummer).

Other sections of the crowd

With the disciples, also, but not daring to join in the shouting, was a group of the more sympathetic Pharisees (“the Jews”). They had come out to Bethany that morning, and were now returning to the city with Jesus (Jn.12 :9,17). Some of these had been present when Jesus brought Lazarus from the tomb (Jn.11 :45).That morning they had spoken with Lazarus again, and knew there could be no arguing about that mighty miracle.

But there were also Pharisees of a very different kidney (Lk.)—men who valued their religious authority and prestige in the nation more than anything, and who would stick at nothing to hold on to it. As Jesus came in triumph into the city, these, exasperated beyond measure, with biting scorn bade Jesus quell the excitement which seethed all round him. What a superb unintentional tribute it was to him that they should deem him capable of such control over an undisciplined crowd!

Jesus swept their complaining aside: “I tell you that, if these should hold their peace, the stones would immediately cry out.” The Hebrew (and Aramaic) words for “sons (disciples)” and “stones” are almost the same. If disciples cannot praise God for their Messiah, then the temple itself will add its witness by crashing to the ground in a thunderous roar—”not one stone left upon another!”

Among themselves the Pharisees differed widely in their attitude to this bedlam of enthusiasm for Jesus. “Perceive ye how ye prevail nothing!” (Jn.). In more modern speech: ‘Look what’s happening! You can’t make any headway against this.’ The exasperated complaint to their president was: “Behold, the world is gone after him.” They used the word kosmos with reference to the Jewish world, but reporting it the apostle John is careful to set it down immediately alongside the pregnant incident of Greeks coming to Jesus (12 :20), thus suggesting a more far-reaching significance. Again, as Caiaphas earlier, all unconsciously the enemies of the Lord were true prophets (cp.11:51).

What an irony there was about this situation! These men of power were the very people who, not long before, had issued their imperious instruction that “if any man knew where he were, he should shew it, that they might take him”(Jn. 11:57).

Now, no need to enquire where Jesus was. But take him they dare not. Let them give the slightest sign of attempt to do so that day, and Jerusalem would be reduced to a shambles of riot and fury.

Another segment of the crowd affected by this sensational event was the populace of Jerusalem itself. As Jesus entered the city, the disturbance was like an earthquake (Mk.21 :10Gk.). “Who is this?” they asked in alarm. Iti st o be remembered that the capital had hardly recovered from the upheaval and chaos lately created by Barabbas’ attempt at violent revolution (Lk.23 :18,19).

Anticlimax

Who is this? They knew well enough, for the name of Jesus of Nazareth was on the lips of everybody. So their question meant: What is he here for? What does ne intend to do? Then was it the demeanour of Jesus himself, or the fact that he rode on an ass, and not a charger, which held back the enthusiasts from answering: “The Messiah himself, the King of Israel, bringing in the kingdom of our father David. Blessed be the king that cometh in the name of the Lord”? Instead, proud to own him as one of themselves, they acclaimed him now as “the prophet from Nazareth in Galilee.” Again, what dramatic irony, for it was a matter of minutes only before this that Jesus had made his first explicit detailed prophecy of the utter destruction to which Jerusalem was doomed.

It soon became evident that Jesus had no revolutionary intentions. He rode to the temple enclosure and dismounted. Then he made a tour of inspection (Mk.) of every part of the sacred area to which a layman had right of access. With anger in his eyes he noted that the Bazaars of the Sons of Annas were plying their unscrupulous trade again. Three years before, he had swept them all away. His scrutiny gave notice that another spring-cleaning could be expected—but not now, for the sun was already on the horizon (Mk.), so he called the twelve together, and returned quietly to Bethany.

In the city the excitement subsided like a punctured tyre. That day, with the leaders perplexed, panic-stricken, and divided amongst themselves, and with the multitude of Passover pilgrims eager to back him up, Jesus could have done as he pleased. Yet all he did was to go into the temple, look round, and go away again. No harangue of the crowd, no threats against the rulers, no violence against the hated legionaries, but only tears, sadness, quiet rebuke and unspoken anger.

Was ever so promising an opportunity so foolishly thrown away? What was the matter with the man? Could this indeed be the Messiah?

And the reaction set in.

Notes: Mk. l1:1-11

1.

Bethphage and Bethany. Why mentioned in this order, for he almost certainly came to Bethany first. The village itself had not been entered the day before because the home of Lazarus was on its eastern edge, The Talmud mentions that Bethphage and Bethany had a big reputation for hospitality to pilgrims coming to the feasts.

2.

The village must be Bethphage, and not Bethany, for Mt. mentions only the former.

4.

A place where two ways met. In LXX (e.g. Jer. 17 :27) this word amphedon normally means “a palace” (Herod’s?).

6.

Even as Jesus had said. “Commanded” (Mt.) should read “organized”.

8.

Branches from the trees. Jn: palm trees. Palms and Hosanna were both associated with the Feast of Tabernacles, not Passover. Thus the gospel writers intimate that this ride into Jerusalem was only a type and foreshadowing, although the crowd thought differently.

11.

Looked round about. The time of “visitation” (Lk.)

Lk. 19:29-44

37.

With a loud voice. Jn’s word for this (in some MSS.) comes in only one place: Ezra 3 :13LXX

41.

Wept over it. The tears of the Son of God: Jn.ll :35; Heb.5 :7; and such Messianic Psalms as 6.-6; 39:12;42:3; 56:8; 69:10; 116:8.

42.

Peace, as in ls.53 :5; 59 :8; Jer.8 :11; Ps.122 :5-9; cp. Lk.14 :32s.w. Contrast the hostility in Mt.22 :15ff.

43.

The day will come. This somewhat unusual Gk. verb seems always to be used regarding God in action (see concordance).

44.

Visitation Cp. also Lk.l :68,78; Mk. 11:11,13; Mic.7:6.

150. The Shadow of the Cross (Matt. 17:22, 23; 20:17-19; Mark 10:32-34; Luke 18:31-34)*

Passover, the last Passover, was now not far away. The long and much-interrupted progress up to Jerusalem had reached its last stage; and now, unique in the gospel record, Mark gives a brief but tremendously impressive picture of J,?sus going ahead of the twelve and the inescapable crowd. The Good Shepherd was going before his sheep (Jn.10 :4), even as the visible sign of the Glory of God had led Israel in the wilderness (Num.10 :33).

“And they (the twelve) were amazed, and those who followed were afraid.” The words grip the imagination, even though no explanation is given for this reaction in the disciples. Does the recent raising of Lazarus throw light on the situation? “Master, the Jews of late sought to stone thee, and goest thou thither again?” And since then “the chief priests and the Pharisees had given a commandment that, if any man knew where he were, he should shew it, that they might take him” (Jn.11 :8,57). So, almost certainly, those closely associated with Jesus were likewise marked men. Also, the recent fears of the chief priests were finding an echo in not a few minds: that any attempt to assert Messiahship in Jerusalem would inevitably mean “the Romans will come and take away both our place and our nation” (Jn.11 :48).

Further Warning

At one point Jesus took the twelve aside from the accompanying crowd and “began to tell them what things should happen unto him” (Mk.). This was now the third time (according to Matthew and Mark), the fourth according to Luke (9 :22,44; 17 :25), that he had spoken explicitly about his rejection and suffering at Jerusalem, and he was still at the beginning of their education in these things, so little progress did they make in understanding.

Very probably this was because each of these warnings came after a strong Messianic emphasis in the ministry-Peter’s confession (Lk. 9 :20), the Transfiguration (9 .-28-35), the first detailed discourse about the Second Coming (17 :20-24), and the promise of everlasting life to the faithful follower (18:29,30).

“Behold,” Jesus now said to them, “we go up to Jerusalem, and all things that are written by the prophets concerning the Son of man shall be accomplished” (Lk.) Here is clear intimation of how the mind of Jesus was prepared for what lay ahead. The prophetic imperative lay upon him. As men of God were constrained to write the message of God’s purpose with His Messiah, so also he was constrained obediently to fulfil it. Yet here the common version hardly does justice to the dative case in the original. More accurately, it would signify: “all things written by the prophets for the Son of man.” Paul was doubtless right when he declared that all these things ”were written aforetime for our learning… ” (Rom.15 :4). But they were written also for the Christ-for his instruction, for the reinforcement of his faith, and for the routing or his discouragement.

What Jesus now told was more detailed than anything he had as yet attempted to unfold concerning the crisis looming ahead:

“The Son of man shall be delivered (betrayed) unto the chief priests and unto the scribes;

and they shall condemn him to death,

and they shall deliver him to the Gentiles,

and they shall mock him,

and they shall scourge him,

and they shall spit upon him,

and they shall kill him,

and the third day he shall rise again” (Mk.).

Several details here —as “mocking, scourging, spitting”-were now mentioned for the first time. “Handed over to the Gentiles” could mean only one thing —crucifixion by the Romans (as Matthew specifically mentions). A Jew delivered by Jews to their Roman overlords, for such an end! It was unthinkable. So perhaps the disciples took these warnings as indications of what the rulers would like to do. Or maybe they regarded their Lord’s solemn words as another of his parables—to be taken as meaning: ‘I have faced a long period of seeming failure, but it will be crowned with sudden success.’ In any case, the disciples’ lack of insight becomes a providential security for the truth of their later witness to the resurrection. But at present they showed little comprehension of these eight stages in the Saviour’s travail of the New Creation.

Thus, “they understood none of these things: and this saying was hid from them, neither knew they the things which were spoken” (Lk.). The variation in Greek tenses here is fascinating. The significance probably is that at first what Jesus declared made no sense to them, and when he explained further it still remained obscure, nor did opportunity to think about it enable them to grasp it any better.

This pregnant passage in Luke about the disciples’ lack of appreciation of their Lord’s warning is repeated almost verbatim from an earlier occasion (9 :45). It is as though Luke is trying to apologize beforehand for the apostles’ spiritual immaturity and dullness, for immediately after these occasions the record adds: (a) “Then there arose a reasoning among them, which of them should be greatest” (9 :46); (b) “And James and John . . . came unto him, saying . . Grant unto us that we may sit one on thy right hand, and the other on thy left hand, in thy glory” (Mk.10 :35ff); (c) The later warning: “The Son of man goeth, as it was determined . . . betrayed . . . And there was also a strife among them which of them should be accounted the greatest” (Lk.22 :22-24),

To the modern reader of the gospels there is puzzlement of a different sort —why that which now seems simple and obvious should have remained so obscure to men who were so close to Jesus. If affords a lesson regarding the blinding power of preconceived ideas and prejudice. Very probably the meaning of many Bible prophecies of the last days, which today are wondrously mysterious, will before long become all at once crystal clear and easy enough for a child to understand. The present-day student of Holy Scripture is in no position to feel superior.

The Prophets and the Son of man

It makes a useful exercise in the study of Messianic prophecy to seek out the Old Testament anticipations _ of the sufferings of Christ which the apostles now heard alluded to.

His betrayal by Judas is readily traceable in the familiar words which Jesus himself was to quote at the last Supper: “Mine own familiar friend, in whom I trusted, which did eat of my bread, hath lifted up his heel against me” (Ps.41:9; and by all means see the parallel passage in Ps. 55:12-24). The condemnation to death, in gross violation of all true justice, is easy to read in Isaiah 53:7,8,12: “as a lamb to the slaughter . . . taken from prison and from judgment. . . cut off out of the land of the living … he poured out his soul unto death.” Another Isaiah prophecy has equally clear and poignant details: “I gave my back to the smiters, and my cheeks to them that plucked off the hair: I hid not my face from shame and spitting” (50:6). Psalm 22:16 fills out the picture: “For dogs (that is, Gentiles) have compassed me: the assembly (the Sanhedrin) of the wicked have inclosed me: they pierced my hands and my feet” (cp. Ps.69:12,19).

Messiah’s resurrection was plainly foretold in Psalm 16 :10 “Thou wilt not leave my soul in hell, neither wilt thou suffer thine holy one to see corruption.” It was also foreshadowed in the restoration of Isaac, the beloved only-begotten son, and in the divine boon of life to stricken Hezekiah. And that this should be on the third day was also anticipated in the experience of both Isaac and Hezekiah. Even more obviously, it was typified in the “resurrection” of Jonah, in the ark going a three-days journey before the people of the Lord to seek out a resting place for them (Num.10 :33), and in the offering of the wave-sheaf on the third day after the slaying of the Passover Lamb (Lev.23 :11).

It would be a grave error to assume that these are all the Old Testament testimonies regarding the sufferings of Christ. Of course there are others.

A further detail worthy of note at this point is that whereas Mark’s record says: “after three days,” Matthew and Luke have “on the third day.” Clearly these are equivalent expressions, unless one is to assume that the gospels contradict each other! Unhappily the tendency of two different groups of interpreters has been to emphasize whichever of these phrases suits best their own point of view. This is very unsatisfactory exegesis unless it be accompanied by an adequate explanation of all the evidence which appears to support the contrary opinion. This is important. Study 182 will explore this question further.

Notes: Lk.18:31-34

31.

Besides those earlier explicit anticipation of the Cross, there had been other foreshadowings: Jn. 2:19 (3:13-16?); 6 :47-50; Mt.9 :15.

All things that are written. Mt. Mk, use the word mello, which means either what was about to happen, or what was destined to happen. Lk’s phrasing strongly suggests the second of these.

Fulfilled-telesthai. Peter uses epitelesthai (additionally fulfilled; 1 Pet. 5:9) with reference to the sufferings of the disciple following his Master’s steps.

The Son of man. Even against this backcloth of suffering Jesus proclaims himself the Messiah (Dan.7:13; 9:24,25).