|
There
is as much confusion surrounding the message Jesus brought
as there is about the personality of the man Himself—which is to
say that there is an enormous lack of true understanding.
Even
the word gospel is usually misunderstood—connoting to most
minds something smacking of Bible-belt Christianity peculiar to
that portion of the United States so named, or even referring to
"gospel music" or any kind of evangelical fire-and-brimstone preaching
(often times charismatic and accompanied by glossolalia or speaking
in tongues).
To
the average layman, the "gospel message" is merely "believe on the
Lord Jesus Christ and thou shall be saved," judging from the billboards,
barn roofs, roadside rocks and bumper stickers one may encounter.
But
if you were to see the analogy of Jesus as a true being from outer
space who, born of the virgin Mary, trod this earth as a human being,
but whose mind was totally attuned to the different dimension of
the spirit world, who brought a message of a coming government which
was to descend from the heavens above to quite literally conquer
and rule over this entire earth, perhaps the "gospel" would take
on an awesome new significance.
If
there had been in some far corner of the world a strange cylindrical
capsule which, according to the natives, had come plummeting down
in the cockpit of a flying saucer, and which represented a space-age
"cockpit voice recorder," perhaps people would honestly believe
there had come a message from outer space and an imminent attack
from Martians, Venusians, or Plutonians would soon take place.
Come
to think of it, considering all of the many ideas about strange
places on the earth (such as Lost Valleys in which primordial creatures
still roam, the Bermuda Triangle, et al.), or the many concepts
concerning UFOs and extraterrestrial phenomena, there are, no doubt,
any number of people who believe just such an attack might some
day occur.
If,
for the sake of argument or experimentation, Jesus could be seen
for a moment as one who came from outer space, bearing a message
of a future intervention of that spacial power which would drastically
alter the course of human civilizations, the whole matter of the
meaning of the gospel of the kingdom of God could be cleared up
once and for all.
Jesus
plainly showed He was speaking of a future world ruling government.
He was continually talking to His disciples about positions of responsibility
in that yet-future kingdom!
Jesus
drew analogy after analogy concerning not only the kind of Christian
personality required to fulfill the final requirement of "enduring
to the end" or qualifying to be one "Who has overcome," but also
illustrating the extent of the kingdom, the approximate time of
its arrival, its inherent nature, the laws under which its citizens
will be governed, and the celestial and terrestrial phenomena which
will accompany its arrival.
The
precepts of religious tradition are so manifold and so laborious
that trying to research the works of critics and scholars who have
researched the works of other critics and scholars concerning their
own concepts of the kingdom of God is not unlike being lost in a
labyrinth of caverns with no lights.
Some
think the kingdom of God is a sentiment within a human being. Others
believe it was the ancient Roman Empire finally "Christianized"
by the Roman Catholic Church. Hitler thought he was going to set
it up. Some believe it is here now, but only "ruling in the hearts
of men" in some nebulous spiritual sense, meaning that collective
feeling of "pervasive goodness" alleged to live in the hearts of
Christians universally, be they Catholic or any of the hundreds
of Protestant denominations. (of course according to "mainstream"
evangelical theologians, this would almost certainly exclude any
members of the alleged "sects" no matter how sincere or Bible-believing
they may appear to be, simply because they are not one of the more
"respected" or "established" theological bodies.)
A
simple perusal of what Jesus plainly said would clear up
the matter for any questing mind once and for all. But it is necessary
to go to the source, armed with the idea that Jesus, after
all, ought to know. Since He was the advance emissary of
the kingdom of God; the very Son of that God who sent Him to this
earth, and the King of the coming kingdom, perhaps, after all, the
one human individual more qualified than any other to know just
precisely what is the kingdom of God is Jesus Christ Himself.
Jesus
continually preached about the kingdom of God (Matthew's gospel
calls it "kingdom of heaven") He continually tells what the kingdom
of God is like.
On
one occasion He said it was like leaven, using this example
in the 13th chapter of Matthew where leavening is a type of righteousness.
This analogy shows the all-pervasiveness of the kingdom which will
finally spread over the entirety of the earth at the second coming
of Christ.
On
another occasion, He talks about the kingdom being of such value
it is like a "Pearl of great price," or a great treasure a man found
in a field which, once he had discovered it, leads him to sell every
other earthly possession to purchase that one field.
Of
course, every conceivable political organization, military movement,
paramilitary group and/or theological organization has tried to
utilize the teachings of Jesus to justify its doctrines.
Surprisingly,
though most people feel communism and the Bible have nothing in
common, the very word "common" appearing as it does, in connection
with those believers who "sold their earthly goods in order to have
all things common" could indicate an early attempt at communal living.
(But put this together with one of Jesus’ lessons about the kingdom
and we see how incongruous such a conclusion will become).
There
are three major parables, all involving money, that Jesus gives
about the kingdom of God.
The
first parable (in Matthew 20) is about the householder who hired
laborers at different times during a day, yet paid them all the
same wage at the end of the day.
The
second parable (in Matthew 25) is about a man who travels to a far
country and entrusts differing sums of money ("talents") to his
servants in proportion to their different abilities.
The
third parable (in Luke 19) is about a nobleman who went into a far
country to receive a kingdom and gave each of his servants one "pound"
asking them to gain as much as possible before he returned.
Each
of these parables conveys a different aspect of the kingdom of God
as its primary point, as well as some interesting secondary points.
Let
us now discuss each of these parables in detail, looking for practical
information about human business, politics, financial affairs, labor
relations, etc., as well as for the primary illustrations regarding
the kingdom of God and its judgments.
We
find that Jesus’ concepts of fairness would not be palatable to
the labor unions and blue-collar workers of today.
We
begin by quoting each.
Matthew
20:1-16: "For the kingdom of heaven is like unto a man that
is an householder, which went out early in the morning to hire labourers
into his vineyard. And when he had agreed with the labourers for
a penny a day, he sent them into his vineyard. And he went out about
the third hour, and saw others standing idle in the market-place,
and said unto them; Go ye also into the vineyard, and whatsoever
is right I will give you. And they went their way. Again he went
out about the sixth and ninth hour, and did likewise. And about
the eleventh hour he went out, and found others standing idle, and
saith unto them, Why stand ye here all the day idle? They say unto
him, Because no man hath hired us. He said unto them, Go ye also
into the vineyard; and whatsoever is right, that shall ye receive.
"So
when even was come, the lord of the vineyard saith unto his steward,
Call the labourers, and give them their hire, beginning from the
last unto the first. And when they came that were hired about the
eleventh hour, they received every man a penny. But when the first
came, they supposed that they should have received more; and they
likewise received every man a penny. And when they had received
it, they murmured against the goodman of the house, saying, These
last have wrought but one hour, and thou hast made them equal unto
us, which have borne the burden and heat of the day.
"But
he answered one of them and said, Friend, I do thee no wrong: didst
not thou agree with me for a penny? Take that thine is, and go thy
way: I will give unto this last, even as unto thee. Is it not lawful
for me to do what I will with mine own? Is thine eye evil, because
I am good? So the last shall be first , and the first last: for
many be called, but few chosen."
On
this occasion, Jesus said the kingdom of heaven is like a man who
is a householder or home owner who went out early in the morning
to hire laborers for his vineyard.
When
he had agreed with the laborers for a penny a day, he sent them
into his vineyard to go to work. He went out again about 9: 00 A.M.
and saw others standing in the marketplace jobless and idle, and
he said, "You can also go to work in the vineyard, and whatever
is right, whatever is a fair wage, I will give you."
The
account says these jobless idlers were willing enough and went their
way.
Again
Jesus said the landowner went out about noon and 3:00 p.m. and did
likewise. Again about 5:00 p.m. (or apparently an hour before quitting
time) he went out and found others standing and he said to them,
"Why do you stand here all day idle?" They answered, "Because no
one has given us a job." He said, "Then go to work in my vineyard."
That
evening, Jesus said that the master of the property called his foreman
or his steward and said, "Call the laborers and pay them their wages,
beginning from the last to the first." The account goes on to relate
that all the laborers received exactly the same wages—even those
who were hired at the very last moment; they all received a "penny"
(the old King James English changes the Greek term denarios into
a comparable sum in 1611). But when the first group came in—those
who had been laboring all day long—they supposed they should receive
more.
Rumors
had by now traversed the line of laborers waiting for their pay
that those at the head of the line, who had only worked for one
hour, were receiving a full wage. As a result there is no doubt
that the ones who had gone to work early in the morning were expecting
they would receive three to five times as much.
However,
astonishingly, they all received "every man a penny"?
Jesus
went on to explain that "when they received it, they murmured at
the householder, ‘These last have spent only an hour working in
the field, and yet you made their wages equal to ours even though
we have had to bear the burden of the day in this scorching heat.’"
The
landowner then said, "Friend, I do you no harm or wrong: Didn't
you agree with me to work for a penny? Take that which is yours,
and go your way; for it is my determination to give to the last
ones I hired, these that came into my vineyard at the eleventh hour,
the same wages as I gave to you. Isn't it lawful for me to do what
I want with that which is mine? Or is your eye evil—are you thinking
malicious—thoughts because I am good to others?"
Jesus'
example here is laden with important principles concerning the kingdom
of God; and at the same time would be almost impossible for the
average wager-earner in a socialized society to accept.
Jesus
went on to conclude in this lesson given to His own disciples as
well as to those who were standing, by saying, "The last shall be
first and the first last."
The
obvious spiritual meaning of the parable is that those who walk
this earth today at the eleventh hour of man’s experience are like
those who labored in the vineyard for only the eleventh hour, while
perhaps other individuals who have lived and died long ago could
be compared to those who labored longer.
To
students of eschatology, the immediate reference would be to the
stated sequence of events in biblical prophecy which illustrate
Jesus’ final famous statement that the "last shall be first, and
the first last."
The
miraculous conversion, explained in Revelation 7, of a vast number
from nations all over the world called "an innumerable multitude,"
plus the miraculous conversion at the very last moment prior to
Christ’s arrival on this earth of 144,000, representing 12,000 from
every tribe of Israel except Dan, with a double portion going to
Joseph, would obviously be inferred from this story.
It
illustrates the fact that while many will have been "enduring unto
the end" and earning their righteousness "tried in the fire of tribulation"
(Jesus said, "in the world ye shall have tribulation") and will
have been living lives of privation, hardship. persecution. and
even martyrdom, there will, nevertheless, be hundreds of thousands
of individuals who, within perhaps only a few weeks or even days
of their conversion, will be inducted into God's kingdom.
Still,
there is more to the analogy since each human individual is limited
by his own life span, when he or she was called to God, the vastly
differing trials of life, etc.
Therefore,
in any normal life span, there will be some whose lives will
be filled with enormous trials to take place over 70 or more years,
while others will be converted in a very short period of time. Both
groups will be fully born into God's Family and become eternal spirit
beings and Sons of God, and although some will have understood God's
truth and will have received the real Jesus Christ of Nazareth as
their Savior for only weeks or even days, they will be just as much
Sons of God with just as long eternal life.
A
more practical application of Jesus' parable of the householder
and his practice of hiring idle passersby into
his vineyard could cause some problems. Try it out on the unions
of today and see what a riot would result!
First,
let's understand from this analogy that Jesus ratifies and supports
the principle of private ownership of property, of success gained
from one's own skills and effort, of the determination to set wages
based upon mutually agreeable circumstances, and the right of a
landowner to settle individual disputes on his own property, privately,
between himself and his laborers.
Furthermore,
notwithstanding the obvious prophetic port of this analogy, there
is a great deal which can be gleaned about the personality of Jesus
as well as the character of the kingdom over which He says He will
rule.
Politically,
it obviously suggests that the capitalistic system of competition
and free enterprise is, as long as manmade governments
endure, the best. It indicates, furthermore,
that free enterprise will be part of the economic system in the
millennial kingdom setup following Christ's second coming.
Old
Testament laws and judgments, coupled with New Testament teaching
and Jesus' own example, uphold hard, honest work, and remuneration
for that work. Also supported and upheld are the private ownership
of property and sole control over such property according to law;
the enjoyment of the fruits of one's own labors; and the ability
to "lay up for one's children," meaning leaving an inheritance to
come without governmental restrictions which would deprive legal
heirs of the substance of their father's and grandfather's labors.
Notice
that there was no standardized wage forced upon employers and employees.
Each made a private, separate agreement; each was paid exactly according
to the stipulations of his own original agreement.
Can't
you imagine the placards and signs of those who would picket a modern-day
vineyard where a winemaker had followed such a practice?
Screams
of outrage, the hurling of epithets, and the possible destruction
of his property would surely result.
The
whole concept goes totally against the grain of our own beliefs
that it is simply "not fair" for one person to receive exactly the
same wage for working for 11 or 12 hours as does another person
for working only one hour.
Yet,
Jesus makes the point that the vineyard owner had a perfect right
to make different agreements with different people. He was in charge.
The vineyard was his. The fruit of his own labor was his own home,
lands, and crop.
The
householder had the perfect right to make private and exclusive
agreements with each group of laborers for a specific wage.
The
householder was therefore his own employment agency, union, and
arbiter in the cast of disputes. Will there be unions, collective
bargaining, etc, under the rule of Jesus Christ? This parable, at
least, suggests not!
It's
no wonder the bumper sticker says, "Jesus will make you mad."
Anyone
who dares to pick up the unembellished gospels of Matthew, Mark,
Luke and John and simply read them as they would any other textbook,
though in modern, understandable English, could probably grow quite
angry at the personality they discovered there. Especially anyone
attempting to apply sociological principles reverted by Jesus Christ
to the federalized, socialized, unionized welfare states of this
modern world would soon find ample room for conflict.
Jesus'
concept of fairness is utterly different from our own; that what
a person has earned by his own honest work is perfectly proper in
God's sight; that what one can accomplish through one's own acquired
skills need not be subjected to the rules and regulations of others.
Certainly, this parable of Jesus, while surely primarily applicable
to explaining the kingdom of God, upholds some of the fundamental
values of the capitalistic system of private ownership and individual
initiative.
Matthew
25:14-30:
"For
the kingdom of heaven is as a man traveling into a far country,
who called his own servants, and delivered unto them his goods.
And unto one he gave five talents, to another two, and to another
one, to every man according to his several ability; and straightway
took his journey. Then he that had received the five talents went
and traded with the same, and made them other five talents. And
likewise, he that had received two, he also gained other two. But
he that had received one went and digged in the earth, and hid his
lord's money. After a long time the lord of those servants cometh,
and reckoneth with them. And so he that had received five talents
came and brought other five talents, saying, Lord, thou deliveredst
unto me five talents: behold, I have gained beside them five talents
more. His lord said unto him, Well done, thou good and faithful
servant: thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will make
thee ruler over many things: enter thou into the joy of thy lord.
He also that had received two talents came and said, Lord, thou
deliveredst unto me two talents: behold, I have gained two other
talents beside them. His lord said unto him, Well done, good and
faithful servant; thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will
make thee ruler over many things: enter thou into the joy of thy
lord. Then he which had received the one talent came and said, Lord,
I knew thee that thou art an hard man, reaping where thou hast not
sown, and gathering where thou had not strawed: And I was afraid,
and went and hid thy talent in the earth: lo, there thou has that
is thine. His lord answered and said unto him, Thou wicked and slothful
servant, thou knewest that I reap where I sowed not, and gather
where I have not strawed: Thou oughtest therefore to have put my
money to the exchangers, and then at my coming I should have received
mine own with usury. Take therefore the talent from him, and give
it unto him which hath ten talents. For unto every one that hath
shall be given, and he shall have abundance: but from him that hath
not shall be taken away even that which he hath. And cast ye the
unprofitable servant into outer darkness: there shall be weeping
and gnashing of teeth."
This
second important parable has been called "the parable of the talents."
A
talent was a great deal of money; it represented an ancient Greek
unit of weight—the heaviest in both for monetary purposes and for
commodities. (It is understood that our English-language use of
the word "talent" to imply the general capacity for knowledge or
ability came about directly as a result of Jesus' use of the term.)
As
the heaviest unit of monetary weight, Jesus’ example obviously means
that the benefactor of the servants was investing a great deal of
his own money.
In
this case, the property owner appears as a person who is about to
move into a different nation, and who calls his own servants and
delivers into their hands much of his wealth. Jesus said, "to one
he gave five talents, to another two, to another one; to each person,
he gave according to his different abilities;
and the property owner went on his journey" (paraphrased, and so
throughout parable).
According
to the analogy, the one who received the five talents went and traded
with them, using the principle of making money with money, and increased
his bankroll by five talents; this means he achieved a 100 percent
rate of return on his investment and eventually accumulated ten
talents altogether.
Though
starting with a lesser amount, two talents, and therefore representing
by analogy an individual with somewhat less ability or "natural
talent," the second servant also bartered with the money he, had
received and also increased his estate 100 per
cent, ending up with a total of four.
But
the individual who began with the least ability was both fearful
and security-minded. He was taking no chances. Jesus said, "But
he that received the one went away and dug in the earth, and hid
his lord's money."
As
Jesus related the story, in due time the master returned home and
asked for a reckoning.
He
add, "And he that received the five talents came and brought five
other talents, saying, Lord, you delivered unto me five talents;
look—I have gained five more talents!" Jesus said the householder
said to him, "Well done, good and faithful servant: you have been
faithful over a few things, I will set you over many things; enter
into the joy of your Lord."
This
scripture has been used in hundreds of sermons to illustrate that
ultimate statement which is the most prized to any human individual
who is truly and sincerely seeking entry into God's kingdom. To
be told, "Well done, thou good and faithful servant," no matter
the degree of inherent, beginning ability, is the most priceless
pronouncement any person could ever hear. (Notice, as the account
proceeds, that the householder said the identical words to the one
who reported he also had doubled his talents—starting with two he
ended up with four—even though this man had only 40 percent of the
first servants sum.)
Finally,
Jesus said, "And he also that had received the one talent came and
said, ‘Lord I knew you were a very stern man; reaping where
you do not sow and gathering where you did not scatter—taking what
is not even yours—and I was afraid; so I went away and hid your
sum of money in the earth. Here is what you gave me; I did not lose
it.' "
But,
Jesus said, the householder said to him, "You wicked and lazy servant—you
understood that I am an investor; that I have used my money to increase
my fortunes, and not always through my own human physical labor;
at the very least, knowing this, you should have invested my money
in the bank (for at least they know how to properly reinvest it),
so that at my coming I could have received back that which was my
own with interest."
Note
that, contrary to some superrighteous attitudes, there is no condemnation
whatsoever of the wealthy homeowner who first gave private loans
and then expected a reckoning, fully planning both to reward and
punish accordingly. Notice also the obvious approval given for a
financial system of money and banking much as we know it today.
Jesus
illustrates that it is not wrong for money to "earn interest,"
notwithstanding the attitudes of some to the contrary; at the same
time He gives divine approval to the principle of "making money
with money," by providing the capital for would be entrepreneurs
whose successes are then shared by the investor or capitalist.
Again,
notice how totally cross-grained is the statement of the individual
who, terribly security-minded, thought to hide his money in a can
underneath the chicken coop.
Jesus
said that the householder said, "Take away the talent from him,
and give it to him that has the ten! For to everyone who has shall
be given, and he shall have abundance; but to him who has
not [has earned nothing; increased nothing, overcome not at all]
even that which he has [which wasn’t his own in the beginning] shall
be taken away."
Jesus
then gave the antithesis of His statement, "Well done, thou good
and faithful servant" spoken to the other two by saying, "Cast out
the unprofitable servant into outer darkness; there shall be weeping
and gnashing of teeth."
Then
follows the account of the "sheep and the goats" with Jesus' statements
concerning rewards and payments in the kingdom—which has led many
individuals to assume the judgment scene is like a great courtroom
in the sky, with a magic lever automatically plunging the unfortunate
"wicked servant" down into an everburning hell, and with a supercatapult
poised toward heaven ready to spring the "good and faithful servant"
into the beatific vision!
It
seems lost on many that Judgment is a process of separation;
that the Bible plainly says, "Judgment must begin today" on the
Church of God (those who are converted and baptized), and that the
"Great White Throne Judgment" pictured in the Bible takes place
over at least one lengthy lifespan, and is as much a "process" as
any other lengthy assessment.
Unfortunately, few seem to realize that God’s "Judgment" is not
a summary execution of punishments following an angelic indictment
over dozens of filthy deeds done in this human life. God's righteous
judgment is carried out throughout the span of life following
repentance, the receiving of knowledge of God’s truth and the
begetting of His Holy Spirit.
You can forget the childish horror story of a harsh God who sits
in long robes with white hair and beard, and with a huge gavel in
His hand, waiting for that one moment of sadistic delight when He
can crash His gavel down on the judgment bench, looking almost through
you with piercing, ice-blue eyes, and say, "Guilty!"
These two examples—the laborers in the vineyard and the investor
of large sums of money—illustrate very clearly that "the kingdom
of heaven is like" both of these pragmatic analogies. Therefore,
Jesus illustrates the fact that human individuals are judged according
to their natural abilities; according to the exact degree of knowledge
and understanding they possess, according, to use the vernacular,
to "what they did with what they had to do with."
Luke19:12-27:
"He
said therefore, A certain nobleman went into a far country to receive
for himself a kingdom, and to return. And he called his ten servants,
and delivered them ten pounds, and said unto them, occupy till I
come. But his citizens hated him, and sent a message after him,
saying, We will not have this man to reign over us. And it came
to pass, that when he was returned, having received the kingdom,
then he commanded these servants to be called unto him, to whom
he had given the money, that he might know how much every man had
gained by trading. Then came the first, saying, Lord, thy pound
hath gained ten pounds. And he said unto him, Well, thou good servant:
because thou hast been faithful in a very little, have thou authority
over ten cities. And the second came, saying, Lord, thy pound hath
gained five pounds. And he said likewise to him, Be thou also over
five cities. And another came, saying, Lord, behold, here is thy
pound, which I have kept laid up in a napkin: For I feared thee,
because thou art an austere man: thou takest up that thou layedst
not down, and reapest that thou didst not sow. And he saith unto
him, Out of thine own mouth will I judge thee, thou wicked servant.
Thou knewest that I was an austere man, taking up that I laid not
down, and reaping that I did not sow: Wherefore then gavest not
thou my money into the bank, that at my coming I might have required
mine own with usury? And he said unto them that stood by, Take from
him the pound, and give it to him that hath ten pounds. (And they
said unto him, Lord, he hath ten pounds.) For I say unto you, That
unto every one which hath shall be given; and from him that hath
not, even that he hath shall be taken away from him. But those mine
enemies, which would not that I should reign over them, bring hither,
and slay them before me."
Some
consider this final parable concerning money to be perhaps the most
important of all.
The
reason Jesus gave it was that many of His disciples were making
the mistake tens of thousands of others have made all the way down
through history, and are still making to some extent today: they
thought the kingdom of God would immediately appear (Luke 19: 11).
Some,
150 years ago, sincere believers thought Napoleon was the anti-Christ,
and surely the kingdom was then coming soon. Others had thought
the world could not grow any worse in the days of Martin Luther,
and surely Christ had to come soon.
Whether
it was during the Crusades, the Hundred Years War, the Black Death
in Europe, or the Revolutionary War, there were many in every generation
who confidently predicted the end of the world. During World War
1, World War II, and during practically every other major global
event before and since, there have always been those who claimed
the "end" was near.
Supposed
"anti-Christs" have included most major military figures of the
past, practically every papal occupant. Hitler, Mussolini, various
kings, prime ministers, presidents, even bankers and business leaders.
When
He gave this parable to His disciples, Jesus was very close to Jerusalem;
He was in Jericho, a short distance from the Jordan River valley,
and was staying at the home of a very wealthy man named Zacchias
who was the chief publican or tax-collector, but apparently a fair
one.
Even
though Zacchias had the reputation of being "a sinner" (the general
populace remained terribly suspicious of, and virtually hated, all
publicans), he was able to tell Jesus that he had actually given
half his goods to the poor, never wrongfully extracted money from
anyone, and would restore fourfold if and when a mistake was made.
Because
they were close to Jerusalem, Jesus wanted to straighten the disciples
out, on the matter of whether He intended to go to Jerusalem in
triumphal entry to bring about an earthly "kingdom" at that time.
He
told them about a certain nobleman who went away into a far country
to receive a kingdom for himself and return.
Jesus
said, "He called his ten servants, gave each of them ten pounds,
and instructed them each to conduct appropriate business with his
investment until he returns" (paraphrased, and so throughout parable)
Jesus
is obviously the "certain nobleman" who went away into a far country
(the throne of His Father in heaven) and His servants are, by analogy,
individual Christians on this earth who, though varying in basic
talent and ability as well as individual responsibilities, are each
given challenging commissions and responsibilities in this life.
In
this case the British pound is the unit of money that is used by
the King James translators. Jesus said that the servants were given
the money (a pound sterling) to "trade with" until He returned.
The
analogy continued, "But his citizens hated him, and sent a message
after him, saying, We will not have this man reign over us." (This
reminds me of the skid-row "wino" who, peering bleary-eyed through
a wine-soaked fog at a would-be benefactor who is peeling off ten
dollar bills into his outstretched hand, says, "Look, fella, just
what is it you want from me?")
Jesus’
analogy said, "And it came to pass, when he returned home, having
received the kingdom, that he commanded these servants, to whom
he had given the money, to be called to him, that he might know
that they had gained by trading. And the first came before him,
saying, Lord, your pound has made ten pounds more."
The
man had increased 1000 percent! Again, the same wonderful words
as were recorded in Matthew's account of the parable of the talents
are said. The nobleman proclaimed, "Well. Done, you good and faithful
servant; because you were faithful in a very little, you are to
have authority over ten cities."
The
second servant came saying, "Your pound, Lord, has made five pounds."
And he heard the identical words, though his reward was in exact
proportion to the amount of increase, which in this case was 500
percent: "Be also over five cities."
Again,
the reward was exactly commensurate with the degree of increase.
Inevitably,
here came "Mr. Cautious" with his debilitating admixture of ignorance
of "the system," fear and suspicion of those who were wealthy, and
an unhealthy desire for security. All of this resulted in his saying,
"Lord, here is your pound which I kept laid up in a napkin because
I was afraid of you. I knew you were an austere person; you pick
up that which you didn’t lay down, and reap what you did not sow."
(Almost the identical words, though in a slightly different analogy
than Jesus used in the parable of the talents.)
Jesus
said that the nobleman replied, "Out of your own mouth will I judge
you, you wicked servant. You knew that I am an austere man, picking
up that which I did not lay down, and reaping that which I did not
sow; then why didn't you at least put my money into the bank, so
that at my return I could have at least received back what was mine
with interest."
Jesus
said, "Take the pound away from him, and give it to him who already
has the ten pounds."
If
this sounds strange to us today, it also sounded strange to those
in the story Jesus related.
Those
standing by, who now had been charged with this unpleasant task,
said, "Lord he already has ten pound! He doesn't need another
one!
Jesus
answered, "I am telling you that to he that has shall be
given [and the only reason he "has" is because he has diligently
overcome, grown, developed. improved and increased; because he has
followed every principle of success and endurance including sweating
out the hardships which would always exist in such a success story],
but from him that has not [has not increased, not overcome,
not grown or developed at all], even that which he has (precious
little, if any of his own) shall be taken away from him. But as
for these enemies of mine who would not have me rule over them,
fetch them here, and execute them in my presence."
A
rather chilling ending to an otherwise pleasant enough, though difficult
to understand, analogy.
Christ
is clearly the "young nobleman" who went away into a far country
to be crowned king and return. The "citizens" do not embody any
members of any particular race; but represent, collectively, that
group of individuals who simply cannot stomach the thought of the
Lord Jesus Christ as the Boss, Ruler and Master who dares to expect
faithful obedience of His followers.
Modern
people want to believe in a comfortable household god they can kick
into a comer at will; a "Jesus" made in their own image who is a
spiritual tranquilizer for their problems.
In
this last parable, these people represent those individuals who,
by their combination of life-styles, attitudes, approaches and religious
precepts, are constantly sending a "message" to Jesus saying, "We
are not about to submit to any arbitrary spiritual dictatorship!"
In
these three major "money" parables, Jesus is obviously the one,
who is proportioning the reward: to the laborers in the vineyard,
those who were given the heaviest unit of Greek money to invest,
or those who were required to invest their pounds.
Human
beings. all of whom are different in some way, and who have varying
degrees of knowledge, understanding and some skill, are represented
by those who began equally, yet overcame and developed to
different degrees according to their own "several abilities."
The
rewards, at the time of Christ's arrival in the power of His kingdom,
are plainly stated to be rulership over "cities."
Practically
no professing Christian really understands the full scope of these
simple truths today. The plain scriptures on the subject, especially
Revelation 2:26, 3:21 and 5: 10, plainly state that co-rulership
with Christ over the nations on earth is the reward of the saved.
What's
wrong with this physical earth, after all? That's where all the
problems and opportunities are!
Confronting the Pharisees and Sadducees
Spiritual
awareness brings spiritual comparisons.
The
Pharisees and Sadducees were rival religious organizations. Though
normally deeply divided, they could find temporary alliance in their
hatred of Jesus. His popularity with the common folk—made poignantly
obvious by their own unpopularity—and the sensational size and growing
scope of His ministry made Jesus a significant rival for the affections
and admirations of the people.
These
religious leaders, like most religious leaders in all religious
groups from time immemorial, inspired more superstitious fear than
sincere loyalty in their followers.
The
religious situation in first-century Palestine was not that different
from the way it is today.
Most
people were not members of a religious group. The average Jew back
then was like the average American, Briton, German, Frenchman now.
He probably had a certain form of piety, attended the temple very
occasionally at one of the festivals, and perhaps even tithed in
a good year. But the average Jew was not a Pharisee, Sadducee, or
Essene any more than the average Israeli is ultra Orthodox.
This
point becomes obvious when we compare the population of the country
with the membership in the different religious groups.
A
conservative estimate of the population of Palestine at the time
is about half a million. According to Josephus there were approximately
4,000 Essenes for one period and about 6,000 Pharisees for another.
We have no figures for the Sadducees, but being a priestly group
they probably had fewer. If we are generous, we still come up with
probably quite a few short of 20,000 for all the religious groups
put together. This would make only about one out of 25 a member
of a formal religious organization. This is conservative; it could
have easily been one out of 30 or 40. This means only about 4 percent
or less of the population had any specific affiliation with
a religious group.
The
average Jew was what later rabbinic literature referred to rather
disparagingly as an am ha’arets, "person of the land."
He was considered to have a certain small amount of religious piety
or scruples without being over-bothered with religion. He had some
definite views about certain aspects of religion so long as it didn't
affect how he lived. After all, it wasn’t easy to make a living
and, like all peoples at all times, a short weight or a little water
in the wine was easily overlooked. Of course, many were very honest
and conscientious individuals, yet still did not claim any religious
affiliation.
A
certain amount of respect was paid to the priests and the religious
teachers. But this respect was no different from that of the average
layman today. They told jokes about the Pharisee with the bloody
nose because he so averted his eyes from looking at an attractive
girl that he didn't see the wall until too late. They thought it
was funny when the young bull got away and had to be wrestled down
by the priests in their robes before they could sacrifice it. And
the many street-corner preachers were considered as much wild-eyed
fanatics a they are today.
It
has been a standard myth that the Pharisees were an overwhelmingly
dominant force in Palestine in Jesus' time. This erroneous view
is based on late rabbinic literature, but recent studies—especially
those by the well-known scholar Jacob Neusner—have shown that the
situation was quite different after the destruction of Jerusalem
in A.D. 70 from what it was before. Rabbinic Judaism was a post
A.D. 70 phenomenon which descended directly from the Pharisees and
therefore tended to exaggerate their historical significance.
Judaism
before A.D. 70 was much more pluralistic than is commonly believed,
with a variety of different groups and sects, many of which disappeared
in the Jewish war against the Romans.
In
the decades following the destruction of Jerusalem, rabbinic Judaism
was hammered out and became the dominant religious influence on
Jews (though again the average Jew was still the am ha’arets
who basically ignored the detailed regulations proclaimed by
the rabbis). Later rabbinic Judaism was Torah centered. Study of
the lay and legal disputations were common activities of the rabbis
and their disciples.
But
Pharisaism differed in many ways from the later rabbinic Judaism.
The Pharisees were not a group formed to study the Torah. They were
an organization of laymen who agreed to observe certain purity
laws so that they could imitate the priests in the temple.
In
other words they tried to make their home into a model of the temple
and their table into a model of the altar. They were a table
fellowship group. Even though they were concerned about such
things as Sabbath observance, the bulk of their concern was with
laws relating to eating.
They
washed pots and pans because that was necessary for ritual purity.
They criticized the disciples of Jesus for eating with "unwashed"
hands (Mark 7) because the disciples had not followed the purity
regulations (regulations nowhere required in the Old Testament except
for the priests in the temple). They were scrupulous about tithing,
not because they were concerned about the priests, but because they
could not eat, something unless it had been properly tithed!
Naturally,
this was so much nonsense to the average Jew. What was to be gained
by imitating the temple Priests? Even the priests did not observe
these purity laws outside the temple in their own homes. It is not
hard to see why there were only 6,000 members or so of this super-strict
table fellowship group. One had to conduct his life with his mind
constantly on minute regulations of ritual purity with no purpose
other than the desire to be able to sit down at a table from which
non-Pharisees were excluded.
The
Sadducees were a group associated mainly with the priests (Acts
4: 1). Their activities centered mainly around the temple, and this
is why their influence on Judaism was totally finished when the
temple was destroyed.
The
main appeal of the Sadducees was to the upper classes. Consequently,
they had less popular appeal than the Pharisees and others.
Yet
many of the professional scribes were Sadducees. The scribes were
a professional class roughly corresponding to the civil servant
or bureaucrat of today. They were trained in the law (the term "scribe"
is basically interchangeable with "lawyer") and the literature of
the Jews. They held various administrative and educational posts.
They were respected much as are the legal and medical professions
today. So when Jesus said, "The scribes and Pharisees sit in Moses'
seat," he was recognizing their prestige and authority as teachers.
(But then He went on to condemn many of their practices and examples!—Matt.
23).
The
third Judaic sect of the first century—the Essenes—is not mentioned
in the New Testament. Most scholars feel the Qumran community—immortalized
and popularized by the Dead Sea Scrolls—was a leading Essene center.
Other writers indicate that Essenes also lived in various villages
and cities throughout Palestine. They were very much a minor group,
though, and probably kept somewhat separate because of their exclusive
attitudes.
The
popular press has long engaged in speculation about Jesus being
an Essene or associated with the Qumran community. Such absurdities
have been almost universally rejected by Qumran specialists. There
is no evidence that Jesus had anything to do with the Essenes and
Qumran. As already mentioned, the Essenes are not even mentioned
once in the entire New Testament.
The
Pharisees in Jesus' time, obsessed with their own rules and traditions
of religious ritual, were no better and no worse than any other
religious group of any other time. It is a basic psychological trait
of human beings that, as one becomes more convinced of his own spiritual
purity, especially if it can be expressed through physical means,
he simultaneously becomes less tolerant of others. In a word he
becomes self-righteous.
Self-righteousness
is the antithesis of Godly righteousness. It can in fact become
the most insidious of sins because it is the most difficult to recognize.
It is not particularly hard for a prostitute to know what she is,
or for a murderer, drunk or thief to know what he is. Perhaps it
becomes progressively more troublesome for a liar and a covetous
person to recognize his sins. But the self-righteous person, one
who thinks that he has not committed any sins, "knows"
he is righteous and he "knows" that he knows it, is in the
gravest danger of insidious self-delusion and ultimate self-destruction.
Whatever
is required, the self-righteous person thinks he does; whatever
is forbidden, he thinks he eschews. Yet God states that "all
have sinned" (Rom. 3:23). and that the personal recognition
of one's own sinful nature, mind and heart is the essential first
step in the conversion/salvation process . For the prostitute or
murderer it can be easy, but for the self-righteous person this
can be an intolerable stumbling block. It's no wonder that Jesus
Christ reserved His fiercest attacks for the self-righteous religious
leaders, who, epitomized the attitude and approach of all religious
leaders of all religions from all times (and do not represent just
one persecuted race).
The
Pharisees personified the concepts of spiritual rank, show, pecking
order, and degree of sanctimoniousness. How all such self-righteous
characters know how to hate! (Satan himself must become at least
a little Jealous over their vituperative musings; their filthy,
lying, carnal-minded plots.)
A
"righteous posture" is always center stage; all the lights are on—it's
opening night, and all the, critics are out there. Give it your
best!
Religious
folk have always taken themselves altogether too seriously, and
the Pharisees were no different. But they, like all other people
of past generations, are dead. They were religious fanatics.
They were spiritually proud, while being morally corrupt, They were
hypocrites. They persecuted Jesus and finally succeeded in killing
Him.
But
the "Jews" did not!
Oh,
the Pharisees were Jews, all right, but then, so were most if
not all of the disciples and early apostles, and so were the great
majority of all the converts during the early days of the church!
And,
to once again state the obvious, so was Jesus Christ Himself.
Consequently,
to capitalize on and exploit the fact that the Jewish religious
leaders were involved in the crucifixion and murder of Jesus in
order to support even implicitly an anti-Semitic attitude is the
height of historical absurdity, ludicrous in the extreme, and only
serves to broadcast one's own ignorance. In fact, surely a far greater
case could be made for a "pro-Semitic" attitude, based on the clear
New Testament testimony that the leading apostles and disciples
and the great majority of the early church in Judea, as well as
the core members of the churches even in the Gentile world, were
all Jewish!
An
ultimate contradiction is to posture that one is wearing the cloak
of "Christianity" (which says to resist not evil; turn the other
cheek; pray for—and even love—your enemies) in order to persecute
the Jews or, for that matter, any other group, creed, race,
organization or individual).
After
the miracles of the loaves and the fishes, a continual furor began
in the towns and villages as leading Pharisees from Jerusalem began
stirring up the crowds. The confrontation between these religious
leaders and Jesus was easy to foretell, and His denunciation of
them as "hypocrites," who honored Him with their lips but whose
heart was far from Him, was stinging. Jesus said, "How beit in vain
do they worship me, teaching for doctrines the commandments of men"—and
thoroughly scolded them for their man-made traditions which He said
made the Word of God of no effect.
Many
falsely assume the religion of the Pharisees was the Old Testament
religion, the religion of Moses.
No
way. Even though Jesus said that they sat "in Moses’ seat,"
recognizing their inheritance of the authority of Moses (in
administering the law), He warned against the doctrine of the Pharisees,
which He specifically called their "leaven."
The
added corruptions; the repressive, restrictive, hyper-religious
customs and traditions of these men were what Jesus
attacked. They had made the Word of God, a way of life spelled
out In the scriptures, of "no effect" by their traditions.
After
all, very few even today figure their religion is any good to them
if they can understand it, do they? Isn't it much better if it borders
on the mysterious, the unknown, the obscure? Isn't it more effective
to gaze in wonderment at bizarre, detailed, carefully arranged rituals
performed by some person dressed in obvious "religious" garb, and
vaguely "guess" this must be pleasing to some sort of divine being,
than it is to observe and appreciate the practical, day-to-day way
of life that God lays down in His Word?
The
Pharisees decided it was holy to fast twice each week, as if on
a righteously rigorous schedule. (You'd be a rich man if you could
have a dollar for every day those pretending religious fanatics
failed to really fast "twice in the week," even though they
openly bragged about it.)
Jesus
was well aware of the story about the Pharisee and the publican.
He said, "Two men went up into the temple to pray; the one a Pharisee,
and the other a publican. The Pharisee stood and prayed thus with
himself, God, I thank thee, that I am not as other men are, extortioners,
unjust, adulterers, or even as this publican. I fast twice in the
week, I give tithes of all that I possess. And the publican, standing
afar off, would not lift up so much as his eyes unto heaven, but
smote upon his breast, saying, God be merciful to me a sinner. I
tell you, this man went down to his house justified rather than
the other: for every one that exalteth himself shall be abased;
and he that humbleth himself shall be exalted" (Luke 18:10-14).
Here
was the attitude of the Pharisees again: That of spiritual
pride, vanity, ego, self-importance and hypocrisy!
The
publican (normally suspected to be a cheat by the literate masses)
knew what he was, and was repenting of it. The Pharisee was
only interested in what the publican was, and had absolutely
no doubt of his own "righteousness." He could not admit that he
had any of his own sins, and bragged he was entirely righteous.
Unfortunately,
the "leaven" of the Pharisees is very much alive and active in too
many religious folk. Spiritual pride, vanity, pretense, hypocrisy—these
are blatantly obvious in many a posing, pompous, pseudo-spiritual
person today.
Jesus
told of the martyrdom of men of God in times past, and then indicted
the Pharisees because they admitted to being descendants of
those who had done such things.
The
implication of Christ's words are clear: if the Pharisees had
lived during those earlier days, they would have perpetrated the
same crimes! Not only this, but Jesus also implied that they
were plotting His own murder, and that some of them would remain
alive to be involved, no doubt, in the murder of James, Zebedee's
son; of Steven; and the attempts on the life of Paul!
There
were those, Jesus said, who "worshipped" Him. That is, they "revered",
and "adored" His person; they "believed on Him"! But He said, "in
vain do they worship me, teaching for doctrines the commandments
of men"(Matt. 15: 9)
Worship?
How
many who are professing Christians believe that today? After all,
the very essence of "salvation" according to the way many look at
it is to accept Christ as personal Savior, to believe on
Him; to admit you are a sinner, and to worship Jesus!
"If
you love the Lord, honk!" says the bumper sticker. The guy
in the automobile can look pityingly on each unsaved sinner who
passes without honking—because he thinks "loving the Lord" is the
key to salvation.
If
You believe—you shall be saved!" is the popular belief. But
the demons believe, James said—and demons aren't "saved."
Jesus said belief can flower into worship, and still be done
in vain.
To
those who believe "on" Jesus—how about believing what
Jesus said? It's possible to worship even the real Jesus,
and still do it in vain—remember, those Pharisees and others were
facing the real Jesus and blew it, where millions today only
fantasize about a fake Jesus, a counterfeit, and so
start off worse than the Pharisees!
Jesus
become very angry at the Pharisees, but His anger was not
self-oriented; He wasn’t mad because His own ego was bruised.
Jesus
directed His anger through an outgoing spirit of love,
coupled with grief toward human beings who were so bigoted and pig-headed
they could not see the simple truths before their eyes. For example,
mad Mark's account of Jesus' healing of the man with the withered
hand.
"Again
he entered the synagogue, and a man was there who had a withered
hand. And they watched him, to see whether he would heal on the
Sabbath, so that they might accuse him" (Mark 3:1-2, RSV).
Notice,
there was no doubt in these religious leaders' minds whether
Jesus had the power to heal—they knew He had that power!
So
why didn't they rejoice? As religious leaders whose primary job
was to "feed the flock," and to be as gentle shepherds over the
"little people" in their charge, why should they not have been deeply
grateful for the miraculous power that Jesus exercised which brought
such blessed relief from physical aches and pains, from blindness,
deafness, dumbness, epilepsy, leprosy and all the other hideous
diseases which afflicted a sick and poverty stricken generation?
Strangely,
since these murder-plotting Pharisees postured themselves to be
religious leaders and the proprietors of the Holy Scriptures, they
should have at least had full knowledge of the terrible penalties
God would impose on any such individuals who were guilty of forming
various clandestine alliances with other religious and philosophical
organizations with which they normally would have, had no relationship
whatsoever.
Jews
was in the synagogue, and these religious leaders watched Him to
see whether He would heal on the Sabbath so they might accuse
Him!
Thus,
Jesus was being baited. They almost expected, indeed hoped and
prayed, that Jesus would heal on the Sabbath in order
that they might have what they felt was tangible evidence that Jesus
had done something wrong! Just a few verses earlier, the Pharisees
had tried to accuse Jesus because His disciples were plucking ears
of grain and eating them on the Sabbath day, and Jesus had to tell
them of how David ate the shewbread, and remind them that the Sabbath
was not a yoke of bondage and a burden, but "the Sabbath was made
for man" not "man for the Sabbath; so the Son of man is Lord even
of the Sabbath." (Strange, isn’t the Sabbath the only day
which is truely sanctified by God in the Bible?)
Jesus
looked about Him and spied the man with the withered hand and said,
"Come here." Then He said to the Pharisees, "Is it lawful on the
Sabbath to do good or to harm, to save life or to kill?"
Again,
that ringing voice of authority and that level gaze of conviction
combined with the logic of those words, were simply too much for
these hypocritical charlatans. They simply had to shut their mouths
in the face of such piercing logic. They couldn’t answer either
way. If they said, "Yes, it is lawful to do good," they would give
full approval for Jesus’ actions of healing on the Sabbath. If they
said it was lawful to do harm, then this would be an obvious flagrant
violation of the biblical principles for which they stood.
"And
He looked around at them with anger."
That's
right—Jesus was mad. After all, doesn't the Bible say, "Be
ye angry and sin not"? (Eph. 4:26).
The
Spirit of God helps an individual control and direct these
emotions, so that they an not motivated from vanity and ego.
Jesus’
anger had nothing to do with the relationship between Himself
and the Pharisees! He was not "mad at them in the way you or
I might have been! Actually, He loved them—hoped the best
for them, wanted to see as many of them as possible come to themselves
and repent (though He knew according to the prophecies of the Old
Testament this was exceedingly unlikely); Jesus expressed outgoing
concern for them, all the while plainly calling the truth "true,"
labeling their attitudes and woeful lack of character for precisely
what it was!
The
Bible says, "And he looked around at them with anger, grieved at
their hardness of heart, and said to the man, Stretch out your hand.
He stretched it out, and his hand was restored" (Mark 3,5).
Notice,
the Pharisees saw one of the most incredible miracles in
all of history! it defied anything any human eye had ever seen before!
They actually saw an emaciated, withered, shrunken limb,
grotesque in its gnarled condition, extended out toward Jesus to
gradually swell to individual fingers and assume full size with
a normal, healthy skin color, able to grasp and reach and be utilized
with the full capability of the marvelous human hand.
Instead
of congratulating the man, receiving him joyously, clapping him
on the back, and having the rewarding experiences of gathering around
to give a good honest shake and grip to that newly restored hand,
then turning to congratulate Jesus and thank Him for having so freed
and healed a member of their own congregation, "the Pharisees went
out, and immediately, held counsel with the Herodians against him,
how to destroy him."
Such
is the shameful account of religious bigotry. Unfortunately, such
bigotry is alive and well in many a human heart to this day!
The
Sadducees and Pharisees, as true to form as all competing religious
groups, were constantly battling one another.
Religious
arguments on all matters great and small constantly seesawed back
and forth between them. They no doubt allowed their bitter hatred
for each other to occasionally overwhelm their hatred for Jesus,
and his record has been preserved as a witness to the abject futility
of religious bickering for all generations down through history.
The
occasion of Jesus' last public teaching in Jerusalem was particularly
meaningful. The ruling Sanhedrin had formally challenged Jesus'
authority, demanding to know whether He was an accredited teacher
or not. Mark, Matthew and Luke all record the challenge of the Jewish
leader who asks Jesus, "Just who in the world gave you the authority
to do these things here in the temple, teaching the people and saying
the things you are saying—where does your authority come from?"
Jesus
said, "I will ask you one question—and if you can give me a straight
answer, then I’ll tell you the source of my authority.
"The
baptism of John, did it come from heaven, or originate with men?
Answer me!"
Dozens
of people heard this rapid-fire exchange in the temple. Nobody ever
talked that way to the esteemed religious leaders. What were they
going to do! In a hastily huddled caucus, the Sanhedrin reasoned
among themselves.
In
hurried and nervous whispers, and with the curious gaze of their
constituents fixed on the backs of their heads, they came to the
awfully embarrassing conclusion that they were stuck: if they were
to admit the baptism of John had come from a heavenly source, they
knew Jesus’ answer would have probably been, "Then why didn't you
believe him?"
On
the other hand, if they should claim John's ministry and baptismal
practice came from only a human source, the rulers of the Sanhedrin
"feared the people"; because everyone surely held "John to be a
prophet."
One
of their number, chosen to be the spokesman, finally gathered himself
to his full height, arrayed in his robes and great dignity, and
gave Jesus their studied opinion.
Perhaps
he put h this way, "The full question of John's authority has not
yet been formally brought before the Sanhedrin, and such an egregiously
complex question, considering its enormous implications and ramifications,
would demand thorough consideration. We would therefore require
a great deal of further study and deliberation before we could ever
attempt to answer such an impromptu matter: consequently, we would
wish to make no comment on John's ministry and baptism at this time."
(Or he might have just said, "We don't know!")
Jesus'
conclusive statement twisted their consternation into knots, "Since
you obviously can't answer me, neither will I answer you by what
authority I am doing all these things."
Then
followed three keenly incisive—and obvious parables in which Jesus
exposed the hypocritical leadership of the religious leaders: the
parable of the two sons, the parable of the wicked husbandman, and
the parable of the marriage feast for the king's son.
Matthew's
account begins with the parable of the man who had two sons (see
Matt. 21:28-46).
Jesus
said, "What do you think about this? There was a man who had two
boys and he came to the first and said, 'Son, I want you to go to
work today in my vineyard,' and the boy said, 'I won't do it.'"
But afterward he repented and went to work.
The
father came to the second lad and said the same thing. And the boy
answered, 'Yes, sir, I am going," but he didn't go.
"Which
of the two did the will of his father?" Jesus asked the leaders
of the Sanhedrin.
They
had to admit the obvious, which was "the first." Then Jesus, speaking
directly to their leaders, in the audible presence of dozens upon
dozens of people in the immediate environment of the temple, said,
"I’m telling you the truth: petty crooks and whores will enter into
the kingdom of God before you—because John came to you preaching
and following the right way of the law of God, and you didn't believe
him!
"But
the petty crooks and harlots of our society believed him! When you
saw that happen, you still didn't repent. Even when you saw John's
ministry changing human lives, you never opened your mind so that
you could believe John's preaching.
"But,
before you leave, let me give you another parable [Matthew, Mark
and Luke all record it]: There was a man, a homeowner, who had planted
a vineyard and had grown a protective hedge around it; he also had
set up a wine press and built a tower for the production of wine.
He then became an absentee landlord as he was forced to go away
to another country.
"When
the harvest time was near, he sent some of his servants to collect
the profits from his vineyard. But the renters willfully and maliciously
ambushed his servants—beat one of them, murdered another, and stoned
a third. The injured ones came back to the landowner, and so he
sent another servant, only to find that they did the same thing
to him. They injured him badly, and threw him out.
"Seeing
that he was totally failing by sending his servants, the landowner
decided to send his own son, reasoning that they would revere him
because after all, 'he is from my own family.' But when the renters
saw the son, they conspired among themselves saying, 'Now this is
our real opportunity: he is the heir of the property—let's kill
him, take away his inheritance and claim it for our own!' So they
captured the son, threw him out of the vineyard, and killed him
in a nearby lot."
Jesus
then turned to the leader of the Sanhedrin and asked, "When the
lord of the vineyard shall return, what do you think he will do
to those renters of his property!" The leaders answered, "No doubt
he will utterly destroy such miserable creatures, and turn around
and find some new renters who would give him the profits which are
rightfully his when they are due."
They
had trapped themselves. They could give no other logical answer
in front of the crowd, despite their refusal to answer concerning
John's baptism.
Jesus
then asked, "Why, have you never read in the scriptures" (an acid-laden
question, for they were supposed to be the most highly skilled in
this business claiming to have known every minute aspect and understanding),
"the stone which the builders rejected, that same stone is made
the chief cornerstone. This was the doing of the Lord, and it is
wonderful in our eyes"? (See Psalm 118:22,23.)
"Therefore,
I’m telling you, the kingdom of God is going to be taken away from
you, and will be given to a nation bringing forth the fruits thereof
And anyone who falls on that chief cornerstone is going to be smashed
to pieces. But whoever it shall fall upon, will be scattered as
dust." (A veiled reference to Isa. 8:14-15.)
The
chief priests and Pharisees did not need to be either especially
learned or bright to perceive that Jesus was talking about them,
and so in another whispered conspiracy, they frantically tried to
find some method whereby they could arrest him. But the crowd of
excited, enthusiastic people milling all around thought Jesus was
a prophet, and the religious leaders were smart enough to realize
they were asking for big trouble—a potential riot in an occupied
city is inviting disaster—if they continued with their plan to physically
abuse Jesus. Their time would come; but just now they feared the
crowd—knowing that such a precipitous act would be illegal. They
felt totally thwarted and frustrated; Jesus' popularity with the
crowd, who obviously believed He was a spiritual leader and a prophet,
was growing.
Matthew's
gospel then includes the next parable where Jesus explained that
the kingdom of heaven was "likened unto" a certain king who decided
to throw a big wedding feast for his son who was the prince, and
so sent all of his servants out to call the invited guests to the
marriage.
Unfortunately,
and for, whatever reason, all of those who had received formal announcements
to the wedding refused to come. So the king sent other servants
out telling those who had been invited, "Look, the feast is all
ready, all the preparations are made, much hard work has been done,
all the special foods and meats are here, the wines and drinks are
the finest and have taken much time to order; the rooms are decorated
and the musicians have been hired to entertain you—so won't you
please come to the marriage feast for my son?"
But
the guests ridiculed the king, his son, the marriage, the feast
and especially the invitation. The last, in fact, became a common
joke. Nobody would have shown up now, so they all scattered. One
went to his own farm, another back to his business, while the remainder
of them manhandled the servants, bruised, and injured some, even
murdering others.
When
word filtered back to the king, he was furious. "Angry" was in fact
much too calm a word to describe his feelings. He wasted little
time in sending his military units to destroy the murderers, and
burn their city to the ground.
Then
the king got back to the matter of the feast; he told some other
servants, "The wedding is ready and those whom I had invited earlier
have proved unworthy to attend, so I want you to go out into the
county roads and highways and collect as many people as you can
find—I don't care who they are—and tell them that I want them to
come to my son's wedding feast."
So
the servants went out into all the towns, villages, highways and
byways, gathering together as many as they could find, without respect
to economic standing, social status or personal reputation; bad
and good, the servants were not to discriminate or make value judgments
as to who should, or should not, come to the king's feast. All were
now to be invited, and finally the palace banquet table was filled
with guests.
When
the king entered and looked them over, he noticed one man who had
not bothered to dress up in wedding attire. Apparently he did not
appreciate or respect the magnificent opportunity he was being given.
The
king then went up to him and asked him, "Friend, how is it that
you came in here not having a wedding garment on?"
The
man was struck speechless; he couldn't answer. The king turned to
his servants and said, "Tie him up hand and foot and cast him out
into outer darkness for there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth—because
many are called, or invited, but only very few are chosen!" (Matt.
22:1-14).
The
meaning of this parable was transparent to all who heard it. There
was no doubt that the religious leaders were the first guests who
had scornfully rejected their own king's generous invitation. Their
reward was swift.
But
the story had another point, a final twist. One of the guests who,
though not deserving it, was fortunate enough to receive such a
priceless opportunity did not appreciate it. His end, was the bitterest
of all—he was so close, yet so far.
The
Herodians and the Pharisees had conspired together to load each
of Jesus' audience with a handful of spies who pretended they were
believers, applauding Jesus words, nodding and looking at Him with
bright-eyed agreement, in order to trap Him in some error of speech,
some illegal activity or some seditious plot. The whole idea was
to be able to bring about Jesus' arrest and turn Him over to the
authority of the governor (Luke 20:20).
Finally,
this mixed group of Pharisees and Herodians had an opportunity to
ask Him a question—so they gave their best shot: They wanted to
force Jesus into a direct conflict with the Roman authorities. They
sought to get Jesus to condemn Himself.
To
the question they maliciously concocted, Jesus dared not give either
a "Yes" or a "no" answer. "Master [Teacher or Rabbi], we know that
you are true and what you teach is true, that you do not seem to
be a respecter of persons or play any favorites among those of different
social standing, and that you are indeed teaching the way of God—so
we would really appreciate it if you would answer this question.
"Is
it lawful to pay Caesar tribute money or not?" (In other words,
"Why should we have to pay taxes to this pagan, heathen warrior?")
Jesus
knew their collusion; He could immediately sense their vicious,
sneaky maneuver. Jesus knew they were a pack of hypocrites (Mark
12:15) and bluntly called it straight: "Why are you trying to tempt
me, you pack of hypocrites? Show me a penny."
Someone
dug into the fold of his robe and produced a "Penny" (denarion
in the Greek language, which was a coin of considerably more
value than a "penny" of today.) Then Jesus, understanding how they
would respond no matter which way He answered, said, "Whose image
and superscription is on the coin?" They answered, "Caesar’s," and
He said, "Fine, since you say it is Caesar’s, why don't you give
it to him. Since Caesar’s picture is on it, it's his coin. So you
should give to Caesar the things which are Caesar's, and you should
likewise give to God the things which are God's!"
Everyone
absolutely marveled at Jesus' deft ability to turn a dangerous and
potential trap—He could have been arrested—into such a beautiful
example. And the words of this powerful verse, which have been immortalized
in the King James English, are worth repeating, "Render therefore
unto Caesar the things which be Caesar’s, and unto God the things
which be God's" (see Matt. 22:16-22).
There
was no other possible answer. If Jesus had played it "safe" and
said, "Yes, it is lawful to pay tribute," the religious leaders
would have no doubt accused Him of rejecting all of the common hopes
and teachings of the future kingdom of Israel, the total sanctity
of the law of Moses plus the authority of the Sanhedrin, and claimed
that He was giving public recognition to a Gentile government, approving
its domineering occupation of their homeland, and indeed almost
paying homage and obeisance to a pagan idol.
If
Jesus had answered, "No,"' they could have accused Him of being
an illegal insurrectionist who was trying to bring about an uprising
against the Roman state: they could have reported Him to the governor,
who had had his hands full with similar situations over the past
several years, as one false teacher after another had tried to incite
followers into bringing about a revolution and wresting the rich
kingdom of Judea away from the Roman armies.
Later,
first the Sadducees and then the Pharisees were again totally silenced
when they brought their favorite trick questions to Jesus.
The
Sadducees did not believe in the resurrection of the dead, and so,
in order to confuse the Pharisee’ dogmatic assertion of this doctrine,
contrived an absurdly elaborate situation involving seven marriages
to the same woman.
This
never failed to befuddle and silence the Pharisees, much to the
Sadducees delight. They took the same question to Jesus. "Rabbi,
Moses writes to us that if a man's brother dies and leaves a wife
behind him, yet leaves no child, that it is the obligation of his
brother to marry his widowed wife, and to raise up seed unto his
brother that their name be preserved in Israel. Now it so happens
that there were seven brothers we know about, and the first married,
then died, having left no child. The second son recognized his obligation
and married his dead brothers wife, and they didn't have any children,
and he finally died. The third did the same thing, and finally all
of them did the same thing and married the woman, clear up to the
seventh, all of the brothers successively dying, yet no one ever
managing to have a child. Finally, still childless, the woman also
died. The question is, In the resurrection whose wife will she be,
because all seven had her to wife?"
It
was important for the sake of this story that the Sadducees explain
that each of the seven successive brothers had no children, because
if any child had been produced, it would have meant there was no
further obligation for the next brother, even upon the death of
the elder one, to marry the woman—for an heir would be living and
the name would be preserved.
The
Pharisees habitually stumbled all over themselves in their ultra-legalistic
approach to the Scriptures, trying to ask all sorts of counter-
questions: they probably tried to find out how old the parties were,
how long they lived together, whether or not their marriage was
successful, whether there might have been some "unseemly thing"
or other problem which could have nullified one or the other of
the seven marriages, etc. But the whole futile exercise always ended
up in hopeless confusion, with no one actually able to give the
Sadducees a satisfactory answer.
Jesus
turned this trick question into a positive lesson, not only against
their hypocrisy, but as an opportunity to teach the truth about
the nature of the Resurrection, which millions of people still refuse
to believe today.
He
said, "It's obvious you are making a big mistake, and don't even
know the scriptures, or the power of God. Because when people rise
from the dead, they will neither marry nor give away a daughter
or son in marriage, but will be exactly as are the angels in heaven—not
physical, but spirit beings—sons of God's, sons of the resurrection
and therefore not subject to the laws of human marriage.
But
concerning the dead, and the fact of the resurrection, haven't you
ever read in the book of Moses [Jesus’ favorite "put down"] in the
place concerning the burning bush, how when God said, ‘I am the
God of Abraham and the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob’; that
that God is not the God of the dead, but of the living? You have
no idea how far afield you are from the truth of the scriptures!"
When
the crowd around heard the incredible answer, they were absolutely
astonished. Several of the scribes—most likely Sadducees themselves—then
had the intellectual honesty to say, "Master, you have certainly
answered well"—though perhaps not yet the courage to admit how wrong
they were or to repent of it (see vv. 23-33).
And
Luke says that from that time on, the Sadducees dared not ask Him
any further questions!
I
don't blame them!
|