Life of Christ 97
Jesus has arrived at the
Feast of Tabernacles partway through its weeklong run. Hundreds of thousands of
Jews had convened on Jerusalem for this feast, and the city was buzzing. One of
the main topics of conversation that week was Jesus (John 7.12). Who exactly
was He? Was He what He claimed to be? Was He a fraud?
Jesus goes to the center
of it all, the Temple, and proceeds to begin teaching. The session rapidly
devolves into a questioning give and take. It begins with a challenge to His
right to even teach (John 7.15). Jesus had dealt with this very objection
before on His last visit to the synagogue of His hometown in Nazareth. (see Life of Christ 71) Basically, it was a rejection of His authority to teach
because He hadn't been accredited in the manner to which they were accustomed. The
rabbis of His day insisted that new rabbis be trained by current rabbis, and
thus schools were developed for this purpose. Supposedly they ensured that a
rabbi was connected, via a long chain of rabbinical training going back
centuries, to the original rabbi, Moses. Jesus, of course, had no rabbinical
training whatsoever, and thus some said He shouldn't have even had the right to
teach at all.
His response is that His
teaching didn't come from a chain of rabbis going all the way back to Moses,
but rather that it came directly from the Father Himself i.e. 'right from the
horse's mouth' in our vernacular. 'My doctrine is not mine, but his that sent
me' (John 7.16).
He then offers them two
ways to test out the validity of His claim to be teaching truth straight from
God. First is the test of obedience. 'If any man will do his will, he shall
know of the doctrine, whether it be of God' (John 7.17). Obedience often
precedes understanding, and it is for a lack of grasping this that many a
Christian stumbles. I'm heartily for explaining the why behind the what, but too
often it is impossible to accurately get across the why until the what starts
being done. The second test was of selflessness. If He was making up His own
material He would have spent much more time and emphasis talking about Him. He
didn't. He spent His time revealing the Father. (John 7.18).
The Jews claimed
vigorously to be followers of Moses, holding him up above all prophets and
rabbis, and believing his words were God's Words. Jesus now tells them that
they essentially were not followers of Moses because they disobeyed the Mosaic
Law, specifically the commandment, 'Thou shalt not kill' (Exodus 20.13). He
said this because there were those in the crowd that day in the Temple who were
actively seeking a pretense and means of killing Him.
Their response was to
pretend no such thing was happening, and to again accuse Him of being possessed
of Satan. 'Thou hast a devil; who goeth about to kill thee?' (John 7.20). This
was laughable at best and downright deceptive at worst. Just five verses later
we see that the plots on His life were already public knowledge. 'Then said
some of them in Jerusalem, Is not this he, whom they seek to kill?' (John
7.25). In fact, in just a few short minutes, this very conversation would end
with an attempt on His life (John 7.30).
At this point Jesus
takes the offensive, and goes directly to an area in which He was so often
attacked before, that of healing on the Sabbath day. Jesus, again, finds a way
to skewer them. Their esteemed Moses told them to be circumcised, and they valued
circumcision so highly they would even perform the rite on the Sabbath. In
other words, even the strict Pharisees didn't think that performing a
circumcision on the Sabbath broke the Law in regards to not working on the
Sabbath. Jesus then tells them that every argument that could be applied to
prevent Him from healing on the Sabbath could also be applied to performing a
circumcision on the Sabbath. Why, then, were they angry at Him for performing
miracles on the Sabbath (John 7.22-23)?
He has now pointed out
both their illogic and deceit. He then appeals to the people to make a judgment
call about Who He is, and to make it correctly, not simply by how it looks on
the surface according to the picture the Pharisees had painted of Him. 'Judge
not according to appearance, but judge righteous judgment' (John 7.24).
At this point, some
genius in the crowd comes up with a surefire answer to all of Christ's logic,
power, and pleading. The Jews of His day believed that the messiah, when he
came, would appear suddenly, out of nowhere, and sweep them all to earthly
glory. Jesus, on the other hand, had a reputation that had grown gradually, and
everybody knew the story or His origins in Nazareth, and of His parents, Joseph
and Mary (John 7.27). Ergo, He couldn't be the Messiah since they knew where He
came from.
Jesus, making no bones
about it at all, lifts His voice for emphasis and shouts to all around that
they are wrong about this. He didn't come from Joseph and Mary and Nazareth. He
came straight from God, sent from God, and they clearly didn't know this God.
'Then cried Jesus in the temple as he taught, saying, Ye both know me, and ye
know whence I am: and I am not come of myself, but he that sent me is true,
whom ye know not. But I know him: for I am from him, and he hath sent me' (John
7.28-29).
This is nothing less
than a highly public and aggressive claim to be the divine Son of God, and the
Jews obviously took it this way for the immediate emotional response of the
crowd around Him was to seek to kill Him (John 7.30). Of course, this was neither
the time, or place, or manner in which He needed to die the atoning death
necessary to be our sacrifice, and He slipped away in the mayhem. Yet again, we
clearly see Jesus claiming to be the Son of God, and that the Jews of His day
understood Him to be doing so.
Others in the crowd,
more rational, discuss among themselves the fact that His claims to the
messiahship had been fully authenticated by His many indisputable miracles
(John 7.31).
This entire story has
been the record of a give and take with an overtly hostile and inertly
supportive crowd of Jews in the Temple. We will see the like again and again in
the last six months of His life as He takes His claims right to the heart of
the Jewish system.
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