Verses 1-50
Chapter 12
In Matthew 12:1-50
we read the history of a series of crucial events in the life of Jesus.
In every man's life there are decisive moments, times and events on
which the whole of his life hinges. This chapter presents us with the
story of such a period in the life of Jesus. In it we see the orthodox
Jewish religious leaders of the day coming to their final decision
regarding Jesus--and that was rejection. It was not only rejection in
the sense that they would have nothing to do with him; it was rejection
in the sense that they came to the conclusion that nothing less than his
complete elimination would be enough.
Here in this chapter we see the first definite steps, the end of
which could be nothing other than the Cross. The characters are painted
clear before us. On the one hand there are the Scribes and the
Pharisees, the representatives of orthodox religion. We can see four
stages in their increasing attitude of malignant hostility to Jesus.
(i) In Matthew 12:1-8,
the story of how the disciples plucked the ears of corn on the Sabbath
day, we see growing suspicion. The Scribes and Pharisees regarded with
growing suspicion a teacher who was prepared to allow his followers to
disregard the minutia of the Sabbath Law. This was the kind of thing
which could not be allowed to spread unchecked.
(ii) In Matthew 12:9-14,
the story of the healing of the man with the paralysed hand on the
Sabbath day, we see active and hostile investigation. It was not by
chance that the Scribes and Pharisees were in the synagogue on that
Sabbath. Luke says they were there to watch Jesus (Luke 6:7).
From that time on Jesus would have to work always under the malignant
eye of the orthodox leaders. They would do his steps, like private
detectives, seeking the evidence on which they could level a charge
against him.
(iii) In Matthew 12:22-32,
the story of how the orthodox leaders charged Jesus with healing by the
power of the devil, and of how he spoke to them of the sin which has no
forgiveness, we see the story of deliberate and prejudiced blindness.
From that time on nothing Jesus could ever do would be right in the eyes
of these men. They had so shut their eyes to God that they were
completely incapable of ever seeing his beauty and his truth. Their
prejudiced blindness had launched them on a path from which they were
quite incapable of ever turning back.
(iv) In Matthew 12:14
we see evil determination. The orthodox were not now content to watch
and criticize; they were preparing to act. They had gone into council to
find a way to put an end to this disturbing Galilaean. Suspicion,
investigation, blindness were on the way to open action.
In face of all this the answer of Jesus is clearly delineated.
We can see five ways in which he met this growing opposition.
(i) He met it with courageous defiance. In the story of the healing of the man with the paralysed hand (Matthew 12:9-14)
we see him deliberately defying the Scribes and Pharisees. This thing
was not done in a corner; it was done in a crowded synagogue. It was not
done in their absence; it was done when they were there with deliberate
intent to formulate a charge against him. So far from evading the
challenge, Jesus is about to meet it head on.
(ii) He met it with warning. In Matthew 12:22-32
we see Jesus giving the most terrible of warnings. He is warning those
men that, if they persist in shutting their eyes to the truth of God,
they are on the way to a situation where, by their own act, they will
have shut themselves out from the grace of God. Here Jesus is not so
much on the defence as on the attack. He makes quite clear where their
attitude is taking them.
(iii) He met it with a staggering series of claims. He is greater than the Temple (Matthew 12:6),
and the Temple was the most sacred place in all the world. He is
greater than Jonah, and no preacher ever produced repentance so
amazingly as Jonah did (Matthew 12:41). He is greater than Solomon, and Solomon was the very acme of wisdom (Matthew 12:42).
His claim is that there is nothing in spiritual history than which he
is not greater. There are no apologies here; there is the statement of
the claims of Christ at their highest.
(iv) He met it with the statement that his teaching is essential. The point of the strange parable of the Empty House (Matthew 12:43-45)
is that the Law may negatively empty a man of evil, but only the gospel
can fill him with good. The Law therefore simply leaves a man an empty
invitation for all evil to take up its residence within his heart; the
gospel so fills him with positive goodness that evil cannot enter in.
Here is Jesus, claim that the gospel can do for men what the Law can
never do.
(v) Finally, he met it with an invitation. Matthew 12:46-50
are in essence an invitation to enter into kinship with him. These
verses are not so much a disowning of Jesus' own kith and kin as an
invitation to all men to enter into kinship with him, through the
acceptance of the will of God, as that will has come to men in him. They
are an invitation to abandon our own prejudices and self-will and to
accept Jesus Christ as Master and Lord. If we refuse, we drift farther
away from God; if we accept, we enter into the very family and heart of
God.
Breaking The Sabbath Law (Matthew 12:1-8)
12:1-8 At that
time Jesus went through the cornfields on the Sabbath day. His disciples
were hungry, and they began to pluck the ears of corn and to eat them.
When the Pharisees saw this, they said to him, "Look you, your disciples
are doing that which it is not permitted to do on the Sabbath day." He
said to them, "Have you not read what David and his friends did, when he
was hungry--how he went into the house of God and ate the shewbread,
which it was not permissible for him, nor for his friends to eat, but
which the priests alone may eat? Or, have you not read in the Law that
the priests profane the Sabbath, and yet remain blameless? I tell you
that something greater than the Temple is here. But, if you had known
the meaning of the saying, 'It is mercy that I wish, and not sacrifice,'
you would not have condemned those who are blameless. For the Son of
Man is Lord of the Sabbath."
(The last phrase should perhaps be translated: "For man is master of the Sabbath.")
In Palestine in the time of Jesus the cornfields and the
cultivated lands were laid out in long narrow strips; and the ground
between the strips was always a right of way. It was on one of these
strips between the cornfields that the disciples and Jesus were walking
when this incident happened.
There is no suggestion that the disciples were stealing. The Law
expressly laid it down that the hungry traveller was entitled to do
just what the disciples were doing, so long as he only used his hands to
pluck the ears of corn, and did not use a sickle: "When you go into
your neighbours standing grain, you may pluck the ears with your hand,
but you shall not put a sickle to your neighbours standing grain" (Deuteronomy 23:25).
W. M. Thomson in The Land and the Book tells how, when he was
travelling in Palestine, the same custom still existed. One of the
favourite evening dishes for the traveller is parched corn. "When
travelling in harvest time," Thomson writes, "my muleteers have very
often prepared parched corn in the evenings after the tent has been
pitched. Nor is the gathering of these green ears for parching ever
regarded as stealing.... So, also, I have seen my muleteers, as we
passed along the wheat fields, pluck off the ears, rub them in their
hands, and eat the grains unroasted, just as the apostles are said to
have done."
In the eyes of the Scribes and Pharisees, the fault of the
disciples was not that they had plucked and eaten the grains of corn,
but that they had done so on the Sabbath. The Sabbath Law was very
complicated and very detailed. The commandment forbids work on the
Sabbath day; but the interpreters of the Law were not satisfied with
that simple prohibition. Work had to be defined. So thirty-nine basic
actions were laid down, which were forbidden on the Sabbath, and amongst
them were reaping, winnowing and threshing, and preparing a meal. The
interpreters were not even prepared to leave the matter there. Each item
in the list of forbidden works had to be carefully defined. For
instance, it was forbidden to carry a burden. But what is a burden? A
burden is anything which weighs as much as two dried figs. Even the
suggestion of work was forbidden; even anything which might symbolically
be regarded as work was prohibited. Later the great Jewish teacher,
Maimonides, was to say, "To pluck ears is a kind of reaping." By their
conduct the disciples were guilty of far more than one breach of the
Law. By plucking the corn they were guilty of reaping; by rubbing it in
their hands they were guilty of threshing; by separating the grain and
the chaff they were guilty of winnowing; and by the whole process they
were guilty of preparing a meal on the Sabbath day, for everything which
was to be eaten on the Sabbath had to be prepared the day before.
The orthodox Jews took this Sabbath Law with intense
seriousness. The Book of Jubilee has a chapter (chapter 50) about the
keeping of the Sabbath. Whoever lies with his wife, or plans to do
anything on the Sabbath, or plans to set out on a journey (even the
contemplation of work is forbidden), or plans to buy or sell, or draws
water, or lifts a burden is condemned. Any man who does any work on the
Sabbath (whether the work is in his house or in any other place), or
goes a journey, or tills a farm, any man who lights a fire or rides any
beast, or travels by ship at sea, any man who strikes or kills anything,
any man who catches an animal, a bird, or a fish, any man who fasts or
who makes war on a Sabbath--the man who does these things shall die. To
keep these commandments was to keep the Law of God; to break them was to
break the Law of God.
There is no doubt whatever that, from their own point of view,
the Scribes and Pharisees were entirely justified in finding fault with
the disciples for breaking the Law, and with Jesus for allowing them, if
not encouraging them, to do so.
The Claim Of Human Need (Matthew 12:1-8 Continued)
To meet the criticism of the Scribes and Pharisees Jesus put forward three arguments.
(i) He quoted the action of David (1 Samuel 21:1-6)
on the occasion when David and his young men were so hungry that they
went into the tabernacle--not the Temple, because this happened in the
days before the Temple was built--and ate the shewbread, which only the
priests could eat. The shewbread is described in Leviticus 24:5-9.
It consisted of twelve loaves of bread, which were placed every week in
two rows of six in the Holy Place. No doubt they were a symbolic
offering in which God was thanked for his gift of sustaining food. These
loaves were changed every week, and the old loaves became the
perquisite of the priests and could only be eaten by them. On this
occasion, in their hunger, David and his young men took and ate those
sacred loaves, and no blame attached to them. The claims of human need
took precedence over any ritual custom.
(ii) He quoted the Sabbath work of the Temple. The
Temple ritual always involved work--the kindling of fires, the slaughter
and the preparation of animals, the lifting of them on to the altar,
and a host of other things. This work was actually doubled on the
Sabbath, for on the Sabbath the offerings were doubled (compare e.g. Numbers 28:9).
Any one of these actions would have been illegal for any ordinary
person to perform on the Sabbath day. To light a fire, to slaughter an
animal, to lift it up on to the altar would have been to break the Law,
and hence to profane the Sabbath. But for the priests it was perfectly
legal to do these things, for the Temple worship must go on. That is to
say, worship offered to God took precedence of an the Sabbath rules and
regulations.
(iii) He quoted God's word to Hosea the prophet: "I desire steadfast love and not sacrifice" (Hosea 6:6).
What God desires far more than ritual sacrifice is kindness, the spirit
which knows no law other than that it must answer the call of human
need.
In this incident Jesus lays it down that the claim of
human need must take precedence of all other claims. The claims of
worship, the claims of ritual, the claims of liturgy are important but
prior to any of them is the claim of human need.
One of the modern saints of God is Father George Potter
who, out of the derelict Church of St. Chrysostom's in Peckham, made a
shining light of Christian worship and Christian service. To further the
work he founded the Brotherhood of the Order of the Holy Cross, whose
badge was the towel which Jesus Christ wore when he washed his
disciples' feet. There was no service too menial for the brothers to
render; their work for the outcast and for homeless boys with a criminal
record or criminal potentialities is beyond all praise. Father Potter
held the highest possible ideas of worship; and yet when he is
explaining the work of the Brotherhood he writes of anyone who wishes to
enter into its triple vow of poverty, chastity and obedience: "He
mustn't sulk if he cannot get to Vespers on the Feast of St. Thermogene.
He may be sitting in a police court waiting for a 'client'. . . . He
mustn't be the type who goes into the kitchen and sobs just because we
run short of incense. . . . We put prayer and sacraments first. We know
we cannot do our best otherwise, but the fact is that we have to spend
more time at the bottom of the Mount of Transfiguration than at the
top." He tells about one candidate who arrived, when he was just about
to give his boys a cup of cocoa and put them to bed. "So I said, 'Just
clean round the bath will you while it's wet?' He stood aghast and
stuttered, 'I didn't expect to clean up after dirty boys!' Well, well!
His life of devoted service to the Blessed Master lasted about seven
minutes. He did not unpack." Florence Allshorn, the great principal of a
women's missionary college, tells of the problem of the candidate who
always discovers that her time for quiet prayer has come just when there
are greasy dishes to be washed in not very warm water.
Jesus insisted that the greatest ritual service is the
service of human need. It is an odd thing to think that, with the
possible exception of that day in the synagogue at Nazareth, we have no
evidence that Jesus ever conducted a church service in all his life on
earth, but we have abundant evidence that he fed the hungry and
comforted the sad and cared for the sick. Christian service is not the
service of any liturgy or ritual; it is the service of human need.
Christian service is not monastic retiral; it is involvement in all the
tragedies and problems and demands of the human situation. Whittier had
it rightly:
"O brother man, fold to thy heart thy brother!
Where pity dwells, the peace of God is there;
To worship rightly is to love each other,
Each smile a hymn, each kindly deed a prayer.
For he whom Jesus loved hath truly spoken;
The holier worship which he deigns to bless
Restores the lost, and binds the spirit broken,
And feeds the widow and the fatherless.
Follow with reverent steps the great example
Of Him whose holy work was doing good;
So shall the wide earth seem our Father's temple,
Each loving life a psalm of gratitude."
That is what we mean--or ought to mean--when we say, "Let us worship God!"
Master Of The Sabbath (Matthew 12:1-8 Continued)
There remains in this passage one difficulty which it is not possible
to solve with absolute certainty. The difficulty lies in the last
phrase, "For the Son of man is lord of the sabbath." This phrase can
have two meanings.
(i) It may mean that Jesus is claiming to be Lord of the
Sabbath, in the sense that he is entitled to use the Sabbath as he
thinks fit. We have seen that the sanctity of the work of the Temple
surpassed and over-rode the Sabbath rules and regulations; Jesus has
just claimed that something greater than the Temple is here in him;
therefore he has the right to dispense with the Sabbath regulations and
to do as he thinks best on the Sabbath day. That may be said to be the
traditional interpretation of this sentence, but there are real
difficulties in it.
(ii) On this occasion Jesus is not defending himself for
anything that he did on the Sabbath; he is defending his disciples; and
the authority which he is stressing here is not so much his own
authority as the authority of human need. And it is to be noted that
when Mark tells of this incident he introduces another saying of Jesus
as part of the climax of it: "The Sabbath was made for man, not man for
the Sabbath" (Mark 2:27).
To this we must add the fact that in Hebrew and Aramaic the
phrase son of man is not a title at all, but simply a way of saying a
man. When the Rabbis began a parable, they often began it: "There was a
son of man who..."; when we would simply say, "There was a man who . .
." The Psalmist writes, "What is man that thou art mindful of him? and
the son of man that thou dost care for him?" (Psalms 8:4).
Again and again the Ezekiel God addresses Ezekiel as son of man. "And
he said to me: 'Son of man, stand upon your feet and I will speak with
you'" (Ezekiel 2:1; compare Ezekiel 2:6; Ezekiel 2:8; Ezekiel 3:1; Ezekiel 3:4; Ezekiel 3:17; Ezekiel 3:25). In all these cases son of man, spelled without the capital letters, simply means man.
In the (early and best) Greek manuscripts of the New Testament
all the words were written completely in capital letters. In these
manuscripts (called uncials) it would not be possible to tell where
special capitals are necessary. Therefore, in Matthew 12:8,
it may well be that son of man should be written without capital
letters, and that the phrase does not refer to Jesus but simply to man.
If we consider that what Jesus is pressing is the claims of
human need; if we remember that it is not himself but his disciples that
he is defending; if we remember that Mark tells us that he said that
the Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath; then we may
well conclude that what Jesus said here is: "Man is not the slave of the
Sabbath; he is the master of it, to use it for his own good." Jesus may
well be rebuking the Scribes and Pharisees for enslaving themselves and
their fellow-men with a host of tyrannical regulations; and he may well
be here laying down the great principle of Christian freedom, which
applies to the Sabbath as it does to all other things in life.
Love And Law (Matthew 12:9-14)
12:9-14 He left
there and went into their synagogue. And, look you, there was a man
there with a withered hand. So they asked him, "Is it permitted to heal
on the Sabbath?" They asked this question in order that they might find
an accusation against him. "What man will there be of you," he said,
"who will have a sheep, and, if the sheep falls into a pit on the
Sabbath day, will not take a grip of it, and lift it out? How much more
valuable is a man than a sheep? So, then, it is permitted to do a good
thing on the Sabbath day." Then he said to the man, "Stretch forth your
hand!" He stretched it out, and it was restored, sound as the other. So
the Pharisees went away and conferred against him, to find a way to
destroy him.
This incident is a crucial moment in the life of Jesus. He
deliberately and publicly broke the Sabbath Law; and the result was a
conference of the orthodox leaders to search out a way to eliminate him.
We will not understand the attitude of the orthodox unless we
understand the amazing seriousness with which they took the Sabbath Law.
That Law forbade all work on the Sabbath day, and so the orthodox Jews
would literally die rather than break it.
In the time of the rising under Judas Maccabaeus certain Jews
sought refuge in the caves in the wilderness. Antiochus sent a
detachment of men to attack them; the attack was made on the Sabbath
day; and these insurgent Jews died without even a gesture of defiance or
defence, because to fight would have been to break the Sabbath.
1Maccabees tells how the forces of Antiochus "gave them battle with all
speed. Howbeit they answered them not, neither cast they a stone at
them, nor stopped the places where they lay hid; but said: 'Let us die
in our innocency: heaven and earth shall testify for us, that ye put us
to death wrongfully.' So they rose up against them in battle on the
Sabbath, and they slew them with their wives and children and cattle, to
the number of a thousand people" (1 Maccabees 2:31-38).
Even in a national crisis, even to save their lives, even to protect
their nearest and their dearest, the Jews would not fight on the
Sabbath.
It was because the Jews insisted on keeping the Sabbath Law that
Pompey was able to take Jerusalem. In ancient warfare it was the custom
for the attacker to erect a huge mound which overlooked the battlements
of the besieged city and from the height of the mound to bombard the
defences. Pompey built his mound on the Sabbath days when the Jews
simply looked on and refused to lift a hand to stop him. Josephus says,
"And had it not been for the practice, from the days of our forefathers,
to rest on the seventh day, this bank could never have been perfected,
by reason of the opposition the Jews would have made; for though our Law
gave us leave then to defend ourselves against those that begin to
fight with us and assault us (this was a concession), yet it does not
permit us to meddle with our enemies while they do anything else"
(Josephus: Antiquities, 14. 4. 2.).
Josephus recalls the amazement of the Greek historian
Agatharchides at the way in which Ptolemy Lagos was allowed to capture
Jerusalem. Agatharchides wrote: "There are a people called Jews, who
dwell in a city the strongest of an cities, which the inhabitants call
Jerusalem, and are accustomed to rest on every seventh day; at which
time they make no use of their arms, nor meddle with husbandry, nor take
care of any of the affairs of life, but spread out their hands in their
holy places, and pray till evening time. Now it came to pass that when
Ptolemy the son of Lagos came into this city with his army, these men,
in observing this mad custom of theirs, instead of guarding the city,
suffered their country to submit itself to a bitter lord; and their Law
was openly proved to have commanded a foolish practice. This accident
taught an other men but the Jews to disregard such dreams as these were,
and not to follow the like idle suggestions delivered as a Law, when in
such uncertainty of human reasonings they are at a loss what they
should do" (Josephus: Against Apion, 1: 22). The rigorous Jewish
observance of the Sabbath seemed to other nations nothing short of
insanity, since it could lead to such amazing national defeats and
disasters.
It was that absolutely immovable frame of mind that Jesus was up
against. The Law quite definitely forbade healing on the Sabbath. It
was true that the Law clearly laid it down that "every case when life is
in danger supersedes the Sabbath Law." This was particularly the case
in diseases of the ear, the nose, the throat and the eyes. But even then
it was equally clearly laid down that steps could be taken to keep a
man from getting worse, but not to make him better. So a plain bandage
might be put on a wound, but not a medicated bandage, and so on.
In this case there was no question of the paralysed man's life
being in danger; as far as danger went, he would be in no worse
condition the next day. Jesus knew the Law; he knew what he was doing;
he knew that the Pharisees were waiting and watching; and yet he healed
the man. Jesus would accept no law which insisted that a man should
suffer, even without danger to life, one moment longer than necessary.
His love for humanity far surpassed his respect for ritual Law.
The Challenge Accepted (Matthew 12:9-14 Continued)
Jesus went into the synagogue, and in it was a man with a paralysed
hand. Our gospels tell us nothing more about this man, but the Gospel
according to the Hebrews, which was one of the early gospels which did
not succeed in gaining an entry to the New Testament, tells us that he
came to Jesus with the appeal: "I was a stone mason, seeking my living
with my hands. I pray you, Jesus, to give me back my health, so that I
shall not need to beg for food in shame."
But the Scribes and Pharisees were there, too. They were not
concerned with the man with the paralysed hand; they were concerned only
with the minutiae of their rules and regulations. So they asked Jesus:
"Is it permitted to heal on the Sabbath day?" Jesus knew the answer to
that question perfectly well; he knew that, as we have seen, unless
there was actual danger to life, healing was forbidden, because it was
regarded as an act of work.
But Jesus was wise. If they wished to argue about the Law, he
had the skill to meet them on their own ground. "Tell me," he said,
"suppose a man has a sheep, and that sheep falls into a pit on the
Sabbath day, will he not go and haul the sheep out of the pit?" That
was, in fact, a case for which the Law provided. If an animal fell into a
pit on the Sabbath, then it was within the Law to carry food to it,
which in any other case would have been a burden, and to render it all
assistance. "So," said Jesus, "it is permitted to do a good thing on the
Sabbath; and, if it is permitted to do a good thing to a sheep, how
much more must it be lawful to do it for a man, who is of so much more
value than any animal."
Jesus reversed the argument. "If," he argued, "it is right to do
good on the Sabbath, then to refuse to do good is evil." It was Jesus'
basic principle that there is no time so sacred that it cannot be used
for helping a fellow-man who is in need. We will not be judged by the
number of church services we have attended, or by the number of chapters
of the Bible we have read, or even by the number of the hours we have
spent in prayer, but by the number of people we have helped, when their
need came crying to us. To this, at the moment, the Scribes and
Pharisees had nothing to answer, for their argument had recoiled on
their own head.
So Jesus healed this man, and in healing him gave him three things.
(i) He gave him back his health. Jesus is vitally interested in
the bodies of men. Paul Tournier, in his book A Doctor's Case Book, has
some great things to pass on about healing and God. Professor
Courvoisier writes that the vocation of medicine is "a service to which
those are called, who, through their studies and the natural gifts with
which the Creator has endowed them specially fitted to tend the sick and
to heal them. Whether or not they are aware of it, whether or not they
are believers, this is from the Christian point of view fundamental,
that doctors are, by their profession, fellow-workers with God."
"Sickness and healing," said Dr. Pouyanne, "are acts of grace." "The
doctor is an instrument of God's patience," writes Pastor Alain Perrot.
"Medicine is a dispensation of the grace of God, who in his goodness
takes pity on men and provides remedies for the evil consequences of
their sin." Calvin described medicine as a gift from God. He who heals
men is helping God. The cure of men's bodies is just as much a God-given
task as the cure of men's souls; and the doctor in his practice is just
as much a servant of God as the minister in his parish.
(ii) Because Jesus gave this man back his health, he also gave
him back his work. Without work to do a man is half a man; it is in his
work that he finds himself and his satisfaction. Over the years idleness
can be harder than pain to bear; and, if there is work to do, even
sorrow loses at least something of its bitterness. One of the greatest
things that any human being can do for any other is to give him work to
do.
(iii) Because Jesus gave this man back his health and his work,
he gave him back his self-respect. We might well add a new beatitude:
Blessed are those who give us back our self respect. A man becomes a man
again when, on his two feet and with his own two hands, he can face
life and with independence provide for his own needs and for the needs
of those dependent on him.
We have already said that this incident was crisis. At the end
of it the Scribes and Pharisees began to plot the death of Jesus. In a
sense the highest compliment you can pay a man is to persecute him. It
shows that he is regarded not only as dangerous but as effective. The
action of the Scribes and Pharisees is the measure of the power of Jesus
Christ. True Christianity may be hated, but it can never be
disregarded.
The Characteristics Of The Servant Of The Lord (Matthew 12:15-21)
12:15-21
Because Jesus knew this, he withdrew from there: and many followed him
and he healed them all; and he strictly enjoined them not to surround
him with publicity. All this happened that there might be fulfilled the
word which came through Isaiah and which says: "Look you, my servant,
whom I have chosen! My beloved one in whom my soul finds delight! I wig
put my Spirit upon him, and he will tell the nations what justice is. He
will not strive, nor will he cry aloud, nor will anyone hear his voice
in the streets. He will not break the crushed reed, and he will not
quench the smoking wick, till he sends forth his conquering judgment,
and in his name shall the Gentiles hope."
Two things here about Jesus show that he never confounded
recklessness with courage. First, for the time being, he withdrew. The
time for the head-on clash had not yet come. He had work to do before
the Cross took him to its arms. Second, he forbade men to surround him
with publicity. He knew only too well how many false Messiahs had
arisen; he knew only too well how inflammable the people were. If the
idea got around that someone with marvellous powers had emerged, then
certainly a political rebellion would have arisen and lives would have
been needlessly lost. He had to teach men that Messiahship meant not
crushing power but sacrificial service, not a throne but a cross, before
they could spread his story abroad.
The question which Matthew uses to sum up the work of Jesus is from Isaiah 42:1-4. In a sense it is a curious quotation, because in the first instance it referred to Cyrus, the Persian king (compare Isaiah 45:1).
The original point of the quotation was this. Cyrus was sweeping
onwards in his conquests; and the prophet saw those conquests as within
the deliberate and definite plan of God. Although he did not know it,
Cyrus, the Persian, was the instrument of God. Further, the prophet saw
Cyrus as the gentile conqueror, as indeed he was. But although the
original words referred to Cyrus, the complete fulfilment of the
prophecy undoubtedly came in Jesus Christ. In his day the Persian king
mastered the eastern world, but the true Master of all the world is
Jesus Christ. Let us then see how wonderfully Jesus satisfied this
forecast of Isaiah.
(i) He will tell the nations what justice is. Jesus came to
bring men justice. The Greeks defined justice as giving to God and to
men that which is their due. Jesus showed men how to live in such a way
that both God and men receive their proper place in our lives. He showed
us how to behave both towards God and towards men.
(ii) He will not strive, nor cry aloud, nor will anyone hear his
voice in the streets. The word that is used for to cry aloud is the
word that is used for the barking of a dog, the croaking of a raven, the
bawling of a drunken man, the uproar of a discontented audience in a
theatre. It means that Jesus would not brawl with men. We know all about
the quarrels of conflicting parties, in which each tries to shout the
other down. The hatred of theologians, the odium theoligicum is one of
the tragedies of the Christian Church. We know all about the oppositions
of politicians and of ideologies. In Jesus there is the quiet, strong
serenity of one who seeks to conquer by love, and not by strife of
words.
(iii) He will not break the crushed reed nor quench the smoking
wick. The reed may be bruised and hardly able to stand erect; the wick
may be weak and the light may be but a flicker. A man's witness may be
shaky and weak; the light of his life may be but a flicker and not a
flame; but Jesus did not come to discourage, but to encourage. He did
not come to treat the weak with contempt, but with understanding; he did
not come to extinguish the weak flame, but to nurse it back to a
clearer and a stronger light. The most precious thing about Jesus is the
fact that he is not the great discourager, but the great encourager.
(iv) In him the Gentiles will hope. With Jesus there came into
the world the invitation, not to a nation but to all men, to share in
and to accept the love of God. In him God was reaching out to every one
with the offer of his love.
Satan's Defences Are Breached (Matthew 12:22-29)
12:22-29 Then
there was brought to him a man possessed by a devil, blind and dumb; and
he cured him, so that the dumb man spoke and saw. The crowds were
beside themselves with amazement. "Surely," they said, "this cannot be
the Son of David?" But, when they heard it, the Pharisees said, "The
only way in which this fellow casts out devils, is by the help of
Beelzeboul, the prince of the devils." When he saw what they were
thinking, Jesus said to them, "Every kingdom which has reached a state
of division against itself is laid waste; and any city or region which
has reached a state of division against itself will not stand. If Satan
is casting out Satan, he is in a state of division against himself. How
then shall his kingdom stand? Further, if I cast out devils by the power
of Beelzeboul, by whose power do your sons cast them out? They do cast
them out, and therefore they convict you of hypocrisy in the charge
which you level against me. But, if I cast out devils by the Spirit of
God, then the Kingdom of God has come upon you. Or, how can anyone enter
into the house of a strong man, and seize his goods, unless he first
bind the strong man? Then he will be able to seize his house."
In the eastern world it was not only mental and psychological
illness which was ascribed to the influence of demons and devils; all
illness was ascribed to their malignant power. Exorcism was therefore
very commonly practised; and was in fact frequently completely
effective.
There is nothing in that to be surprised at. When people believe
in demon-possession, it is easy to convince themselves that they are so
possessed; when they come under that delusion, the symptoms of
demon-possession immediately arise. Even amongst ourselves anyone can
think himself into having a headache, or can convince himself that he
has the symptoms of an illness. When a person under such a delusion was
confronted with an exorcist in whom he had confidence, often the
delusion was dispelled and a cure resulted. In such cases if a man was
convinced he was cured, he was cured.
In this instance Jesus cured a man who was deaf and dumb and
whose infirmity was attributed to demon-possession. The people were
amazed. They began to wonder if this Jesus could be the Son of David, so
long promised and so long expected, the great Saviour and Liberator.
Their doubt was due to the fact that Jesus was so unlike the picture of
the Son of David in which they had been brought up to believe. Here was
no glorious prince with pomp and circumstance; here was no rattle of
swords nor army with banners; here was no fiery cross calling men to
war; here was a simple carpenter from Galilee, in whose words was wisdom
gentle and serene, in whose eyes was compassion, and in whose hands was
mysterious power.
All the time the Scribes and Pharisees were looking grimly on.
They had their own solution of the problem. Jesus was casting out devils
because he was in league with the prince of devils. Jesus had three
unanswerable replies to that charge.
(i) If he was casting out devils by the help of the prince of
devils, it could only mean that in the demonic kingdom there was schism.
If the prince of devils was actually lending his power to the
destruction of his own demonic agents, then there was civil war in the
kingdom of evil, and that kingdom was doomed. Neither a house nor a city
nor a district can remain strong when it is divided against itself.
Dissension within is the end of power. Even if the Scribes and Pharisees
were right, Satan's days were numbered.
(ii) We take Jesus' third argument second, because there is so
much to be said about the second that we wish to take it separately.
Jesus said, "If I am casting out devils--and that you do not, and
cannot, deny--it means that I have invaded the territory of Satan, and
that I am actually like a burglar despoiling his house. Clearly no one
can get into a strong man's house until the strong man is bound and
rendered helpless. Therefore the very fact that I have been able so
successfully to invade Satan's territory is proof that he is bound and
powerless to resist." The picture of the binding of the strong man is
taken from Isaiah 49:24-26.
There is one question which this argument makes us wish to ask.
When was the strong man bound? When was the prince of the devils
fettered in such a way that Jesus could make this breach in his
defences? Maybe there is no answer to that question; but if there is, it
is that Satan was bound during Jesus' temptations in the wilderness.
It sometimes happens that, although an army is not completely
put out of action, it suffers such a defeat that its fighting potential
is never quite the same again. Its losses are so great, its confidence
is so shaken, that it is never again the force it was. When Jesus faced
the Tempter in the wilderness and conquered him, something happened. For
the first time Satan found someone whom not all his wiles could seduce,
and whom not all his attacks could conquer. From that time the power of
Satan has never been quite the same. He is no longer the all-conquering
power of darkness; he is the defeated power of sin. The defences are
breached; the enemy is not yet conquered; but his power can never be the
same again and Jesus can help others win the victory he himself won.
The Jewish Exorcists (Matthew 12:22-29 Continued)
(iii) Jesus' second argument, to which we now come, was that the Jews
themselves practised exorcism; there were Jews who expelled demons and
wrought cures. If he was practising exorcism by the power of the prince
of devils, then they must be doing the same, for they were dealing with
the same diseases and they had at least sometimes the same effect. Let
us then look at the customs and the methods of the Jewish exorcists, for
they were a remarkable contrast to the methods of Jesus.
Josephus, a perfectly reputable historian, says that the power
to cast out demons was part of the wisdom of Solomon, and he describes a
case which he himself saw (Josephus: Antiquities 8. 2. 5.): "God also
enabled Solomon to learn that skill which expels demons, which is a
science useful and health-bringing to men. He composed such incantations
also, by which distempers are alleviated. And he left behind him also
the manner of using exorcisms, by which they drive away demons so that
they never return, and this method of cure is of great force unto this
day; for I have seen a certain man of my own country, whose name was
Eleazar, releasing people who were demoniacal in the presence of
Vespasian, and his sons, and his captains, and the whole multitude of
his soldiers. The manner of the cure was this. He put a ring that had a
root which was one of those sorts mentioned by Solomon in the nostrils
of the demoniac, after which he drew out the demon through his nostrils;
and when the man fell down immediately, he adjured the demon to return
into him no more, making still mention of Solomon, and reciting the
incantations which he composed. And when Eleazar would persuade and
demonstrate to the spectators that he had such a power, he set a little
way off a cup or basin full of water, and commanded the demon, as he
went out of the man, to overturn it, and thereby to let the spectators
know that he had left the man; and when this was done, the skill and
wisdom of Solomon was shown very manifestly." Here was the Jewish
method; here was the whole paraphernalia of magic. How different the
serene word of power which Jesus uttered!
Josephus has further information about how the Jewish exorcists
worked. A certain root was much used in exorcism. Josephus tells about
it: "In the valley of Macherus there is a certain root called by the
same name. Its colour is like to that of flame, and towards evening it
sends out a certain ray like lightning. It is not easily taken by such
as would do so, but recedes from their hands, nor will it yield itself
to be taken quietly until either the urine of a woman, or her menstrual
blood, be poured upon it; nay, even then it is certain death to those
who touch it, unless anyone take and hang the root itself down from his
hand, and so carry it away. It may also be taken another way without
danger, which is this: they dig a trench all round about it, till the
hidden part of the root be very small; they then tie a dog to it, and
when the dog tries hard to follow him that tied him, this root is easily
plucked up, but the dog dies immediately, as if it were instead of the
man that would take the plant away; nor after this need anyone be afraid
of taking it into their hands. Yet after all these pains in getting it,
it is only valuable on account of one virtue which it possesses, that
if it be brought to sick persons, it drives away those called demons"
(Josephus: Wars of the Jews 7. 6. 3.). What a difference between Jesus'
word of power, and this witch-doctoring which the Jewish exorcist used!
We may add one more illustration of Jewish exorcism. It comes
from the apocryphal book of Tobit. Tobit is told by the angel that he is
to marry Sara, the daughter of Raguel. She is a beautiful maiden with a
great dowry, and she herself is good. She has been in turn married to
seven different men, all of whom perished on their wedding night,
because Sara was loved by a wicked demon, who would allow none to
approach her. Tobit is afraid, but the angel tells him, "On the night
when thou shalt come into the marriage chamber, thou shalt take the
ashes of perfume, and shalt lay them upon some of the heart and liver of
the fish, and shalt make a smoke with it; and the devil shall smell it
and flee away, and never come again any more" (Tobit 6:16). So Tobit did and the devil was banished for ever (Tobit 8:1-4).
These were the things the Jewish exorcists did, and, as so
often, they were a symbol. Men sought their deliverance from the evils
and the sorrows of humanity in their magic and their incantations. Maybe
even these things for a little while, in the mercy of God, brought some
relief; but in Jesus there came the word of God with its serene power
to bring to men the perfect deliverance which they had wistfully and
even desperately sought, and which, until he came, they had never been
able to find.
One of the most interesting things in the whole passage is
Jesus' saying, "If it is by the Spirit of God that I cast out demons,
then the Kingdom of God has come upon you" (Matthew 12:28).
It is significant to note that the sign of the coming of the Kingdom
was not full churches and great revival meetings, but the defeat of
pain.
The Impossibility Of Neutrality (Matthew 12:30)
12:30 "He who is not with me is against me, and he who does not gather with me scatters abroad."
The picture of gathering and scattering may come from either of
two backgrounds. It may come from harvesting; he who is not sharing in
gathering the harvest is scattering the grain abroad, and is therefore
losing it to the wind. It may come from shepherding; he who is not
helping to keep the flock safe by bringing it into the fold is driving
it out to the dangers of the hills.
In this one piercing sentence Jesus lays down the impossibility
of neutrality. W. C. Allen writes: "In this war against Satan's
strongholds there are only two sides, for Christ or against him,
gathering with him or scattering with Satan." We may take a very simple
analogy. We may apply this saying to ourselves and to the Church. If our
presence does not strengthen the Church, then our absence is weakening
it. There is no halfway house. In all things a man has to choose his
side; abstention from choice, suspended action, is no way out, because
the refusal to give one side assistance is in fact the giving of support
to the other.
There are three things which make a man seek this impossible neutrality.
(i) There is the sheer inertia of human nature. It is true of so
many people that the only thing they desire is to be left alone. They
automatically shrink away from anything which is disturbing, and even
choice is a disturbance.
(ii) There is the sheer cowardice of human nature. Many a man
refuses the way of Christ because he is afraid to take the stand which
Christianity demands. The basic thing that stops him is the thought of
what other people will say. The voice of his neighbours is louder in his
ears than the voice of God.
(iii) There is the sheer flabbiness of human nature. Most people
would rather have security than adventure, and the older they grow the
more that is so. A challenge always involves adventure; Christ comes to
us with a challenge, and often we would rather have the comfort of
selfish inaction than the adventure of action for Christ.
The saying of Jesus--"He who is not with me is against
me"--presents us with a problem, for both Mark and Luke have a saying
which is the very reverse, "He that is not against us is for us" (Mark 9:40; Luke 9:50).
But they are not so contradictory as they seem. It is to be noted that
Jesus spoke the second of them when his disciples came and told him that
they had sought to stop a man from casting out devils in his name,
because he was not one of their company. So a wise suggestion has been
made. "He that is not with me is against me," is a test that we ought to
apply to ourselves. Am I truly on the Lord's side, or, am I trying to
shuffle through life in a state of cowardly neutrality? "He that is not
against us is for us," is a test that we ought to apply to others. Am I
given to condemning everyone who does not speak with my theology and
worship with my liturgy and share my ideas? Am I limiting the Kingdom of
God to those who think as I do?
The saying in this present passage is a test to apply to
ourselves; the saying in Mark and Luke is a test to apply to others; for
we must ever judge ourselves with sternness and other people with
tolerance.
The Sin Beyond Forgiveness (Matthew 12:31-33)
12:31-33 "That
is why I tell you that every sin and every blasphemy will be forgiven to
men; but blasphemy against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven. If
anyone speaks a word against the Son of Man, it will be forgiven him;
but if anyone speaks a word against the Holy Spirit, it will not be
forgiven him, either in this world or in the world to come. Either
assume that the tree is good and the fruit is good, or assume that the
tree is rotten and the fruit is rotten. For the tree is known by its
fruits."
It is startling to find words about an unforgivable sin on the
lips of Jesus the Saviour of men. So startling is this that some wish to
take away the sharp definiteness of the meaning. They argue that this
is only another example of that vivid Eastern way of saying things, as,
for example, when Jesus said that a man must hate father and mother
truly to be his disciple, and that it is not to be understood in all its
awful literalness, but simply means that the sin against the Holy
Spirit is supremely terrible.
In support certain Old Testament passages are quoted. "But the
person who does anything with a high hand, whether he is native or a
sojourner, reviles the Lord, and that person shall be cut off from among
his people. Because he has despised the word of the Lord, and has
broken his commandment, that person shall be entirely cut off" (Numbers 15:30-31).
"Therefore I swear to the house of Eli that the iniquity of Eli's house
shall not be expiated by sacrifice or offering for ever" (1 Samuel 3:14).
"The Lord of hosts has revealed himself in my ears. 'Surely this
iniquity will not be forgiven you till you die,' says the Lord God of
hosts" (Isaiah 22:14).
It is claimed that these texts say much the same as Jesus said,
and that they are only insisting on the grave nature of the sin in
question. We can only say that these Old Testament texts do not have the
same air nor do they produce the same impression. There is something
very much more alarming in hearing words about a sin which has no
forgiveness from the lips of him who was the incarnate love of God.
There is one section in this saying which is undoubtedly
puzzling. In the Revised Standard Version Jesus is made to say that a
sin against the Son of man is forgivable, whereas a sin against the Holy
Spirit is not forgivable. If that is to be taken as it stands, it is
indeed a hard saying. Matthew has already said that Jesus is the
touchstone of all truth (Matthew 10:32-33); and it is difficult to see what the difference between the two sins is.
But it may well be that at the back of this there is a
misunderstanding of what Jesus said. We have already seen (compare notes
on Matthew 12:1-8)
that the Hebrew phrase a son of man means simply a man, and that the
Jews used this phrase when they desired to speak of any man. When we
would say, "There was a man. . .," the Jewish Rabbi would say, "There
was a son of man...." It may well be that what Jesus said was this: "If
any man speaks a word against a man, it will be forgiven; but if any man
speaks a word against the Holy Spirit it will not be forgiven."
It is quite possible that we may misunderstand a merely human
messenger from God; but we cannot misunderstand--except
deliberately--when God speaks to us through his own Holy Spirit. A human
messenger is always open to misconstruction; but the divine messenger
speaks so plainly that he can only be wilfully misunderstood. It
certainly makes this passage easier to understand, if we regard the
difference between the two sins as a sin against God's human messenger,
which is serious, but not unforgivable, and a sin against God's divine
messenger, which is completely wilful, and which, as we shall see, can
end by becoming unforgivable.
The Lost Awareness (Matthew 12:31-33 Continued)
Let us then try to understand what Jesus meant by the sin against the
Holy Spirit. One thing is necessary. We must grasp the fact that Jesus
was not speaking about the Holy Spirit in the full Christian sense of
the term. He could not have been, for Pentecost had to come before the
Holy Spirit came upon men in all his power and light and fulness. This
must be interpreted in light of the Jewish conception of the Holy
Spirit.
According to Jewish teaching the Holy Spirit had two supreme
functions. First, the Holy Spirit brought God's truth to men; second,
the Holy Spirit enabled men to recognize and to understand that truth
when they saw it. So then a man, as the Jews saw it, needed the Holy
Spirit, both to receive and to recognise God's truth. We may express
this in another way. There is in man a Spirit-given faculty which
enables him to recognize goodness and truth when he sees them.
Now we must take the next step in our attempt to understand what
Jesus meant. A man can lose any faculty if he refuses to use it. This
is true in any sphere of life. It is true physically; if a man ceases to
use certain muscles, they will atrophy. It is true mentally; many a man
at school or in his youth has acquired some slight knowledge of, for
example, French or Latin or music; but that knowledge is long since gone
because he did not exercise it. It is true of all kinds of perception. A
man may lose all appreciation of good music, if he listens to nothing
but cheap music; he may lose the ability to read a great book, if he
reads nothing but ephemeral productions; he may lose the faculty of
enjoying clean and healthy pleasure, if he for long enough finds his
pleasure in things which are degraded and soiled.
Therefore a man can lose the ability to recognize goodness and
truth when he sees them. If he for long enough shuts his eyes and ears
to God's way, if he for long enough turns his back upon the messages
which God is sending him, if he for long enough prefers his own ideas to
the ideas which God is seeking to put into his mind, in the end he
comes to a stage when he cannot recognize God's truth and God's beauty
and God's goodness when he sees them. He comes to a stage when his own
evil seems to him good, and when God's good seems to him evil.
That is the stage to which these Scribes and Pharisees had come.
They had so long been blind and deaf to the guidance of God's hand and
the promptings of God's Spirit, they had insisted on their own way so
long, that they had come to a stage when they could not recognize God's
truth and goodness when they saw them. They were able to look on
incarnate goodness and call it incarnate evil; they were able to look on
the Son of God and call him the ally of the devil. The sin against the
Holy Spirit is the sin of so often and so consistently refusing God's
will that in the end it cannot be recognized when it comes even
full-displayed.
Why should that sin be unforgivable? What differentiates it so
terribly from all other sins? The answer is simple. When a man reaches
that stage, repentance is impossible. If a man cannot recognize the good
when he sees it, he cannot desire it. If a man does not recognize evil
as evil, he cannot be sorry for it, and wish to depart from it. And if
he cannot, in spite of failures, love the good and hate the evil, then
he cannot repent; and if he cannot repent, he cannot be forgiven, for
repentance is the only condition of forgiveness. It would save much
heartbreak if people would realize that the one man who cannot have
committed the sin against the Holy Spirit is the man who fears he has,
for the sin against the Holy Spirit can be truly described as the loss
of all sense of sin.
It was to that stage the Scribes and Pharisees had come. They
had so long been deliberately blind and deliberately deaf to God that
they had lost the faculty of recognizing him when they were confronted
with him. It was not God who had banished them beyond the pale of
forgiveness; they had shut themselves out. Years of resistance to God
had made them what they were.
There is a dreadful warning here. We must so heed God all our
days that our sensitivity is never blunted, our awareness is never
dimmed, our spiritual hearing never becomes spiritual deafness. It is a
law of life that we will hear only what we are listening for and only
what we have fitted ourselves to hear.
There is a story of a country man who was in the office of a
city friend, with the roar of the traffic coming through the windows.
Suddenly he said, "Listen!" "What is it?" asked the city man. "A
grasshopper," said the country man. Years of listening to the country
sounds had attuned his ears to the country sounds, sounds that a city
man's ear could not hear at all. On the other hand, let a silver coin
drop, and the chink of the silver would have immediately reached the
ears of the money-maker, while the country man might never have heard it
at all. Only the expert, the man who has made himself able to hear it,
will pick out the note of each individual bird in the chorus of the
birds. Only the expert, the man who has made himself able to hear it,
will distinguish the different instruments in the orchestra and catch a
lonely wrong note from the second violins.
It is the law of life that we hear what we have trained
ourselves to hear; day by day we must listen to God, so that day by day
God's voice may become, not fainter and fainter until we cannot hear it
at all, but clearer and clearer until it becomes the one sound to which
above an our ears are attuned.
So Jesus finishes with the challenge: "If I have done a good
deed, you must admit that I am a good man; if I have done a bad deed,
then you may think me a bad man. You can only tell a tree's quality by
its fruits, and a man's character by his deeds." But what if a man has
become so blind to God that he cannot recognize goodness when he sees
it?
Hearts And Words (Matthew 12:34-37)
12:34-37 "You
brood of vipers, how can you who are evil speak good things? For it is
from the overflow of the heart that the mouth speaks. The good man
brings out good things from his good treasure house; and the evil man
brings out evil things out of his evil treasure house. I tell you that
every idle word which men shall speak, of that word shall they render
accounts in the day of judgment; for by your words you will be
acquitted, and by your words you will be condemned."
It is little wonder that Jesus chose to speak here about the
awful responsibility of words. The Scribes and Pharisees had just spoken
the most terrible words. They had looked on the Son of God and called
him the ally of the devil. Such words were dreadful words indeed. So
Jesus laid down two laws.
(i) The state of a man's heart can be seen through the words he
speaks. Long ago Menander the Greek dramatist said: "A man's character
can be known from his words." That which is in the heart can come to the
surface only through the lips; a man can produce through his lips only
what he has in his heart. There is nothing so revealing as words. We do
not need to talk to a man long before we discover whether he has a mind
that is wholesome or a mind that is dirty; we do not need to listen to
him long before we discover whether he has a mind that is kind or a mind
that is cruel; we do not need to listen for long to a man who is
preaching or teaching or lecturing to find out whether his mind is clear
or whether it is muddled. We are continually revealing what we are by
what we say.
(ii) Jesus laid it down that a man would specially render
account for his idle words. The word that it used for idle is aergos (Greek #692); ergon (Greek #2041)is the Greek for a deed; and the prefix "a"--means "without"; aergos (Greek #692)
described that which was not meant to produce anything. It is used, for
instance of a barren tree, of fallow land, of the Sabbath day when no
work could be done, of an idle man. Jesus was saying something which is
profoundly true. There are in fact two great truths here.
(a) It is the words which a man speaks without thinking, the
words which he utters when the conventional restraints are removed,
which really show what he is like. As Plummer puts it, "The carefully
spoken words may be a calculated hypocrisy." When a man is consciously
on his guard, he will be careful what he says and how he says it; but
when he is off his guard, his words reveal his character. It is quite
possible for a man's public utterances to be fine and noble, and for his
private conversation to be coarse and salacious. In public he carefully
chooses what he says; in private he takes the sentinels away, and any
word leaves the gateway of his lips. It is so with anger; a man will say
in anger what he really thinks and what he has often wanted to say, but
which the cool control of prudence has kept him from saying. Many a man
is a model of charm and courtesy in public, when he knows he is being
watched and is deliberately careful about his words; while in his own
house he is a dreadful example of irritability, sarcasm, temper,
criticism, querulous complaint because there is no one to hear and to
see. It is a humbling thing--and a warning thing--to remember that the
words which show what we are are the words we speak when our guard is
down.
(b) It is often these words which cause the greatest damage. A
man may say in anger things he would never have said if he was in
control of himself He may say afterwards that he never meant what he
said; but that does not free him from the responsibility of having said
it; and the fact that he has said it often leaves a wound that nothing
will cure, and erects a barrier that nothing will take away. A man may
say in his relaxed moment a coarse and questionable thing that he would
never have said in public--and that very thing may lodge in someone's
memory and stay there unforgotten. Pythagoras, the Greek philosopher,
said, "Choose rather to fling a chance stone than to speak a chance
word." Once the hurting word or the soiling word is spoken nothing will
bring it back; and it pursues a course of damage wherever it goes.
Let a man examine himself. Let him examine his words that he may
discover the state of his heart. And let him remember that God does not
judge him by the words he speaks with care and deliberation, but by the
words he speaks when the conventional restraints are gone and the real
feelings of his heart come bubbling to the surface.
The Only Sign (Matthew 12:38-42)
12:38-42 Then
the Scribes and Pharisees answered him: "Teacher," they said, "we wish
to see a sign from you." He answered, "It is an evil and apostate
generation which seeks a sign. No sign will be given to it, except the
sign of Jonah the prophet. For, as Jonah was in the belly of the whale
three days and three nights, so the Son of Man will be in the heart of
the earth for three days and three nights. At the judgment the men of
Nineveh will be witnesses against this generation, and they will condemn
it, because they repented at the preaching of Jonah, and, look you,
something more than Jonah is here. The Queen of the South will rise in
judgment with this generation, and will condemn it, because she came
from the ends of the earth to listen to the wisdom of Solomon and, look
you, something more than Solomon is here!"
"The Jews," said Paul, "demand signs" (1 Corinthians 1:22).
It was characteristic of the Jews that they asked signs and wonders
from those who claimed to be the messengers of God. It was as if they
said, "Prove your claims by doing something extraordinary." Edersheim
quotes a passage from the Rabbinic stories to illustrate the kind of
thing that popular opinion expected from the Messiah: "When a certain
Rabbi was asked by his disciples about the time of the Messiah's coming,
he said, 'I am afraid you will also ask me for a sign.' When they
promised that they would not do so, he told them that the gate of Rome
would fall and be rebuilt, and fall again, when there would not be time
to restore it before the Son of David came. On this they pressed him in
spite of his remonstrance for a sign. A sign was given them, that the
waters which issued from the cave of Banias were turned into blood.
"Again, when the teaching of Rabbi Eliezer was challenged, he
appealed to certain signs. First, a locust bean tree moved at his
bidding, one hundred, or according to some, four hundred cubits. Next
the channels of water were made to flow backwards. The walls of the
academy leaned forward, and were only arrested at the bidding of another
Rabbi. Lastly Eliezer exclaimed: 'If the Law is as I teach, let it be
proved from heaven.' A voice came from the sky saying, 'What have you to
do with Rabbi Eliezer, for the instruction is as he teaches?'"
That is the kind of sign that the Jews desired. They did so
because they were guilty of one fundamental mistake. They desired to see
God in the abnormal; they forgot that we are never nearer God, and God
never shows himself to us so much and so continually as in the ordinary
things of every day.
Jesus calls them an evil and adulterous generation. The word
adulterous is not to be taken literally; it means apostate. Behind it
there is a favourite Old Testament prophetic picture. The relationship
between Israel and God was conceived of as a marriage bond with God the
husband and Israel the bride. When therefore Israel was unfaithful and
gave her love to other gods, the nation was said to be adulterous and to
go a-whoring after strange gods. Jeremiah 3:6-11
is a typical passage. There the nation is said to have gone up into
every high mountain, and under every green tree, and to have played the
harlot. Even when Israel had been put away for infidelity by God, Judah
did not take the warning and still played the harlot. Her whoredoms
defiled the land, and she committed adultery with stone and tree. The
word describes something worse than physical adultery; it describes that
infidelity to God from which all sin, physical and spiritual, springs.
Jesus says that the only sign which will be given to this nation
is the sign of Jonah the prophet. Here we have a problem. Matthew says
that the sign is that, as Jonah was in the belly of the whale three days
and three nights, the Son of man will be in the heart of the earth for
three days and three nights. It is to be noted that these are not the
words of Jesus, but the explanation of Matthew. When Luke reports this
incident (Luke 11:29-32)
he makes no mention at all of Jonah being in the belly of the whale. He
simply says that Jesus said, "For as Jonah became a sign to the men of
Nineveh, so will the Son of Man be to this generation" (Luke 11:30).
The fact is that Matthew understood wrongly the point of what
Jesus said; and in so doing he made a strange mistake for Jesus was not
in the heart of the earth for three nights, but only for two. He was
laid in the earth on the night of the first Good Friday and rose on the
morning of the first Easter Sunday. The point is that to the Ninevites
Jonah himself was God's sign, and Jonah's words were God's message.
Jesus is saying, "You are asking for a sign--I am God's sign.
You have failed to recognize me. The Ninevites recognized God's warning
in Jonah; the Queen of Sheba recognized God's wisdom in Solomon. In me
there has come to you a greater wisdom than Solomon ever had, and a
greater message than Jonah ever brought--but you are so blind that you
cannot see the truth and so deaf that you cannot hear the warning. And
for that very reason the day will come when these people of old time who
recognized God when they saw him will be witnesses against you, who had
so much better a chance, and failed to recognize God because you
refused to do so."
Here is a tremendous truth--Jesus is Gods sign, just as Jonah
was God's message to the Ninevites and Solomon God's wisdom to the Queen
of Sheba. The one real question in life is: "What is our reaction when
we are confronted with God in Jesus Christ?" Is that reaction bleak
hostility, as it was in the case of the Scribes and Pharisees? Or, is it
humble acceptance of God's warning and God's truth as it was in the
case of the people of Nineveh, and of the Queen of Sheba? The
all-important question is: "What do you think of the Christ?"
The Peril Of The Empty Heart (Matthew 12:43-45)
12:43-45 "When
an unclean spirit goes out of a man, it goes through waterless places,
seeking for rest, and does not find it. Then it says, 'I will go back to
my house, from which I came out,' and when it comes, it finds it empty,
swept and in perfect order. Then it goes and brings with it seven other
spirits more evil than itself, and they go in and take up their
residence there. So the last state of that man becomes worse than the
first; so it will be with this evil generation."
There is a whole world of the most practical truth in this compact and eerie little parable about the haunted house.
(i) The evil spirit is banished from the man, not destroyed.
That is to say that, in this present age, evil can be conquered, driven
away--but it cannot be destroyed. It is always looking for the
opportunity to counter-attack and regain the ground that is lost. Evil
is a force which may be at bay but is never eliminated.
(ii) That is bound to mean that a negative religion can never be
enough. A religion which consists in thou shalt nots will end in
failure. The trouble about such a religion is that it may be able to
cleanse a man by prohibiting all his evil actions, but it cannot keep
him cleansed.
Let us think of this in actual practice. A drunkard may be
reformed; he may decide that he will no longer spend his time in the
public house; but he must find something else to do; he must find
something to fill up his now empty time, or he will simply slip back
into his evil ways. A man whose constant pursuit has been pleasure, may
decide that he must stop; but he must find something else to do to fill
up his time, or he will simply, through the very emptiness of his life,
drift back to his old pursuits. A man's life must not only be sterilized
from evil; it must be fructified to good. It will always remain true
that "Satan finds some mischief still for idle hands to do." And if one
kind of action is banished from life, another kind must be substituted
for it, for life cannot remain empty.
(iii) It therefore follows that the only permanent cure for evil
action is Christian action. Any teaching which stops at telling a man
what he must not do is bound to be a failure; it must go on to tell him
what he must do. The one fatal disease is idleness; even a sterilized
idleness will soon be infected. The easiest way to conquer the weeds in a
garden is to fill the garden with useful things. The easiest way to
keep a life from sin is to fill it with healthy action.
To put it quite simply, the Church will most easily keep her
converts when she gives them Christian work to do. Our aim is not the
mere negative absence of evil action; it is the positive presence of
work for Christ. If we are finding the temptations of evil very
threatening, one of the best ways to conquer them is to plunge into
activity for God and for our fellow-men.
True Kinship (Matthew 12:46-50)
12:46-50 While
he was still speaking to the crowds, look you, his mother and his
brothers stood outside, for they were seeking an opportunity to speak to
him. Someone said to him: "Look you, your mother and your brothers are
standing outside, seeking an opportunity to speak to you." He answered
the man who had spoken to him: "Who is my mother? And who are my
brothers?" And he stretched out his hand towards his disciples. "See,"
he said, "my mother and my brothers! Whoever does the will of my Father
in heaven is my brother and sister and mother."
It was one of the great human tragedies of Jesus' life that,
during his lifetime, his nearest and dearest never understood him. "For
even his brothers," says John, "did not believe in him" (John 7:5).
Mark tells us that when Jesus set out on his public mission, his
friends tried to restrain him, for they said that he was mad (Mark 3:21). He seemed to them to be busily engaged in throwing his life away in a kind of insanity.
It has often been the case that, when a man embarked on the way
of Jesus Christ, his nearest and dearest could not understand him, and
were even hostile to him. "A Christian's only relatives," said one of
the early martyrs, "are the saints." Many of the early Quakers had this
bitter experience. When Edward Burrough was moved to the new way, "his
parents resenting his 'fanatical spirit' drove him forth from his home."
He pleaded humbly with his father: "Let me stay and be your servant. I
will do the work of the hired lad for thee. Let me stay!" But, as his
biographer says, "His father was adamant, and much as the boy loved his
home and its familiar surroundings, he was to know it no more."
True friendship and true love are founded on certain things without which they cannot exist.
(i) Friendship is founded on a common ideal. People who are very
different in their background, their mental equipment, and even their
methods, can be firm friends, if they have a common ideal, for which
they work, and towards which they press.
(ii) Friendship is founded on a common experience, and on the
memories which come from it. It is when two people have together passed
through some great experience and when they can together look back on
it, that real friendship begins.
(iii) True love is founded on obedience. "You are my friends," said Jesus, "if you do what I command you" (John 15:14). There is no way of showing the reality of love unless by the spirit of obedience.
For all these reasons true kinship is not always a matter of a
flesh and blood relationship. It remains true that blood is a tie that
nothing can break and that many a man finds his delight and his peace in
the circle of his family. But it is also true that sometimes a man's
nearest and dearest are the people who understand him least, and that he
finds his true fellowship with those who work for a common ideal and
who share a common experience. This certainly is true--even if a
Christian finds that those who should be closest to him are those who
are most out of sympathy with him, there remains for him the fellowship
of Jesus Christ and the friendship of all who love the Lord.
-Barclay's Daily Study Bible (NT)