Shalom Aleichem...
Reflections is a weekly Christian Teaching Ministry. Each week we will talk about the Bible and lessons we can put to use in our daily life. We will try to, on a weekly basis, provide to you stories, thoughts, and just easy ways to live your life on a straight path.
THIS WEEK'S TEACHING....January 29, 2018
This week we conclude our teaching series on False Teachings of some religions that claim to be Christian
Our Scripture focus will be on: 2 Peter 2:1–10
The main point of 2 Peter 1 which everything else supports or elaborates is verse 10: "Brethren, be the more zealous to confirm your call and election; for if you do this, you will never fall." Peter wants us to enjoy the certainty of our salvation. He wants us to be so firmly established in God that we cannot be shaken by any temptation or false teaching. In 3:17 he draws his letter to a close with this admonition: "Beware lest you be carried away with the error of lawless men and lose your own stability." Peter devotes his last will and testament (1:14, 15) to help us be firm and stable and unshakable in our faith.
The way he helps us in chapter 1 is by reminding us about God's precious and very great promises. He assures us that if we trust firmly in these, God's power will flow into us and enable us to "escape the corruption that is in the world because of passion" (v. 4), and to grow in godliness and self-control and love (vv. 6, 7). He reminds us that the source of these promises, the Scriptures, "did not come by the impulse of man, but men moved by the Holy Spirit spoke from God" (v. 21). And not only that, but we have this prophetic word made even more sure by the eyewitness experience of Peter who saw Christ's majesty on the mount of transfiguration (v. 16). In summary, then, the confirmation of God's Word leads to confidence in his promises, which brings power for godliness, which gives us a personal, experiential confirmation of our call and election.
Same Goal, Different Approach
And now comes chapter 2, and a very significant change in Peter's approach. I say a change in his approach, not his goal. His goal is still to make us firm and stable and unshakable in our faith. But his approach is very different. Chapter 1 is mainly an encouragement to avail ourselves of God's power to lead lives of godliness and love. Chapter 2 is mainly a warning against the destruction that will befall those who don't avail themselves of this power. If chapter 1 is the carrot, chapter 2 is the crack of the whip over our heads. There are no commands, no admonitions, no imperatives in chapter 2; just pure, terrifying description of what will happen to those who fall prey to the false teachers in the church.
The main point of chapter 2 is expressed in four places. The last part of verse 1: those who deny the Master who bought them bring upon themselves swift destruction. The last part of verse 3: "from of old their condemnation has not been idle, and their destruction has not been asleep." Verse 12: "But these, like irrational animals, creatures of instinct, born to be caught and killed, reviling in matters of which they are ignorant, will be destroyed in the same destruction with them, suffering wrong for their wrongdoing." The last part of verse 17: "For them the nether gloom of darkness has been reserved." The main point of the chapter is a warning that destruction awaits the false teachers and their followers. Chapter 2 is the other side of the coin from what Peter said in 1:10, 11. There he said, "Be zealous to confirm your call and election, for if you do this, you will never fall; so there will be richly provided for you an entrance into the eternal kingdom of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ." Here in chapter 2 he says, if you contradict the doctrine and the character of God's elect, you will fall, and there will be no entrance into the eternal kingdom of our Lord, but instead eternal destruction in the gloom of hell.
Not Playing Games
What would we think of commanders in the British and Argentine armed forces who deployed their troops as though the war were a game and who never paused to ponder that on this or that mission sons and husbands and fathers will be maimed and killed? We would probably call them heartless. How much more, then, should we regard a pastor or teacher or counselor as heartless, who does not pause to ponder that eternal life and death are at stake in preaching and teaching and counseling.
It is heartless to give the impression that in the matters of doctrine, faith, and obedience we are playing a game. It is heartless to foster the impression that the most weighty concerns of our preaching and teaching and counseling are the alteration of psychological states and the modification of behavior. If that were our most weighty concern, then preaching would simply be a variety of psychotherapy, and Christian doctrine would simply be another means to mental health, and the church would be just another institution for the advancement of the psychological and social welfare.
That is exactly the way more and more people view preaching and doctrine and church. But it is heartless, because it treats life as though it were a game, when in fact eternal joy in the kingdom of Christ and eternal misery in hell are at stake. That is our most weighty concern, and that sets the church off as distinct from all other human institutions.
2 Peter 2 is aimed at keeping me from being a heartless pastor. It aims to keep me from playing games in this pulpit. It aims to keep my sermons from dissolving into pep-talks about the power of positive thinking. It aims to make me earnest about my calling and angry about false teaching and grieved over the destruction of the ungodly. This chapter is no accident in Holy Scripture. It is the Word of God and is profitable for teaching, reproof, correction, and training in righteousness, that all of us might become very, very zealous to confirm our call and election.
False Prophets Who Deny the Master
Let's look at the first 10 verses today. Verse 1: "But false prophets also arose among the people, just as there will be false teachers among you who will secretly bring in destructive heresies, even denying the Master who bought them, bringing upon themselves swift destruction." Wherever important truth is at stake, counterfeits will be offered. In the Old Testament men claimed to speak from God when he had not sent them (Deuteronomy 18:20), and in the New Testament church there arose those whose explanations and applications of apostolic doctrine were false and destructive. Even though Peter says these false teachers will arise in the future, it is clear from the rest of the letter that the prophecy is already being fulfilled. The false teachers are on the scene.
The first thing we learn about them is that they are denying the Master who bought them. What does this mean? As with most heresies, Jesus Christ is in some way being diminished. Some aspect of his personhood or his work is being denied. But Peter never tells us what aspect. In fact, you get the impression from chapter 2 that the error of the false teachers was an error in morality, not doctrine. But the two are never really separate. How you live and how you esteem Christ always rise and fall together. It is possible to live in such a disobedient way that Christ is scorned and belittled by our very behavior. That seems to be what was happening here.
There is a clue to this in the little phrase, "Master who bought them" (v. 1). In 1 Corinthians 6:20 Paul says, "You are not your own; you were bought with a price. So glorify God in your bodies." And Peter said in his first letter (1:18), "You were ransomed from the futile ways inherited from your fathers . . . with the precious blood of Christ". When the apostles spoke of being bought or ransomed by Christ (as Peter does in verse 1), they pictured us as slaves of sin and Satan, being purchased and made free from sin to serve Christ and glorify God. And the context in both 1 Corinthians and 1 Peter 1 has to do with sexual morality (1 Peter 1:14 and 1 Corinthians 6:18, 19). To be bought by Christ is to be freed from the domination of sexual passions that drive one into sexual preoccupations and illicit sexual intercourse. We belong to a new master whose promises are so superior to the promises of sex that (as 1:4 says) we can escape from the lordship of passion. When this happens, we exalt Christ and affirm his worth. But if we live in the grip of sexual domination, we belittle Christ and "deny the Master who bought us."
There are some indications in the text that, in fact, the false teachers were propagating sexual immorality in the name of Christian freedom. For example, verse 2: "Many will follow their licentiousness, and because of them the way of truth will be reviled." Notice that right after saying they deny the Master who bought them, it says that their seductive danger lies in their licentiousness. "Licentiousness" is a fancy word for "blatant sexual immorality"—sexual immorality with an arrogant (cf. 2:10, 18), debauched flare (see especially Romans 13:13; 2 Corinthians 12:21; 1 Peter 4:3). Do you remember what happened at Corinth?
In 1 Corinthians 5:1 Paul says, "It is actually reported that there is immorality among you, and of a kind that is not found among pagans; for a man is living with his father's wife. And you are arrogant." This same attitude seems to mark the false teachers in 2 Peter. In 2:18 it says, "For, uttering loud boasts of folly, they entice with licentious passions of the flesh men who have barely escaped those who live in error." In these false teachers arrogance and immorality go hand in hand. Notice verse 10: "they indulge in the lust of defiling passion and despise authority. They are bold and self-willed." They "despise authority" because they cannot stand any controls on their passions. This helps us to understand verse 1, where it says they deny the Master who bought them. They don't want a master. A master means authority and submission. But they despise authority.
This begins to shed a lot of light back on chapter 1. For example, verse 4, where Peter tells us that the promises of God enable us "to escape from the corruption that is in the world because of passion." And verse 6 where Peter stresses that we add to our knowledge "self-control." It becomes clear that already in chapter 1 Peter was choosing his words in view of the false teaching he opposed.
But it seems almost impossible that such a thing as arrogant sexual immorality could actually be taught in the church. What did the false teachers say? Verse 3 tells us, "In their greed they will exploit you with false words." They didn't just come in and seduce people with good looks. They taught. They gave reasons why people should abandon their rules about sexuality. They probably would have said, "It's OK for kids to experiment sexually. It's OK for a couple to live together out of wedlock. It's OK for a husband and wife to gratify their desires with a prostitute or another person's partner."
There is nothing new about the contemporary assault on the sanctity of sexual intercourse in marriage. Jesus wasn't gone for more than 30 years before false teachers in the church were announcing open sex as a legitimate Christian lifestyle. So listen, young people. You know who the real old fogies are today? They are the swingers who live together unmarried, the wife-swappers, the prostitute patrons, the kids at school who twitter about their weekend connections. It's all old-fashioned; and even its perverted Christian authorization is as old as the church.
You can see it in verse 19: "They promise them freedom, but they themselves are slaves of corruption." Sound familiar? The push for free sex was there long before we had any puritanical or Victorian ethic to rebel against. The false teachers were taking the grace of God and perverting it into licentiousness (Jude 1:4). They were saying that what we do with our bodies does not matter, and in fact the more sensuality you pursue, the more you show your true Christian freedom from the law. In the name of grace and in the name of Christ they perverted Christian moral teaching, and in that way denied the Master who bought them.
The answer to give to a person (inside or outside the church) who says that we are enslaved to an old-fashioned sexual morality is this:
1) All immorality is just as old-fashioned as biblical morality. 2) Why should it be called slavery when we freely choose to govern our passions according to divine principles, but be called freedom when you follow the dictates of your passions? If we choose to follow God and you choose to follow your impulses, who's the fool? Listen! Don't let the world shape you! The world is covered with darkness (1:19). It is enslaved to irrational passions. And unless it turns and repents, it is doomed.
God's Past JudgmentThat's what the rest of our text is about. The point of verses 4–10 is to warn us that since God has punished unrighteousness in the past, he will punish it in the future. Peter illustrates God's wrath with three cases in verses 4–8 and then draws his conclusion in verses 9 and 10. First, in verse 4 is the case of the fallen angels. "If God did not spare the angels when they sinned, but cast them into hell and committed them to pits of nether gloom (or chains of darkness) to be kept until judgment . . . " What a lesson there is here!
Angels are the most glorious and mighty beings under God. But all their power and dignity was of no use when they sinned. God was unsparing in his sentence. They were cast out of his presence and have been reserved in darkness, until the great day of judgment when they will be consigned to the "lake of fire and brimstone to be tormented day and night forever and ever" (Revelation 20:10). The false teachers should learn from this that if they "despise authority" (v. 10) and reject the lordship of Christ (v. 1), they will hear the sentence of Jesus which he foretold in Matthew 25:41, "Depart from me, you cursed, into eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels."
The second illustration of God's judgment is the case of Noah's generation in verse 5: "If he did not spare the ancient world but preserved Noah, a herald of righteousness, with seven other persons, when he brought a flood upon the world of the ungodly . . . " If the false teachers do not learn the lesson from the fallen angels, let them learn it from the flood. God swept away the ungodly in judgment. And even though the rebellious and the licentious today may think they are safe, they should learn that "from of old their condemnation has not been idle, and their destruction is not sleeping" (v. 3). It will come upon them with horrifying swiftness.
The third illustration is the case of Sodom and Gomorrah in verses 6–8. "If by turning the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah to ashes he condemned them to extinction and made them an example to those who were to be ungodly; and if he rescued righteous Lot, greatly distressed by the licentiousness of the wicked (for by what that righteous man saw and heard as he lived among them, he was vexed in his righteous soul day after day with their lawless deeds) . . . " If the case of the fallen angels and the case of Noah's generation do not deter people from following the false teachers, then surely the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah will wake them up to God's wrath. For these cities were judged for the very licentiousness that the false teachers commend.
To make the lesson of history perfectly plain Peter states it in verses 9 and 10: "So the Lord knows how to rescue the godly from trial (like Noah and Lot), and he knows how to keep the unrighteous under punishment until the day of judgment, and especially those who indulge in the lust of defiling passion and despise authority." And, of course, Peter doesn't just mean God knows how to do it. It means he has done it in the past; he will do it in the future. Destruction is not sleeping.
Lessons for Today
What, then, do we learn for our life today? First, the church is not immune to false teachers. We must make every effort to keep ourselves rooted and grounded in the Word of God or we lose our stability and can be carried away in error (3:17).
Second, advocating sexual immorality is a heresy. It is an offense against Jesus Christ the Lord. The practice and propagation of sexual activity outside marriage is a denial of the Master who bought us, because he died for us to free us from the domination of sexual passion. We should glorify him in our bodies by submitting to his pattern of sexual fulfillment. There is nothing new about free sex. And we should resist it today as resolutely as the apostles of old.
Third, divine judgment is coming upon those who deny Christ in this way. And it is heartless to encourage people to go about their business and live their lives as though nothing very significant were at stake. Heaven and hell hang on whether we follow Christ in righteousness or deny him in immorality.
Fourth, you can be saved from judgment if you repent and trust the Master who bought you by his blood. When it says the Lord knows how to deliver the godly (v. 9), it doesn't mean he only delivers the perfect. Lot was far from perfect. If you put your trust in Jesus Christ and press on to love what he loves, "then you will never fall, and there will be richly provided for you an entrance into the eternal kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ."
Our Bible Class on Understanding the Denominations begins in March. If you have not signed up, please do so as we will be looking at the false teachings of other so-called "Christian" denominations.
DID YOU EVER WONDER???
Never Let Anyone Tell You it is Impossible!!!!
Aaron Weaver was born on April 14th, 1998 with only his left eye. It was very likely that this rarity would also come with brain damage. It was a one and a million chance that he would not have brain damage, yet he doesn't. He went through 25 reconstructive surgeries and received a prosthetic eye in his right eye socket.
He grew up in a rural town in North Carolina attending the local schools. When he was in 4th grade he dreamed of becoming an author and he carried that dream with him throughout his life, however he faced many obstacles.
From his first day of pre-school to his last day of high school he was looked at strangely and called names. Each year it would get worse and worse. People would call him names like "cyclops" and would tell him that he was a mistake. Along with this he suffered from Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) which made it difficult for him to do normal, every day activities.
In 2016 he graduated high school with the support of a loving family and the help of teachers and friends. He began to write a book including one of his favorite things, zombies. A year later he completed his book and one of his former teachers assisted him in finding a publishing company. He submitted his book to the company, Covenant Books, for the very first time and they decided to publish it. In late 2017 The Human Apocalypse was published and is now being sold through several different outlets. Aaron, who is now 19, has overcome a life of people not accepting him and is pursuing his dream while inspiring others to do the same.
BOOKS OF THE BIBLE...A TEACHING
Christ as Interpreter of the Law
The fifth christological theme is Jesus as the true interpreter of the law. Unlike Mark, with its critique of the Mosaic law (e.g., Mark 7:1–23), Matthew affirms its enduring validity, as interpreted, or reinterpreted, by Jesus. For this reason, Matthew omits Mark’s initial emphasis on the newness of Jesus’ teaching (Mark 1:27) and occasionally adds Jesus’ instruction about keeping Torah to Mark’s story (Matt 12:12; 24:20).
According to Matthew, Jesus came to fulfill the law and exhorts others to obey it (5:17–20; 7:12; 19:17; 22:40). Even the legal teaching of the scribes and Pharisees is to be heeded, although they fail to practice their own precepts (23:2–3).
For the church of Matthew, however, Jesus is the supreme arbiter of the law. Jesus at times therefore reinterprets the law of Moses on a higher ethical level (5:21–24, 27–29) or even radicalizes its demands to the point of revoking its original meaning (5:33–39). In fact, some scholars have suggested that outline 4.1 above of five discourses (in combination with other aspects of the gospel) intends to portray Jesus as the new Moses offering a new law corresponding to the five books of the OT Pentateuch.
These two different emphases of reinterpreting and revoking the law may reflect separate traditions utilized by Matthew. They may have been combined in this gospel to show that Jesus’ teachings both uphold and supersede the law of Moses. Jesus’ teaching is clearly superior to the law of Moses, for whereas the law stands firm “until heaven and earth pass away” (Matt 5:18), Jesus’ own words stand eternally: “heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will never pass away” (24:35).
For Matthew, the essence of the law is love; the two commandments to love God and to love others give decisive expression to the law and the prophets (7:12; 22:40). The scribes and Pharisees are indicted for neglecting these “weightier matters of the law” (23:23). In Matthew, love toward God and others is the hallmark of God’s righteousness (5:44–48; 22:37–40) and of actions in obedience to God’s will (5:43–48; 7:21). Through Jesus’ teaching on love the will of God is revealed, and the law properly interpreted.
A “superior righteousness” is also demanded from the inhabitants of God’s kingdom (5:20, 48). It is attained, not by a stricter legalism, but by following the way of Jesus. Disciples are the “poor in spirit” who belong to the kingdom of heaven (5:3, 8, 10). They are righteous because they follow the way of Jesus, unlike the Pharisees and teachers of the law, who remain in unbelief. This new righteousness sets the stage for Matthew’s heightened emphasis on obedience. Whereas the children of Israel submitted themselves to the “yoke of the commandments” (m. Ber. 2:2), the followers of Jesus surrender to the yoke of Christ (11:28–30), which requires complete submission.
Matthew frequently underscores this ethics of discipleship, reminding the reader that true disciples live transformed lives (6:10; 7:13–27; 12:33, 37; 13:44–46; 16:27; 18:17; 21:31, 43; 22:12). Although membership in the kingdom of heaven is not acquired by good works, it is certainly demonstrated by a disciple’s “righteousness” (5:6, 10, 20; 6:1, 33; 21:32). A good tree produces good fruit; a bad tree produces bad fruit (7:15–20).
Seven Woes to the Scribes and Pharisees
23 Then Jesus said to the crowds and to his disciples, 2 “The scribes and the Pharisees sit on Moses’ seat, 3 so do and observe whatever they tell you, but not the works they do. For they preach, but do not practice. 4 They tie up heavy burdens, hard to bear, and lay them on people’s shoulders, but they themselves are not willing to move them with their finger. 5 They do all their deeds to be seen by others. For they make their phylacteries broad and their fringes long, 6 and they love the place of honor at feasts and the best seats in the synagogues 7 and greetings in the marketplaces and being called rabbi by others. 8 But you are not to be called rabbi, for you have one teacher, and you are all brothers. 9 And call no man your father on earth, for you have one Father, who is in heaven. 10 Neither be called instructors, for you have one instructor, the Christ. 11 The greatest among you shall be your servant. 12 Whoever exalts himself will be humbled, and whoever humbles himself will be exalted.
13 “But woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you shut the kingdom of heaven in people’s faces. For you neither enter yourselves nor allow those who would enter to go in. 15 Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you travel across sea and land to make a single proselyte, and when he becomes a proselyte, you make him twice as much a child of hell as yourselves.
16 “Woe to you, blind guides, who say, ‘If anyone swears by the temple, it is nothing, but if anyone swears by the gold of the temple, he is bound by his oath.’ 17 You blind fools! For which is greater, the gold or the temple that has made the gold sacred? 18 And you say, ‘If anyone swears by the altar, it is nothing, but if anyone swears by the gift that is on the altar, he is bound by his oath.’ 19 You blind men! For which is greater, the gift or the altar that makes the gift sacred? 20 So whoever swears by the altar swears by it and by everything on it. 21 And whoever swears by the temple swears by it and by him who dwells in it. 22 And whoever swears by heaven swears by the throne of God and by him who sits upon it.
23 “Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you tithe mint and dill and cumin, and have neglected the weightier matters of the law: justice and mercy and faithfulness. These you ought to have done, without neglecting the others. 24 You blind guides, straining out a gnat and swallowing a camel!
25 “Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you clean the outside of the cup and the plate, but inside they are full of greed and self-indulgence. 26 You blind Pharisee! First clean the inside of the cup and the plate, that the outside also may be clean.
27 “Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you are like whitewashed tombs, which outwardly appear beautiful, but within are full of dead people’s bones and all uncleanness. 28 So you also outwardly appear righteous to others, but within you are full of hypocrisy and lawlessness.
29 “Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you build the tombs of the prophets and decorate the monuments of the righteous, 30 saying, ‘If we had lived in the days of our fathers, we would not have taken part with them in shedding the blood of the prophets.’ 31 Thus you witness against yourselves that you are sons of those who murdered the prophets. 32 Fill up, then, the measure of your fathers. 33 You serpents, you brood of vipers, how are you to escape being sentenced to hell? 34 Therefore I send you prophets and wise men and scribes, some of whom you will kill and crucify, and some you will flog in your synagogues and persecute from town to town, 35 so that on you may come all the righteous blood shed on earth, from the blood of righteous Abel to the blood of Zechariah the son of Barachiah, whom you murdered between the sanctuary and the altar. 36 Truly, I say to you, all these things will come upon this generation.
Lament over Jerusalem
37 “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the city that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it! How often would I have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you were not willing! 38 See, your house is left to you desolate. 39 For I tell you, you will not see me again, until you say, ‘Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord.’ ”
A LAMENT FOR THE JEWISH TEACHERS
Jesus wants the crowds to do what their teachers say, but not what they do! They teach the law of Moses, but they don’t practice it. They make the law a huge burden, rather than a joyful freedom (23:1–36).
Jesus utters seven ‘woes’ on the teachers of the law and Pharisees. Woes are the opposite of blessings or beatitudes. They pronounce grief and disaster.
The Pharisees’ religion is all for show, so that people will admire them. Jesus condemns them as hypocrites, which means actors or pretenders. They are more sinister than actors, because they don’t admit that they’re acting. People think they are genuine, but Jesus sees through them.
The Pharisees fringe their garments with long tassels to show they are rabbis or respected teachers. ‘Rabbi’ means ‘my great one’. They like to be called ‘rabbi’, ‘father’ and ‘teacher’. They are seeking a kind of glory and status which is due to God alone.
Jesus pronounces ‘woes’ on the teachers and Pharisees because:
♦ they don’t enter the kingdom of God themselves—and they keep others from God by blocking the way with their impossible rules.
♦ they go to enormous trouble to make converts, and then burden them with legalism and pretence.
♦ they make complicated rules about swearing and oaths—as though truth could come from anything other than God.
♦ they tithe even the leaves of herbs, but neglect the things God really wants—such as justice, mercy and faithfulness. Their efforts to keep the law are elaborate and misguided—like straining out a gnat but swallowing a camel!
♦ they wash cups and dishes with the greatest care—as though clean habits make holy lives. But they never tackle the greed and selfishness in their hearts, which is the real source of pollution.
♦ These Pharisees and teachers are blind guides, incapable of leading others. They are like whitewashed tombs, putting a mask of purity on the face of corruption. Jesus sees them trying to escape from God’s anger, like vipers wriggling away from a stubble fire. But judgment is about to overtake them.
♦ Jesus holds the religious leaders responsible for the death of every innocent person, from Abel to Zechariah. They build fine tombs to honour the prophets and martyrs of the past; but it was their ancestors, people like them, who persecuted and killed them.
Jesus and the Pharisees
The Pharisees are a group of Jews, numbering about 6,000, who try to lead perfect lives. In order to do this they have developed hundreds of rules covering every aspect of human behavior.
To make sure they are ritually ‘clean’ the Pharisees wash their fingers with carefully measured amounts of water. To make sure they don’t work on the sabbath they refuse to carry loads, or walk more than a certain number of paces, or even cook food on that day. Jesus teases them that they even tithe the leaves of their herbs!
But the Pharisees are sincere. They are trying to keep the Jewish people holy despite the occupation of their country by pagan Romans. They also believe that God is at work in the world through his holy angels, and that he will raise good people from death at the end of time. Jesus respects their faith in a holy God—and their desire to obey God completely.
However, some of the Pharisees have become religious snobs. They are proud of their purity and disapprove of lesser mortals. They are also control freaks, who criticize Jesus for ‘working’ on the sabbath when he heals people. In becoming obsessive about God’s law, they have lost sight of God’s grace.
The Pharisees think they are pleasing God by keeping sinners out of his kingdom. But Jesus shows that God is welcoming them in! He makes contact with many who are ‘unclean’ through sin, suffering and circumstance, and helps them to realize God’s love.
Abel was the first person to be murdered—killed out of jealousy by his brother, Cain (Genesis 4:8). Zechariah (actually son of Jehoiada) was the last martyr recorded in the history books of the Old Testament. He was stoned to death for speaking out against the evil King Joash (2 Chronicles 24:20–22).
A LAMENT FOR JERUSALEM
After his long outburst of anger against the Pharisees and teachers, Jesus grieves for Jerusalem (23:37–39). He has longed to gather and protect his people, but his love has been spurned. Soon he will leave the temple for the last time, and the presence of God will no longer dwell there. Jesus will not return unless and until the people welcome him as their Lord and God.
Knowles, A. (2001). The Bible guide (1st Augsburg books ed., p. 433). Minneapolis, MN: Augsburg.
Knowles, A. (2001). The Bible guide (1st Augsburg books ed., pp. 432–433). Minneapolis, MN: Augsburg.
The Holy Bible: English Standard Version. (2016). (Mt 23:29–39). Wheaton: Standard Bible Society.
The Holy Bible: English Standard Version. (2016). (Mt 23:1–28). Wheaton: Standard Bible Society.
Puskas, C. B., & Crump, D. (2008). An Introduction to the Gospels and Acts (p. 98). Grand Rapids, MI; Cambridge, U.K.: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.
Puskas, C. B., & Crump, D. (2008). An Introduction to the Gospels and Acts (pp. 97–98). Grand Rapids, MI; Cambridge, U.K.: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.
HAVE A SAFE AND BLESSED WEEK:)
Ho'omaikaʻi ka Pua iā kākou