Jesus Declares War: Operation Sabbath Freedom -- Mark Chapter 2
By
David L. Miner
Mark,
in his Gospel, ties an event with some interesting teaching that, on
its face, seems unrelated to the event. In truth, I believe this
passage is a subtle but powerful declaration of war on the Pharisees
and especially on the established religious belief system enforced by
the Pharisees. I believe Jesus, in this passage, subtly announced
that he was here to more than just upset the apple cart!
In
chapter one of Mark's Gospel, Jesus is recorded as teaching and
healing at several times. Casting out evil spirits falls under both
teaching and healing, as Jesus indicated, and he does some of both.
The
result of all this is that by the end of the first chapter, Jesus is
thronged by crowds every time he comes into town, and in chapter two,
even while he is still out of town.
In
chapter two, Jesus is confronted by a man with "the palsy,"
which was almost certainly some form of paralysis. Four friends
brought the man before Jesus in a unique manner that was sure to
attract his attention - they destroyed part of the roof in Peter's
house, or maybe his mother-in-law’s house, and let the man down
from above. Jesus was really impressed by the faith of the man's
friends. As a result, Jesus said,
"Son,
thy sins be forgiven thee.”
[Mark
2:5, KJV]
And
this act caused certain teachers of the Law to claim that Jesus was
speaking blasphemy, saying, "Who can forgive sins but God only?"
Jesus
responds with a question: "Which
is easier to say to the paralytic, 'Your sins are forgiven,' or to
say, 'Get up, take your mat and walk?'"
[Mark
2:9, NIV]
The
scribes and the Pharisees knew the importance of that question! In
Jewish tradition, if a Jew loved and served God, he was blessed by
God in his finances or his health or both. If a Jew rebelled against
God and sinned, he was punished by God in his finances or his health
or both. To these people, this man was paralyzed so it was clear
that he had sinned. Since he was STILL paralyzed it was clear that
he was STILL in his sins, and had not been forgiven by God. Certain
church leaders still preach this error today.
So,
if God forgave the man, according to this traditional doctrine, then
the man would become healed. Because of this, Jesus forgave the man
of his sins since this would result
in his healing, according to their beliefs.
Hence,
Jesus asked, "Which is more difficult?" Either way, Jesus
implied that traditional Jewish doctrine said one could not happen
without affecting the other. And to underscore what was REALLY
happening here, Jesus DID BOTH!
Brothers
and sisters, THIS
WAS HUGE!
The
fact that Jesus was healing people implied their sins were forgiven.
But as long as no one raised this issue, the Pharisees could ignore
it, sort of. But Jesus forced the issue, and the religious leaders
had to respond with accusations of blasphemy.
So
Jesus left town and headed for the lakeside. As he toured the
fishing boats and the small villages near the shore, he walked among
the carts and booths which were selling the sorts of things sold in
every fishing village throughout time. Including one thing that
nobody wanted to see - the local tax collector.
Mark
records the event where Jesus recruits Levi, the tax collector, into
his increasing team of close disciples. In an act of celebration and
welcome, they had a dinner party at the house of the new disciple.
As always, there were scribes and Pharisees around to closely observe
Jesus in the hopes of catching him in the act of teaching or doing
something, anything,
contrary to established interpretations of the Law.
Naturally,
a disparity, or at least a distinction, came to light:
And
the disciples of John and of the Pharisees used to fast: and they
come and say to him, Why do the disciples of John and of the
Pharisees fast, but thy disciples fast not?
[Mark
2:18, KJV]
Then
Jesus launched into three apparently unrelated stories, even
parables, which he offered as if they were answers to the question.
The
question now becomes, how do these three apparently unrelated stories
relate to the original question? And HOW do they answer the
question? And maybe, DO they answer the question?
In
other words, was Jesus simply avoiding the question?
Jesus
starts his "answer" with a short discussion of the typical
wedding celebration, and asks a question: Can
the friends of the bridegroom give up food and drink while they are
partying with the groom?
He
then goes on with a short story about the lack of foresight when
patching a tear in an old coat with a piece of new material.
And
Jesus finishes his "answer" with a warning against pouring
new wine into an old wine skin, because the final stages of
fermentation, which finish off the wine properly, will produce
expansion. A new wine skin has some stretch in it, but an old wine
skin does not.
So
now the original question becomes, at least for us and almost
certainly for the Pharisees: What
is it about these three unrelated stories that answers the question?
As
we look more closely at this new question, there sneaks into the back
of my mind something else: is
Jesus actually trying to answer the question?
Or is he really trying to answer a question more fundamental, closer
to what Christ wants the Pharisees to see is really at issue here? I
submit that Jesus was really trying to redirect attention away from
what the Pharisees wanted and onto what Jesus wanted.
If
we take the time to research formal Jewish weddings of that day, we
will easily find dozens of publications on the shelves of a good
Jewish library, ranging from pamphlets to chapters in a book to
entire books. An overview of them will show a plethora of customs,
requirements, restrictions, and traditions. And each variant of
Jewish practice has its own library of publications.
There
were so many details to a formal Jewish wedding, and each of these
details was tied to varying degrees of "required" rules and
traditions, that a serious and formal wedding all but required a
professional wedding planner just to keep the wedding within the
approval of the traditional sensitivities and Pharisaic approval.
And a simple review of the formal Jewish wedding showed a week-long
“celebration” and then the infamous wedding night. You might
want to read again the first miracle by Jesus at the wedding feast
running short of wine part way through that week, as recorded in
Chapter 2 of John's Gospel.
With
all the complexities in a formal wedding to draw from in answer to
the question, Jesus chose to focus on the fun part, the portion of
the week-long ceremony that relates to the groom's partying, and
tells the Pharisees that the groom's friends don't give up food and
drink for a week while the groom is still around celebrating his
coming wedding night! It would appear that this was the only part of
the long wedding ceremony that the Pharisees didn't consider. They
were well aware of the requirements and restrictions and customs of
wedding feasts, because they were always around to enforce them, but
they most likely had given little thought to the party aspect during
that week-long wedding feast.
It
was almost as if Jesus was treating a serious and formal question on
an important issue as if it was a party. Jesus was on the edge of an
insult, and disguised it as an answer to the question they asked.
And
if the Pharisees weren't irritated enough at that, Jesus took things
a couple steps further.
Jesus
brought out two parables that took something old and established, and
implied that the old cannot be added to, modified, or fixed, but
required something entirely new:
-
A tear in an old coat can't be fixed by patching it with
new material
-
An old wine skin can't be used to contain new wine
For
the fast-thinking Pharisee, and they were all fast thinking, Jesus
just implied that the established complexities of rabbinical teaching
about the Law was not as important as the joy and fellowship between
the groom and his friends. Further, and perhaps even more important,
any attempt to fix the old teachings or use them differently will
just make things worse. Jesus was claiming that the old system must
be thrown away and the new teachings must be wholly adopted.
It
is important to note the fact that Jesus chose to do these things on
the Sabbath. And then he followed his words with what might be the
most powerful part of Christ's declaration of war. Jesus was
challenging everything the Pharisees believed in, and the
restrictions regarding the Sabbath were the cornerstone of the
religion demanded by the Pharisees.
Jesus was challenging everything the Pharisees believed in, and the restrictions regarding the Sabbath were the cornerstone of the religion demanded by the Pharisees.
There was no tighter control or
more clear restrictions than what the Pharisees demanded of the Jews
concerning the Sabbath. And Jesus took direct aim on that issue and
fired his best and most powerful shot.
The
Pharisees were saying to Him, "Look, why are they doing what is
not lawful on the Sabbath?" And
He said to them, "Have you never read what David did when he was
in need and he and his companions became hungry; how he entered the
house of God in the time of Abiathar the
high priest, and ate the consecrated bread, which is not lawful for
anyone
to eat except the priests, and he also gave it to those who were with
him?" Jesus said to them, "The Sabbath was made for man,
and not man for the Sabbath. So the Son of Man is Lord even of the
Sabbath."
[Mark
2:24-28 (NASB)]
Jesus
referred to himself as the Son of Man some 80 times in the four
Gospel accounts. And each time Jesus referred to the Son of Man, he
added to the meaning and the role of the Son of Man in a collective
description, clearly making references to the Messiah and at times to
the Son of God. Add all those references up and the composite
picture is definitely that of God coming to the earth as a man, and
very definitely Jesus claiming to be that man.
And
his first reference to himself as the Son of Man was to establish his
power and authority over the Sabbath. Jesus was not starting his
battle with the Pharisees with a bang. Jesus was starting it with a
huge explosion.
Allow
me to explain.
Jesus
was claiming something so powerful that it ultimately got him killed.
Jesus here was claiming that the Son of Man, and through him ALL
mankind, was not under the requirements and the restrictions of the
Sabbath. Jesus was claiming that he was not so much breaking
the Sabbath as he was redefining it. Jesus was
proclaiming that the requirements and the restrictions of the
Sabbath no longer controlled mankind's relationship with God. That
role had been taken over by Jesus, the Son of Man.
The
Pharisees had made the Sabbath, with its requirements and its
restrictions, the focus – the centerpiece – of man's relationship
with God. And Jesus was showing them that the Sabbath was never
intended to be the centerpiece. Jesus was making himself the
centerpiece of man's relationship with God. And in doing so, he was
teaching that man no longer had to be subject to the Sabbath; that
man no longer had to be subject to the Law; that man had to be
subject to the Son of Man, the only Begotten Son of the Living God.
Jesus
was establishing a new religious system, knowing that in doing so
these Pharisees would seek his death. Jesus was subtly and not too
gently trying to say, "Out with the old and in with the new"
because the old was just too complex and inflexible and cumbersome to
update.
This
was a warning from Jesus of what was to come. Earlier in this
chapter, Jesus had already thrown in front of the Pharisees his
ability to heal and his authority to forgive sins by equating them
and then doing BOTH right in front of them. See Mark 2:1-12. This
was not only novel, but it was blasphemous in the eyes of the
Pharisees. Yet Jesus didn't seem the least bit concerned about that.
And
Jesus was about to heal a man's deformed hand on the Sabbath, thereby
violating the Pharisees' understanding of Sabbath restrictions.
Taken together, Jesus crossed the Pharisees so drastically that they
plotted with the Herodians to kill him in the near future.
Mark
portrayed in his Gospel account that Jesus was not so much willing to
rock the boat as he was intending to sink
the boat and obtain a sleek new catamaran.
And
we are only in Chapter two!
Comments
Post a Comment