“And He was teaching in their synagogues and was praised by
all” (Luke 4:15).
Why did Jesus
return to Nazareth when He was being so well received by the rest of Galilee? Having
returned, why did He choose a passage and an interpretation of that passage that
was certain to elicit backlash? Having returned, why didn’t Jesus modify His
message?
Why didn’t Jesus
simply build on (what we would term) His momentum and bypass Nazareth, at least
for the moment?
We can ask a
similar question when we consider Mark 1:35 – 38 (also at the beginning of His
ministry). In this instance “everyone was looking for Jesus” but Jesus replies,
“Let us go somewhere else…for that is what I came for.” Again, why didn’t Jesus
remain in Capernaum and build on His momentum?
Jesus obviously
was not reading church growth literature, nor was He reading the latest in
leadership material, nor was He aware of how important financial support was
and growing a budget, nor did He understand the importance of securing a solid
homebase of operations. Nor was Jesus aware of how important it is to win your
audience over to you.
Having shocked
the congregation with Isaiah 61, why push them over the edge by bringing into
His message the widow of Zarephath and Naaman the Syrian?
The only response
I have to these questions is: Man builds on success; God builds on
obedience.
“Truly, truly, I
say to you, the Son can do nothing of Himself, unless it is something He sees
the Father doing; for whatever the Father does, these things the Son also does
in like manner” (John 5:18 – 19).
Perhaps we should
recall Paul’s words to the Galatians, “For am I now seeking the favor of men,
or of God? Or am I striving to please men? If I were still trying to please
men, I would not be a bondservant of Christ” (Galatians 1:10).
“As was His
custom” (Luke 4:16)
Throughout His ministry
Jesus visited synagogues and the Temple in Jerusalem, visits which resulted in clashes
between the Spirit and the flesh, grace and the Law, man’s tradition and God’s
Word, the self-righteousness of man and the holy righteousness of God. In the
passage before us, the congregation attempted to murder Him. In Mark 3:1 – 6 (again,
early in His ministry), healing in a synagogue resulted in the Pharisees and
Herodians plotting how to murder Him.
Jesus’ visits to
Judea and Jerusalem entailed the risk of death (John 5:16; 7:32; 8:59; 10:31;
11:53, 80), and of course finally led to His betrayal and crucifixion – as well
as His resurrection!
Jesus may
have entered the synagogue in Nazareth as was His custom, but He did not enter
that synagogue, nor any synagogue, to do what was customary. The same is true
for His visits to the Temple in Jerusalem.
I suppose we could
say that Jesus was not very well behaved in that He did not conform to the old
wineskins, but rather spoke the Word of His Father; comforting the afflicted
and afflicting the comfortable.
As we ponder
these things, perhaps we ought not to be too hard on the synagogue folks, after
all, how do we respond when Jesus comes into the synagogue of our own heart to
speak the Word of His Father? When I read of Jesus cleansing the Tempe, both in
John 2:13 (at the beginning of His ministry) and in Matthew 21:12 (at the conclusion
of His earthly ministry), I picture Him in the temple of my soul, my heart, my mind…casting
out those things which ought not to be there, overturning the tables in my own
life.
What is my
response to Jesus when He comes into my temple? Do I submit to Him or do I try
to kill Him? Jesus begins in me with cleansing, He continues in me with
cleansing, and now, toward the conclusion of my pilgrimage, He continues to
cleanse, to overturn tables – to get my attention.
I suppose I
could say that the Lord Jesus continues to interrupt my “order of service.” How
impolite, yet how merciful.
Malachi writes, “The
Lord, whom you seek, will suddenly come to His temple.” We see this in the
Gospels, we see this on the Day of Pentecost, and we see this in our own lives
(if we will receive Him) and (more rarely perhaps) in the lives of our congregations.
What book of
Scripture is Jesus opening today in our temple? What is He saying in our
individual lives, our marriages, our families, our congregations? We can be
pretty certain that whatever Jesus is saying will challenge our customs, our
ways of doing things – because you just can’t put new wine into new wineskins
(Matthew 9:17).
We can also trust
that He will be teaching us from things “both old and new” (Matthew 13:52).
And may I add,
that Jesus is patient with us – while He is impatient with evil and
unrighteousness and oppression – He is patient with us, He has come that we
might have life and have it abundantly. We see His patience with Peter, not just
in the Gospels, but also in Acts and in Galatians (Chapter Two). This gives me
hope…great hope for myself in Christ.
I hope I am not
presuming to much when I suggest that when Jesus overturns the furniture in our
temples, that He will dispose of the mess and bring the glorious furniture of
the Holy Temple into our hearts, that He will furnish us with the Presence of
the Trinity, with the Bread and the Light and the Altar and Oil and Living
Water…O my…who can understand these things. Well, we may not understand them,
but in Jesus we can most certainly experience them.
Most importantly,
we can trust Jesus to teach us how to love God with all that we have and all
that we are, and to lay down our lives for others…it is always about Jesus,
always about Him.