LENT FOR EVERYONE READING: MATTHEW 11 WEEK 2: WEDNESDAY Jesus - TopicsExpress



          

LENT FOR EVERYONE READING: MATTHEW 11 WEEK 2: WEDNESDAY Jesus is here being put on the spot. Today, when interviewers try to force politicians to say things they didnt really want to let out, they tend to prevaricate, to ignore the question, or even to tell downright lies. We have print and electronic media that can take any sentence uttered by a public figure and beam it round the globe in an instant. In Jesus day they had something almost as powerful, and just as deadly: the rumour mill. Anything you said in one village might precede you to the next. Anything someone like Jesus said about kingship, about Gods new purposes coming to pass, might easily land on the desk of the present would-be king of the Jews, Herod Antipas. So, when the awkward question comes, he has truthful but elusive answers ready. The question was asked by John the Baptist, who was in prison after annoying Herod with his preaching. (John had been saying, among other things, that Herod should not have taken his brothers wife. Accusing someone of blatant immorality was certainly to be taken as a political comment: such a person could hardly be the true king of the Jews. No wonder Herod was annoyed.) But John had pointed to Jesus himself, and had declared that he was Gods chosen one, the coming Messiah. Jesus, in other words, was the reality, and Herod just a cheap imitation. Now Jesus had been healing people, announcing that God was becoming king — but he hadnt marched on Jerusalem, he hadnt launched an attack on Herod, the present wicked usurper. Whats more, he hadnt rescued his own poor cousin from Herods clutches. So: Are you the one who is to come, or should we be looking for someone else? Its the natural question. But Jesus cannot simply give it the natural answer. To say yes is to send a message directly to Herod via the rumour mill: You, Herod, are supposed to be king of the Jews, but now theres someone else going around saying its him instead. Not the sort of thing a king likes to hear. So Jesus speaks instead in biblical terms. The great prophets, notably Isaiah 35, had predicted a coming time of blessing and healing for Gods people. This is coming true in his own work. Blessed is the one who takes no offence at me, he says: in other words, this is what the Messiah is supposed to look like, and if you were expecting something else its you that needs to adjust your picture! But then Jesus makes two other points, more cryptic still. First, he asks the crowds why they came out into the wilderness — already knowing the answer, that they came to see John. What were they looking for? A reed shaken in the wind? They would all know that this referred to Herod Antipas, who had a Galilean reed as the emblem on his coins. Or someone clothed in silks and satins? No: youd had enough of would-be kings, jumped-up little princelings copying the worst habits of Rome and its emperors. This was indeed subversive stuff, but Jesus hasnt said anything that would enable Herod to arrest him too. But then comes a still more cryptic, powerful saying. The crowds had come to see a prophet, and more than a prophet. Jesus has worked the conversation round. John the Baptist is the greatest man who ever lived; yet the least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he . . . and he is Elijah who is to come. No wonder he had to say, after that, If youve got ears, then listen! He was speaking in riddles. If John is the greatest man ever, but since then something new has happened which introduces a whole new value-scale, then it can only be that the new thing that has happened is Jesus own presence, Jesus own work. If John is Elijah, Jesus is the one whom Elijah was going to announce as imminent . . . which makes him at least Israels Messiah. Perhaps even the living embodiment of Israels returning, judging God. When Jesus says that the kingdom has been breaking in violently, and that violent people are trying to snatch it, what he seems to be saying is that Gods kingdom had indeed been decisively launched in his work, and that those bent on violent revolution were trying to get in on the act. That would of course provoke Herod all the more, and indeed — as happens sometimes in our own world — someone who is determinedly pursuing an agenda of violence will not welcome the news of Gods kingdom of peace and healing. The crowds, meanwhile, just dont get it. John looked too crazy, Jesus looks too normal. Sometimes even Jesus just had to plough on, realizing that people hadnt understood, but going ahead anyway. Sometimes we have to do the same. TODAY Lord, give us grace to recognize you, to hail you as our Lord and King, and to follow you even when we too are misunderstood
Posted on: Wed, 19 Mar 2014 10:06:53 +0000

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