Don’t Mess With Taxes (Mark 12:13-17)

In the 4th century AD a man lost or buried a gold ring in a field in England. It was big enough that it had to be worn over a glove.[1] It lay for 1,400 years until it was found by a farmer plowing his field.[2]

Perhaps the original owner was Senicianus. His name was carved into the side. In Latin it reads, “Senicianus, live in God.” A common inscription for Roman Christians at the time. But next to the inscription is an image of the goddess Venus.[3] The mixture is somewhat strange, but this was made during a time when Christians and pagans lived side by side. It’s also strange that the inscription contains two errors.[4] Clearly it was added later, maybe by someone in a hurry.

Decades later, 70 miles from that field, another discovery was made. This time, a lead plate that had been placed in the temple of a local Celtic god. It is a curse tablet. It says: “To the god Nodens. Silvianus has lost a ring; he hereby gives half of it (i.e. half of its value) to Nodens. Among those who are called Senicianus, do not allow health until he brings it to the temple.”[5]

Silvianus was a Roman. He said he was the true owner of the ring and that it had been taken by Senicianus, who then clumsily carved his own name onto the band to try to prove his ownership. So whose ring was it? Silvianus? Senicianus? Was it Christian? Was it pagan?

The question of image and inscription on treasure is the subject of this text. It’s a short passage that is familiar to many of us. But despite its brevity, it packs powerful truth both then and now.

Mark 12:13 – 13 Then they sent some of the Pharisees and the Herodians to Jesus to trap him in his words.

The Sanhedrin has been sending these different groups to try to trip Jesus up in His words. To get Him to say something that could be considered illegal or that would make the crowds turn on Him. Last time it was a group of chief priests, scribes, and elders. Now it’s Pharisees and Herodians. Next it will be Sadducees. They’re throwing everything they’ve got, but they can’t land a single hit.

They’re confident that they’re going to catch Jesus in a trap. The word Mark uses here is a hunting word or a term you would use for hooking a fish.[6] But what they’re doing is so obvious. Just the fact that Pharisees and Herodians are coming to Him together shows their scheming desperation.

Ordinarily these groups would have nothing to do with each other.[7] But by passion week all the leaders are united in one goal: Get rid of Jesus. They’ll partner with people they can’t stand to get it done. It reveals their hate and their jealousy and their greed and their selfish ambition.

One quick note before we move on: Notice they wanted to trap Jesus in His words. We know it’s not going to work. Jesus’ words are always pure, always true, always consistent, never wavering. On the devotional level, we can be encouraged that that is true about the Word of God we have in our hands. You’re going to encounter someone – a coworker, a family member, a professor, a book, a podcast – that says God’s Word is full of errors. That God’s Word isn’t consistent. But it isn’t true. “The Word of the Lord is right.”[8] His instruction is perfect. His testimony is trustworthy. His command is radiant. His ordinances are reliable. More desirable than an abundance of pure gold.[9]

There are things that are hard to understand. And there are difficulties that can be worked through. But God will not be trapped in His words and we will not be trapped if we rely on His Word.

Mark 12:14 – 14 When they came, they said to him, “Teacher, we know you are truthful and don’t care what anyone thinks, nor do you show partiality but teach the way of God truthfully. Is it lawful to pay taxes to Caesar or not? Should we pay or shouldn’t we?”

The issue of taxation is always controversial. We’re not used to politicians having very high approval ratings. Did you know that in 1991, George H.W. Bush had an 89% approval rating? And yet, he lost the election in 1992. Why? Six words: “Read my lips, no new taxes.”[10] That was the promise, but he ended up raising taxes 3%. And that was the end of his presidency.

Taxes are always controversial but in first century Israel it was a different level. You see, the Jews’ land was occupied by Rome. And since 6 AD, the Caesars had been forcing the Jews to pay a census tax every year. That’s the tax in this verse. This was much more than an economic sore spot. This was about culture and religion and oppression and enriching your occupiers.

David Garland writes, “Almost every resident of [Israel] knew someone, even a father or a brother, whom the Romans had victimized. They were sold into slavery (temporarily or permanently), forced off their land…or executed for rising up against the oppression.”[11]

This question was a no-win for Jesus. He’d have to alienate someone. At least, that’s what they thought. Herodians and Romans were fine with the tax. Pharisees resented and resisted it, but paid it, grudgingly.[12] But patriots really hated this tax. It sparked a violent revolution that was quickly put down by Rome.[13] Zealots would not pay.[14]

Now Jesus is surrounded by people of every group. Among His own followers was a tax collector and a former zealot. And His disciples believed Him to be the Messiah. Can you be the Messiah if you’re not anti-Rome? Can you be the Messiah if you’re not planning on overthrowing the Caesar? But if you say you’re going to overthrow Caesar, that spells death for you and all your followers. How in the world is Jesus going to answer this question while still maintaining truth and integrity?

Mark 12:15 – 15 But knowing their hypocrisy, he said to them, “Why are you testing me? Bring me a denarius, to look at.”

The denarius was a particular coin, equal to a laborer’s day wage. You had to use this coin to pay the census tax to Rome.[15] You couldn’t bring in a jar of dirty pennies out of spite. This coin had the image of Caesar Tiberius engraved on it, with inscriptions labeling him as chief priest on one side and as the son of god on the other.[16]

The coin, in and of itself, would be deeply offensive to a devout Jew. Zealots refused to handle them.[17] In fact, authorities minted small copper coins without the graven image to be used by Jews in the area.[18] But you still had to use the silver one for the poll tax once a year.

Now, Jesus did not have one. He was not a wealthy individual. But who did have a denarius? The Pharisees and Herodians. They’re pretending they’re really concerned whether it’s upright and Godly to pay Rome this tax. Meanwhile, they’re fine with Caesar’s coins in their pockets. They’re happy to enrich themselves with his idolatrous, blasphemous coinage. That’s their hypocrisy.

Mark 12:16-17 – 16 They brought a coin. “Whose image and inscription is this?” he asked them. “Caesar’s,” they replied. 17 Jesus told them, “Give to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s.” And they were utterly amazed at him.

Have you heard the term “political football?” It’s when politicians or parties throw a difficult or contentious issue back and forth to try to score points against their opponents but never solving anything. Jesus doesn’t play political football. The truth is, this isn’t a political issue. This is a personal issue. It’s not about party or which group should have more power. Jesus’ answer is that each of us should live a life of obedience and faith. To do Godliness in any system.

The Bible commands us to obey the government. God has authority and Caesar has authority. Not equal. Caesar only has the authority God allows him to have for a time. But the Bible is clear: All authorities are instituted by God.[19] And believers can submit to governments – even tyrannical governments – and still be walking with God and honoring His call on their lives.

See, the zealots thought they were serving God by denying Caesar’s authority.[20] Jesus reveals they were wrong. The coins belonged to Tiberius. Literally. He minted them. They were his property.[21] His government paid for the roads they all walked. Yes, he was a tyrant, but he had done things for the people which benefitted them. In fact, when Jesus said, “give to Caesar,” He used a word that means pay back the debt you owe.[22] You possess his coin. You walk his roads. So, obviously you should pay this tax. You may not want to, but it is right to and it is Godly to do so.

But at the same time, Jesus is not giving a squishy, pro-Roman answer. Give to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s and to God the things that are God’s. Meaning that Caesar is not God. He said he was. His coins said he was. There was a growing emperor cult which worshiped Tiberius as divine. But here’s Jesus saying, “No. There’s One God, and it’s not a guy in Rome.”

Well, if this pretender to heaven’s throne says he’s a god and he’s occupying the Holy Land and imposing his will, isn’t the only answer insurrection? Revolution? Violent overthrow of this evil, ungodly government? That would seem logical and did seem logical to groups like the zealots. It seems logical to certain groups in our own society today.

But you know, neither Jesus nor the apostles ever taught violent resistance against any government. Christianity “[does] not foster disloyalty to the state.”[23] Not under Tiberius or Nero or Nebuchadnezzar or Sacramento. In this answer, Jesus doesn’t send us to any of the groups you could’ve gone to in Jerusalem at the time. Not the zealots, who did use violence to try to get their way. Not to the Essenes, who just quit society and hid out in the desert. Not to the Pharisees who tried to straddle the line between piety and peace with the secular rulers. Certainly not to the Herodians or the Sadducees who had turned their backs on God.

Instead, Christians were a separate thing. Jesus is our King, but we recognize that God has scattered us into a certain time and place. And wherever we find ourselves, we can honor God and accept the authority of the God-ordained government over us. Now when that government demands we disobey God, that is when we disobey government. We must obey God rather than men. But when it’s time to pay taxes, we write the check.

The thing is, we have more liberty and opportunity and influence in our governmental system than any populace in human history. We get to vote. We have opportunity to lawfully pressure our representatives to support or oppose certain legislation. We can protest. Our citizens can sue the government and try to get the courts to force the authorities to change their behavior.

These aren’t bad things. However, if we’re not careful, we can start to believe that gaining political power is a major goal for the Church. It isn’t. It wasn’t for the apostles. And, as one scholar notes, “an unhealthy union between church and state has been the undoing of both churches and governments throughout history.”[24] Our goal is not to set up a Christian Theocracy. Christ is going to do that when He returns. Our goals are personal. Rescuing persons from sin. When people are saved, they live out Godliness and that influences the communities and institutions around them. So, we care about our nation – absolutely. But righteousness exalts a nation, not regime change.

Now listen: This doesn’t mean politics don’t matter. Jesus didn’t send us to the zealots, but He didn’t send us to the Essenes either. The New Testament calls us to be model citizens, thoughtful about our place in society. Praying for our leaders. Working for the good of our communities. But the end goal of those activities for a Christian is not power, but Godliness. That we live lives that are peaceful and quiet and dignified – even when Nero is king. Why? Because it pleases God Who desires most of all not that certain parties have more power, but that people would be saved.[25]

Jesus’ answer was amazing. And it couldn’t be denied. The denarius belonged to Tiberius. Why? His image was on them.

Whose image were you made in? You and I, we belong to the Lord. Not just a once-a-year tax of a single day’s wage, but everything. It’s His breath in our lungs. It is by His mercies we are not consumed. It’s His life that makes us alive. Christians, you bear His image. His name is engraved on your heart. And you give to God the things that are God’s by loving Him with all your heart, all your mind, all your soul, all your strength.

The question is: Have we tried to steal the treasure of our lives away? Has this treasure, your life, been buried in a field somewhere? Not adorning the Body of the King, but lost in the dirt? Have we run off with our lives in pursuit of our own purposes, our own greatness, clumsily carving our own name and message on our lives, with a bunch of errors and mistakes along the way?

It’s not too late to give ourselves over to the Lord for His purposes. He can accomplish a new work even if we’ve been lost in a field for far too long. God can restore you, display you, tell a new story of His grace through your life as you return it to Him, the rightful Owner.

You know, when an archaeologist discovered the link between that lead plate and the gold ring, he didn’t know who this god Nodens was. So he went to a professor friend of his who was an expert on the topic. The archaeologist talked with the professor about this engraved, golden ring, stolen and then lost, the curse, all the rest. The professor helped him understand the history and mythology of Nodens and connect the dots. That professor was J.R.R. Tolkien. After all those years, the ring came out of the dirt and started telling new stories.

Your life is worth much more than an old Roman ring. The testimony of God’s grace in and through you is a greater tale than the greatest of novels. Give your life to Him and continue the story.

References
1 https://astonishinglegends.com/astonishing-legends/2018/7/7/the-ring-of-senicianus
2 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ring_of_Silvianus
3 https://www.nationaltrustcollections.org.uk/object/719789
4 Charles Thomas   Christianity In Roman Britain To AD 500
5 R.G. Goodchild   The Curse And The Ring
6 James Brooks   The New American Commentary, Volume 23: Mark
7 Brooks
8 Psalm 33:4
9 Psalm 19:7-10
10 https://www.carolinajournal.com/opinion/read-my-lips-no-new-taxes/
11 David Garland   The NIV Application Commentary: Mark
12 Ben Witherington   The Gospel Of Mark: A Socio-Rhetorical Commentary
13 R.T. France   The Gospel Of Mark
14 Walter Wessel   The Expositor’s Bible Commentary, Volume 8: Matthew, Mark, Luke
15 Morna Hooker   The Gospel According To Saint Mark
16 William Lane   The Gospel Of Mark,   John Walvoord and Roy Zuck   The Bible Knowledge Commentary: An Exposition of the Scriptures
17 Witherington
18 Hooker
19 Romans 13:1
20 Hooker
21 Witherington
22 France
23 BKC
24 Garland
25 1 Timothy 2:1-4

Wicked While They Work (1 Samuel 2:12-21)

Some of you know how hard it is to navigate a toxic work environment. I’ll tell you where you didn’t want to work, and that was for the UK Post Office system between 1999 and 2015. In 1999 the post office switched from a paper-based accounting system to a computer-based one. One centralized computer program could now see the records for 14,000 post office branches.[1] And guess what it found? Corrupt records. Missing money all over the place. Thousands of pounds gone. Clearly, the employees, the “sub-postmasters” had sticky hands in the till and would now be held accountable.

Over 900 were prosecuted.[2] Year after year more were caught. Except they weren’t stealing. It was the new software that was the problem. The bosses knew it was full of bugs. But they silenced anyone who criticized the system. They lied to journalists and politicians who asked questions. Employees went into their own pockets to cover the shortfalls that did not actually exist. Thousands were impacted, imprisoned, or financially ruined.[3] The scandal led to at least 13 suicides. It was 16 years of a toxic work environment, labeled as the “widest miscarriage of justice in UK history.”

In 1100BC, the Tabernacle was an extremely hostile work environment for little Samuel. For everyone else, it was a hostile worship environment. You see, the top brass – Eli’s two sons – not only had sticky fingers, they also vigorously attacked anyone who questioned them.

What are we supposed to do in a situation like that? When our leaders have become corrupt? When our institutions have broken down? When everyone does what is right in their own eyes?

Sadly, these situations are only limited to the wider society or even the work environment. It can even happen in the worship environment. Perhaps a friend or someone you know – maybe even a member of your own family has said, “I’m a Christian, but I won’t go to church. The Church is full of hypocrites. I got hurt at a church, so I’m done with the whole thing.”

How does faith work in a bad environment? Should we cut and run? Should we stand and fight? Let’s look at this text and see what Samuel and his parents did. Because, in this book, they are specifically, purposefully presented as faithful examples for us. In fact, throughout this chapter, our author keeps ping-ponging back and forth showing the faithfulness of Samuel, then the unfaithfulness of Eli and his sons.[4] Every few verses it pans from one to the other to drive home the contrast and to show that a believer can not only be faithful in dark spiritual days, but we can serve God effectively and grow substantially as we walk by faith – in any environment we’re called into.

1 Samuel 2:12 – 12 Eli’s sons were wicked men; they did not respect the LORD

As priests, Eli and his sons were the top of the authority chain. Other than God, there was no one higher to appeal to. This is one of the reasons why Israel would eventually demand a king, because the priesthood had become degraded and corrupted.[5]

Eli’s sons are described as wicked men. They were “utterly destructive”[6] good-for-nothings.[7] Two interesting things here. First, the term used is, “Sons of Belial.” It means sons of worthlessness.[8] And this is the exact same term Hannah had used when Eli accused her of being drunk. “No, my lord, don’t think of me as a wicked woman.” Eli assumed righteous Hannah is a daughter of Belial, which was the furthest thing from the truth. Meanwhile, his sons were openly, actively wicked. But Eli won’t deal with it. But it was his duty to do so. And so, God considers Eli complicit in their sins.[9]

The other interesting thing is that second phrase: They did not respect the LORD. Literally it says they did not know Yahweh.[10] Accomplishment, position, pedigree, power, talent – none of it matters in the long run if you do not know Yahweh.

God said in Jeremiah 9: “The wise person should not boast in his wisdom; the strong should not boast in his strength; the wealthy should not boast in his wealth. But the one who boasts should boast in this: that he understands and knows Me.”[11] That is the great goal of life: To know God. Meanwhile, here’s some of what Eli’s sons were up to:

1 Samuel 2:13-16 – 13 or the priests’ share of the sacrifices from the people. When anyone offered a sacrifice, the priest’s servant would come with a three-pronged meat fork while the meat was boiling 14 and plunge it into the container, kettle, cauldron, or cooking pot. The priest would claim for himself whatever the meat fork brought up. This is the way they treated all the Israelites who came there to Shiloh. 15 Even before the fat was burned, the priest’s servant would come and say to the one who was sacrificing, “Give the priest some meat to roast, because he won’t accept boiled meat from you—only raw.” 16 If that person said to him, “The fat must be burned first; then you can take whatever you want for yourself,” the servant would reply, “No, I insist that you hand it over right now. If you don’t, I’ll take it by force!”

During the UK Post Office scandal, the leaders of the post office used criminal and civil action to shut up any underlings who said the system was corrupt. When one sub-postmaster was accused for taking £35,000, he denied it and tried to prove the problems were in the software. So the post office spent £300,000 crushing him in court, leaving him bankrupt and his family devastated.

Under the Law of Moses, the priests and their families were given a specific share of the meat. The breast and the thigh were for them.[12] But Eli’s sons wanted more. What they did was at quadruple wrong: They were taking parts that didn’t belong to them, they were taking raw meat, they were eating the fat, and they were threatening people if they didn’t go along with their wickedness.

This is so brazenly wrong. As an example, Leviticus 7 clearly, emphatically states: You can use the fat of an animal in any way but you must not eat it. And if you do eat any fat from an animal offered to the Lord, that person will be cut off from God’s people.[13]

Notice, this wasn’t just something they did once or twice. Verse 14 says that this is the way they treated all the people who came to the Tabernacle – which would include Elkanah’s family.

This was extremely serious. They’re messing with worship. They’re messing with people’s atonement. God would not let this go on indefinitely. We’ll see that next time. But in the meantime, their hypocrisy was giving true faith a bad name in Israel.[14]

When Christian leaders fall into sin, it makes a terrible impact not just on those immediately involved, but on just about everyone who hears about it. The dishonor it brings on Christ. The discouragement and doubt that it brings on others. Christian leaders need to take this seriously.

And so does every Christian. You and I may not have a wide audience, but we’re all priests. If you’re a Christian, the Bible says you are part a royal priesthood.[15] We all must consider how our conduct is influencing the people around us. Your faithfulness or your wickedness will make an impact.

1 Samuel 2:17 – 17 So the servants’ sin was very severe in the presence of the LORD, because the men treated the LORD’s offering with contempt.

The Lord saw all that was happening. Remember what Hannah said in her song: God is a God of knowledge Who weighs our actions. Ultimately, He fiercely judges these fellows because they would not repent. It didn’t matter that they were important priests. If you deny the Lord, He will deny you and you will bear the penalty for your sin.

Now here’s an interesting comparison: In the middle of Second Samuel, David commits a terrible sin. And God will say to him, “David, you have treated Me with contempt.” It’s the same word that describes Eli’s sons. So why wasn’t David judged like Hophni and Phinehas? Repentance. David turned from his sin toward God in confession and repentance. He would still face consequences for what he did – serious and lasting consequences – but God forgave him and cleansed him.

1 Samuel 2:18 – 18 Samuel served in the LORD’s presence—this mere boy was dressed in the linen ephod.

Suddenly the camera pans from this toxic scene to remind us that little Sammy is there, too! We see what’s going on and think, “We gotta get this kid out of there!” What hope does he have to grow in the Lord and become a man of integrity if this is who he’s apprenticing under?

But then we remember the promise of Hannah’s song, that God will guard the steps of His faithful ones. This was a terribly, toxic work environment. And yet, this is where God called Samuel. And though he was surrounded by sin, we see him serving. He’s described not as being influenced by the sons of Eli, but as being in the Lord’s presence.

Maybe you’re in a life situation that has a lot of bad elements. Bad job, bad boss, problematic coworkers, something like that. You don’t always have to stay in that situation. But the thing we need to remember as Christians is that the circumstances are not the deciding factor for us. God’s calling on our lives is the decider. If you feel like Samuel in Shiloh or Daniel in Babylon or Joseph in Egypt, that’s ok – you’re allowed to feel that way. But before you make a change you need to know if God has called you to stay or go. Because you can be Samuel or Daniel or Joseph, who were in terrible life/work situations, and were used for incredible purposes and great spiritual growth.

Remember: We’re the Lord’s servants. Samuel served. He even looks the part. The ephod here was most likely an apron he would wear.[16] It reminds us of how Jesus, on the night before His death, took a towel and tied it around Himself like an apron and washed His disciples feet. And afterward He said He did this as an example for us that we might go and do likewise.[17]

The Christian life is a life of service, not convenience. And one of the things that Samuel’s life shows is that any of us can serve. That doesn’t mean all of us have the strength or health or opportunity to do every kind of service. But all of us are called to serve in the Lord’s presence, before His face, as He sets our lives aside for particular purposes. This term serving “suggests ongoing activity – something ingrained in Samuel’s lifestyle.”[18] And it was ingrained in Hannah’s, too.

1 Samuel 2:19 – 19 Each year his mother made him a little robe and took it to him when she went with her husband to offer the annual sacrifice.

It would’ve been hard to leave your boy year after year. But think of much harder it would’ve been knowing that he was being raised by Eli with Hophni and Phinehas around! But Elkanah and Hannah knew the Lord is trustworthy. They knew He would not fail Samuel.

And notice: they kept coming, even though they’d have to deal with the things Eli’s sons were doing. They didn’t say, “Ok, we’re not going to Tabernacle anymore.” They had Joshua’s mentality: “This is what’s going on, it’s not right, but as for me and my house, we’re going to serve the Lord.”

And when they came each year, Hannah brought a new robe for Samuel. A cloak he would wear over the ephod.[19] It probably felt like a small thing. They couldn’t do all the things they wished they could do for their son. But she could bring a robe. But you know – robes become very significant in Samuel’s story. There are going to be a couple of very pivotal moments which reference the robe he was wearing. I think it’s a nod of grace from the Lord to Hannah. Him using this small, tangible labor for a greater spiritual purpose. The Lord is generous like that. He’s good and kind like that.

1 Samuel 2:20 – 20 Eli would bless Elkanah and his wife: “May the LORD give you children by this woman in place of the one she has given to the LORD.” Then they would go home.

Some part of Eli wants to honor God. Some part of him wants to be used by God. And clearly, God was willing to use him. But, he’s totally compromised. He won’t honor God in his parenting. He won’t do the hard parts of his duty. And so, his story is going to end tragically. It didn’t have to. But spiritual health doesn’t happen on accident. Finishing well doesn’t happen on its own. Christian growth requires obedience. It requires repentance. It requires submission.

1 Samuel 2:21 – 21 The LORD paid attention to Hannah’s need, and she conceived and gave birth to three sons and two daughters. Meanwhile, the boy Samuel grew up in the presence of the LORD.

It’s been said you can’t out-give the Lord. He will never be in debt to anyone. They gave Him a son, He gave them five children back. Notice the words used here: He paid attention to them. He sees your needs. He cares about them. He’s a God of grace and affection.

Not only was the Lord mindful and caring toward Hannah, but toward to Samuel, too. Both are before His face. Both are watched by Him, loved by Him, provided for by Him.

Our goal is to live in the presence of the Lord our God. To commune day-by-day with Him. Whether we’re in a good tent, like Elkanah’s, or a bad tent like in Shiloh. Why? Psalm 130 tells us:

Psalm 130:7 – For there is faithful love with the LORD, and with Him is redemption in abundance.

That is true whether you’re Samuel in Shiloh or David in Jerusalem or Daniel in Babylon or Paul in Philippi or Peter on the Mount of Transfiguration or Noah in the ark or Jonah in the whale.

So what do we do if we find ourselves in a toxic environment? Well, there may be a bunch of things you can and should do on the physical level. What about on the spiritual level? That’s what this text examples for us. In a very bad spiritual situation, Samuel was right where he was called to be.

We need to figure out where we’re called. And if we’re called to a place where we have to rub elbows with toxic or wicked good-for-nothings, we can remember what we’re told in Romans 12:

Romans 12:21 – 21 Do not be conquered by evil, but conquer evil with good.

The good of the Gospel. The good of a life lived in the power of Jesus Christ. The good of faithfulness in action, knowing God can be trusted to do what needs doing. Maybe through us, maybe through someone else. But living as servants of His good, answering His call. They may be wicked while they work, we worship while we work. And if we’re following God’s leading and answer His call, we can rely on the fact that He will guard our steps and we can grow in Him even if the circumstances are bad. Then He can use us for His good.

References
1 https://www.computerweekly.com/feature/Post-Office-Horizon-scandal-explained-everything-you-need-to-know
2 https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1wpp4w14pqo
3 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Post_Office_scandal
4 Dale Ralph Davis   1 Samuel: Looking On The Heart
5 1 Samuel 8:4-5
6 David Toshio Tsumura   The New International Commentary On The Old Testament: The First Book of Samuel
7 Ralph Klein   Word Biblical Commentary, Volume 10: 1 Samuel
8 The NET Bible First Edition Notes
9 1 Samuel 2:29
10 Davis
11 Jeremiah 9:23-24
12 Leviticus 10:14-15
13 Leviticus 7:24-25
14 Robert Bergen   The New American Commentary, Volume 7: 1, 2 Samuel
15 1 Peter 2:9
16 Klein
17 John 13:1-15
18 Bergen
19 Bill Arnold   The NIV Application Commentary: 1 & 2 Samuel

Do Not Bite And Devour One Another

From time to time we take a look at one of the 60 or so “one another” commands in Bible. They’re given to Christians so we can know how to properly relate to each other in the church and so we can be built up, others can be built up, and our church can thrive in the love of God.

Most of these commands are positive. Meaning they give us practical instruction on what we should do toward one another. But there are a handful of negative one another commands as well. Things we should not do to one another. I’d like us to look at one today.

Galatians 5:15 – 15 But if you bite and devour one another, watch out, or you will be consumed by one another.

Don’t bite and devour one another. This can include unkindness, harming or exploiting others.[1] Not getting along. Paul was writing to a church whose love and unity had broken down. Part of that had to do with false teachings, but it was also because many of the people were just no longer walking by the Spirit but were living in the desires of the flesh.[2] Putting self first.

It’s natural for our human hearts to head in this direction. That’s why we need the heart and mind of Christ. But even as born again Christians, we’re reminded that we’re called to kindness and unity and getting along. Some of us are a little more quick to slice with our words or our attitudes. If we indulge that aspect of our sin nature, it’s going to consume us. It’s going to destroy our testimony. It’s going to stifle spiritual growth in our lives. As Paul says, it can even destroy a local church.

So how can I practice obedience to this command? Well, first I need to make it a habit of filtering my attitudes and words through the grace of God. To remember that we’re commanded to – in a proverbial sense – greet one another with a holy kiss, not a huffy bite.

And then Paul gives a practical way for how we avoid devouring one another just above verse 15:

Galatians 5:13-14 – 13 For you were called to be free, brothers and sisters; only don’t use this freedom as an opportunity for the flesh, but serve one another through love. 14 For the whole law is fulfilled in one statement: Love your neighbor as yourself.

As I serve others, love grows in my heart toward them and annoyance or bitterness or resentment is not given opportunity to grow. So, as I read this one another command and want to step toward God in obedience, one thing I can do is keep my thoughts in check and the second is to try to find ways, even very small ways, to serve the brothers and sisters around me. And as we do that we will not be consumed, but we will continue to thrive in God’s plan for us individually and corporately.

References
1 The NET Bible First Edition Notes
2 Galatians 5:16

King Song (1 Samuel 2:1-11)

The right song can really set the tone. Particularly in movies, where the music not only compliments the imagery, but often steers us to how we’re supposed to feel about what we’re watching. Music helps us understand whether the action is scary or silly, whether a character is acting in anxiety or excitement, or if a scene is meant to be pivotal as the soundtrack replays the main theme.

Hans Zimmer is one of the most famous film composers working today, often scoring Christopher Nolan’s movies. He once told a story of how Nolan sent him a letter which contained a short, metaphorical story that had nothing to do with any movie script. Nolan asked Zimmer to take a day, write whatever came to him, and then Nolan would come over and listen.

Hans wrote what he described as a fragile little piece of music. Very personal and tender. After hearing it, Nolan said, “Well, I better make the movie then.” Zimmer asked what is the movie? And Nolan started describing a huge, sweeping space epic. The music would be for Interstellar, and hearing Zimmer’s personal melody, Nolan said, “I know where the heart of the movie is now.”[1]

In 1 Samuel chapter 1, we have a prologue. It sets the stage and tells us where Samuel came from. He is going to be the man God uses to transition Israel from judges to monarchy. But he also establishes how this arrangement will work. That, yes, Israel will have a king, but any king is really just a vice-king under the King of the universe – the Lord of Armies, God Himself.

In chapter 2 we have the Song of Hannah. It’s not only a nice moment of praise and thanksgiving. This song is going to set the tone for the book. It provides the theological heart for the story and foreshadows many of the scenes that lay ahead. By the way – for any classical music lovers out there – scholars categorize this song as a Rondo.[2]

Our author starts the book with a prologue followed by Hannah’s song, and then he ends the book with David’s song and an epilogue. Hannah’s song describes Who God is, what He does, and what He will do. David’s song is about how God has been faithful to do all those things.[3] These are the theological soundtrack for the rest of the book.

The themes Hannah drives home are that God is in charge, He is personally involved in human affairs, and He is interested in you walking with Him through life so that He can lift you up.

1 Samuel 2:1 – 1 Hannah prayed: My heart rejoices in the LORD; my horn is lifted up by the LORD. My mouth boasts over my enemies, because I rejoice in your salvation.

There are many points in the Bible where God’s people pause to sing a song after He has done a work for them. Moses, Miriam, Deborah, David, Habakkuk, and Mary are all examples. In fact Mary’s song in Luke 1 echoes some of the words and themes of Hannah’s song.[4] Both Mary and Hannah understood that not only were they loved and graciously treated by God, but that their lives were part of His ongoing, dramatic work that will one day cover the whole earth.

The same is true of our lives! That’s something to be excited about. Something to sing about. To let our hearts overflow with thankfulness as we sing out the testimony of God’s amazing grace. That we once were lost but now we’re found. That He has done great things and He will do great things.

Hannah rejoiced. Not just because she wouldn’t be called childless anymore. She rejoiced in the LORD. In His salvation. Her relationship with God is what made the difference between chapter 1 and 2. In chapter 1 she said her heart was broken. Now her heart is triumphant! She’s thankful that the Lord opened her womb, of course, but she’s also thankful that the Lord lifted her head.

God is a lifter. Psalm 3 says He is a God Who hears and answers and will lift up your head. When you’re hurt, when you’re overwhelmed, when you’re beaten down, Jesus is the lifter of your head.

Is Hannah being rude back to Penninah in that second to last line? One commentator says the image connotes “sticking out the tongue, and sneering.”[5] I can’t really imagine Hannah doing that. Plus, in a moment she’s going to tell everyone to not boast proudly.

The words she used mean her mouth was open wide to swallow up her enemies.[6] And what is her mouth full of right now? Praise. Thanksgiving. Prayer. Confidence in the Lord. Praise is powerful!

1 Samuel 2:2 – 2 There is no one holy like the LORD. There is no one besides you! And there is no rock like our God.

If you want to know about God, here’s the place to start: His greatness and purity and uniqueness on display. Greater in each of HIs attributes than we can comprehend. How strong is He? Greater than we think. How merciful is He? Greater than we realize. How good is He? How great is His love?

This description of God as Rock reminds us of the parable Jesus told. The wise man built his house, his life, his future, upon the Rock. All other ground is sinking sand. As Deuteronomy 32 says, “Their ‘rock’ is not like our Rock.”[7] And not only is He the solid foundation we can build our lives upon, we remember that He is the rock of our salvation.[8] The Rock of ages, cleft for me.

1 Samuel 2:3 – 3 Do not boast so proudly, or let arrogant words come out of your mouth, for the LORD is a God of knowledge, and actions are weighed by him.

Our God is a God of knowledge. He knows us. He knows the plans He has for us. He knows what we need and what we don’t. He knows how to lead us. He knows the way to go. He knit us together, He sustains our lives, and He wants real relationship with us. So He also evaluates and measures our lives. Are we following? Do our actions line up with what He desires?

Hannah tells us to not be boastful or arrogant. In the coming verses she will list a bunch of things that people naturally lean on or get proud about and she shows how fleeting they are. Meanwhile, if we want to boast, let’s be like Hannah. Let’s boast in the Lord our God.[9] Let’s proclaim His power and accomplishment in our lives and in this world.

1 Samuel 2:4-7 – 4 The bows of the warriors are broken, but the feeble are clothed with strength. 5 Those who are full hire themselves out for food, but those who are starving hunger no more. The woman who is childless gives birth to seven, but the woman with many sons pines away. 6 The LORD brings death and gives life; he sends some down to Sheol, and he raises others up. 7 The LORD brings poverty and gives wealth; he humbles and he exalts.

Hannah lists for us seven contrasts and how the Lord reverses the fortunes of people in these different groups according to His purposes. Strong and weak, full and hungry, barren and fertile, dead and alive, sick and well, poor and rich, humble and exalted. God is in charge over all.

In some of these examples, Hannah actually foreshadows some of what we’ll see in the pages ahead. People of strength and wealth and position brought down while others who are oppressed or weak or humble are exalted.

Now, it would be a mistake if we think God does these reversals just to show how strong He is. It’s not just about flexing His sovereignty. Who does God exalt and who does He bring low? Hannah will tell us in verse 9. Psalms, Proverbs, James, and Peter all explain, “God resists the proud but gives grace to the humble.” It’s not random or arbitrary. Remember – God wants to lift your head.

He wants to make us alive. Here’s what He wants, as written in Isaiah 55: “Come, everyone who is thirsty. Pay attention and come to Me, listen so that you will live![10] That’s what He wants. That we will receive His hesed love and live. He’s not toying with us. He’s telling us how to receive life. But when a person rejects God’s way and God’s revelation and commands, the result is death.

1 Samuel 2:8 – 8 He raises the poor from the dust and lifts the needy from the trash heap. He seats them with noblemen and gives them a throne of honor. For the foundations of the earth are the LORD’s; he has set the world on them.

The poor and needy are shown in the worst possible position. The trash heap means a dung hill.[11] That was where they lived. Where they slept at night. What has the Lord done for them? He gives them a throne of honor. He seats them among princes.[12]

We were the beggars, now we’re royalty. Not because of our own power or our own loveliness, but because of God’s great love for us. His salvation is not just a rags to riches story, it’s an excrement to eternity story. “Gives them a throne of honor” is also translated “inherit the throne of glory.”[13]

Oh the grace of God! That we, who are nothing, who began life as enemies of God, lost in sin, citizens of the kingdom of darkness, who bring nothing to the table but guilt and failure, would be given a place and a part in the Kingdom of Jesus. Not just to dwell there, but to reign with Him![14]

That’s our future. Meanwhile, we can be confident that God will not allow this world to fall apart before His plan is done. There are people out there today saying the world is going to end. That climate change or atomic war or some other threat will destroy us all. Many young people are convinced that there is no future for this world. Here’s what God says is Psalm 75:

Psalm 75:3 – 3 When the earth and all its inhabitants shake, I am the one who steadies its pillars.

Yes, the world trembles. Our God is a Rock. Stable, reliable, unshakable. A firm foundation. If you build your life on Him, then you will be safe in the storm. His plan cannot fail.

1 Samuel 2:9 – 9 He guards the steps of his faithful ones, but the wicked perish in darkness, for a person does not prevail by his own strength.

We talked about this a few weeks ago, but remember: The faithful ones are simply those who receive God’s love. They believe and trust God and walk with Him. Does that describe you?

In the closing song of 2 Samuel, sung by David, David says that he was faithful. That he let God’s ordinances guide his steps. Of course, we look at that and say, “What about Bathsheba? What about your ungodly census? What about the mistakes you made?” David did make mistakes. But even still, God was with him and God was guarding David’s steps – guarding his life. God’s grace working powerfully even when David fell into faithlessness for a time.

No believer’s life is perfect. But God keeps watch and God pours out His grace and God provides His strength as we walk with Him. You see, we can’t accomplish the Christian life in our own strength. That’s not how we prevail. It’s not by our might or by our power, but by God’s Spirit.

As we allow God’s ordinances to guide our steps, the Lord guards our steps. Though a believer may fall, Psalm 37 (another David song) promises that we will not be overwhelmed, because the LORD supports us with His hand.[15] Our part is to put God’s instructions in our hearts so that our step do not falter. And, when we do fail, to turn in repentance so God can restore us. That’s the difference between Saul and David. Not perfection, but faithfulness.

1 Samuel 2:10 – 10 Those who oppose the LORD will be shattered; he will thunder in the heavens against them. The LORD will judge the ends of the earth. He will give power to his king; he will lift up the horn of his anointed.

As usual, the Bible sets before us life and death. If you will receive God’s love by faith, He gives you life. If you oppose the Lord, you will be shattered. It’s the same verb Hannah used up in verse 4 saying the bows would be broken. Not just broken, but crushed into tiny pieces.[16]

God uses this image of the broken bow multiple times. Ezekiel prophesied that Gog’s bow would be broken. Jeremiah prophesied that Elam’s bow would be shattered. But this promise is not just for far off people who we don’t know. All who oppose Him will be shattered. It even applied to Israel. Sadly, by the time of Hosea, the Israelites had opposed the Lord for so long, He finally said, “I’m going to break the bow of Israel.”[17] And it happened.

But look at those last two lines. Hannah ends her song with a crescendo. She identifies two figures who had yet to arrive. The king and the anointed one. In Hebrew, the melek and the messiah. Hannah moves from praise to prophecy. Israel had not yet demanded a king, yet Hannah declares that one was coming and that God would give him power. This, by itself is a great work of grace. Because when Israel demanded a king they were, in one sense, divorcing themselves from God’s rule over their nation. And yet, the Lord would not abandon them. He gave a king. He empowered the king. And when that king failed, God provided a better king.

But more than a king would be needed. God’s people and all people would need a Messiah. The Anointed One, the Christ. A deliverer. And in this book we will see how David on his very best day was only a dim shadow of what the Son of David is yesterday, today, and forever.

1 Samuel 2:11 – 11 Elkanah went home to Ramah, but the boy served the LORD in the presence of the priest Eli.

When Christopher Nolan sent the letter to Hans Zimmer, it contained a short little metaphor about what it meant to be a father. And Zimmer’s piece, he says, was based on his own love for his son.

This great song, this great story, is about a loving God, God the Father, showing faithfulness and love to His children, even when they turn their backs on Him.

So now, the stage is set. The melody has played. Now we watch it all unfold and see the power of God, the graciousness of God, the patience of God, compared to the feebleness of man, the failure of man, the inconsistency of man. But at the same time, we’ll see the story of God using human beings for His good work. Empowering people to be a meaningful part of what He’s promised. It’s an amazing story – one that continues through the lives of believers today.

As we close, I’d like us to return briefly to those reversal verses, verses 4 through 7, where we see God doing these specific things. We might ask, “Does He really do this still today?” Does He clothe us in strength? Then we remember how Ephesians 6 invites us to clothe ourselves in the armor of God so that we will be strong, able to stand against every scheme of the devil.

Does God still fill the hungry? Jesus said that those who hunger and thirst for righteousness will be filled. That those who come to Jesus, the Bread of Life, will never be hungry.

Does He give children to the childless? Whether you have been blessed with physical children or not, God says that in the Church we receive a hundred-fold family. Brothers, sisters, mothers, and children.[18]

Does He make us rich? Paul says in Ephesians 3 we have been given incalculable riches in Christ.

The God of the Bible is a God of faithful, generous activity toward those who will be faithful to Him. Those who trust Him and walk according to His ways. Those are the people who are loved and lifted by the power of God, Who will never fail.

References
1 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q7DuMlJHHC0
2 David Toshio Tsumura   The New International Commentary On The Old Testament: The First Book of Samuel
3 Bill Arnold   The NIV Application Commentary: 1 & 2 Samuel
4 Ronald Youngblood   The Expositor’s Bible Commentary, Volume 3: Deuteronomy, Joshua, Judges, Ruth, 1&2 Samuel
5 Ralph Klein   Word Biblical Commentary, Volume 10: 1 Samuel
6 P. Kyle McCarter   1 Samuel: A New Translation With Introduction And Commentary
7 Deuteronomy 32:31
8 2 Samuel 22:47
9 2 Corinthians 10:17
10 Isaiah 55:1-3
11 Klein, Tsumura
12 Robert Alter   The David Story
13 See KJV, AMP, LES
14 2 Timothy 2:12
15 Psalm 37:23-24
16 Alter
17 Hosea 1:5
18 Mark 10:29

The Son In The Stone (Mark 12:1-12)

Don’t shoot the messenger! That phrase (in one form or another) has roots all the way back in 400 B.C.[1] Historically, people don’t usually take the advice. It’s rough business being a messenger bringing unwanted news. But sometimes even good news leads to the death of the messenger.

In the early 13th century, the Khwarazmian Empire was a powerful kingdom spanning territory in what is now Iran, Afghanistan, and Central Asia.

A ruler from a neighboring kingdom wanted to establish peaceful trade with them. And so, the neighbor king sent a caravan of merchants with rich goods, hoping to establish a partnership. But the merchants were labeled as spies. Their goods were taken and the whole caravan was executed.

Hearing of this injustice, the neighbor king sent diplomats to try to resolve the tension. He wanted the Shah to make things right, but was still willing to live at peace, despite what they had done.

The Shah took the junior diplomats and shaved their beards, which were symbols of masculinity in their kingdom. Then he sent them back with them the severed head of the senior diplomat.[2]

Unfortunately for the Shah, the neighboring ruler he was offending was Genghis Khan. His response was to not send an envoy, but an army. Within two years, the Khwarazmian Empire was obliterated. Millions were dead. And the governor who originally carried out the killing of the merchants was caught and had molten metal poured into his mouth, eyes, and ears. They had killed the messengers, so Genghis made sure the whole world got the message.

All this after a mighty king had wanted to extend peace and prosperity to a neighbor!

For years Jesus shared the message of the Kingdom. It was good news. But the leaders of Israel rejected the message and the Messenger. Now they were conspiring how they could slay Him.

Jesus wanted everyone in Israel and everyone after to understand exactly what was going on. And so, just days before His crucifixion, He told a vivid story of wicked fools who killed the messengers.

Mark 12:1 – 1 He began to speak to them in parables: “A man planted a vineyard, put a fence around it, dug out a pit for a winepress, and built a watchtower. Then he leased it to tenant farmers and went away.

It’s important to identify what different elements symbolize in parables. We need to be careful not to be overly specific with every single thing we see. Usually parables are meant to deliver a distilled spiritual truth. So, for example, we shouldn’t find some allegorical meaning for the “digging” of the winepress.

But we can identify several key figures in this story. The tenant farmers will be identified as the unbelieving leaders of Israel – specifically those contending against Jesus right then in the temple, but also extending to all the rebellious leaders of the nation throughout her history.

The vineyard is Israel. God used this illustration many times in the Old Testament. Psalm 80, Isaiah 27, Jeremiah 2, Ezekiel 19, Hosea 10. Those listening would understand this connection. Imagine if I started telling us a story where a bald eagle flies over a field full of amber waves of grain.

That means that the land owner refers to God. You see, in Isaiah 5 there is a song. A tender love song about how God planted a vineyard – Israel. How He dug a winepress there and built a tower in it and a hedge around it. Jesus is quoting from this song.[3] And the Jews would’ve known that this love song is a sad one. It’s about the failure of the vineyard and the judgment that followed.

Look at all this landowner did. He didn’t just plant a vine or two. This is a major undertaking. A great investment of time and effort and wealth to create this vineyard.

The fence would’ve been made of unmortared stones. Rock after rock carried and placed. The owner installed equipment and facilities necessary not just to grow plants, but to generate products like wine for use and sale. The tower was not only a lookout post, but it would also be a place they could store the crop[4] and it would provide a place for the people working the vineyard to live in.[5]

We’re given the impression that the land owner does it all himself. He set this vineyard up for protection, for production, for preservation, and to give a place to those who wanted to partner with him. He opens the vineyard up to lease to others who want to work there and he supplies all they need for a profitable, long-term partnership.

Mark 12:2 – 2 At harvest time he sent a servant to the farmers to collect some of the fruit of the vineyard from them.

It would usually take a vineyard 4 or 5 years to produce at commercial levels.[6] But the landowner is patient. As we continue through the story, notice the patience of God. He’s almost too patient!

The landowner sending this servant to collect was very normal. In fact, that was the prevailing way things were done at the time.[7] A portion of the crop would be sent back to the owner as rent.

But the rest of the fruit was for the farmers. Theirs for eating and enjoyment and enrichment. The land owner was happy to have them benefit from his hard work and his great wealth.

He sent his servant to collect different types of wine, including as one scholar notes, “a cheap wine designated for the slaves to the state.”[8]  So, the owner isn’t just hoarding the proceeds totally for himself – even though it all belongs to him! But he’s then taking from his profits to bless others. That’s the kind of Master God is. Full of patience. Full of generosity. Full of care and kindness. Inviting us to be a part of His incredible, life-changing work.

Mark 12:3-5 – 3 But they took him, beat him, and sent him away empty-handed. 4 Again he sent another servant to them, and they hit him on the head and treated him shamefully. 5 Then he sent another, and they killed that one. He also sent many others; some they beat, and others they killed.

God said this in Jeremiah 7:

Jeremiah 7:25 – 25 Since the day your ancestors came out of the land of Egypt until today, I have sent all my servants the prophets to you time and time again.

That’s who the servants are in this parable. But God’s people wouldn’t listen. As Stephen said in his famous sermon, “Which of the prophets did your ancestors not persecute?”[9]

The farmers had so much. They could’ve had a vibrant life of purpose and provision and participation in this great landowner’s estate. Instead, they produced only rebellion and violence.

In Hosea 10, God says, “Israel is a lush vine; it yields fruit for itself. The more his fruit increased, the more he increased the altars.”

Despite the evil things these famers were doing, the master is still patient. Did you notice? “He also sent many others.” Even though how wicked the farmers were. When it says they beat some, the term is sometimes used when speaking of literally flaying off someone’s skin.[10]

Why would God allow it? Why not just bring the hammer down after the first rebellion? In other words: Why was God so patient and merciful to these men who deserved death?

Because the Lord is gracious and compassionate. Slow to anger and abounding in hesed love.[11]

Friends, we may not have killed any prophets, but our sins deserve death, too. It is through the Lord’s mercies that we are not consumed.[12] We were at war with God, hostile against Him, and unwilling to submit.[13] But Jesus extends us mercy. He extends us grace because He loves us. That’s why He is patient. He renews His mercy every morning. Because He’s not willing that any should perish, but that all would come to repentance.

And that means, at times, He allows His servants to suffer. Because how can the wicked be saved unless they repent? And how can they repent unless they believe? And how can they believe without hearing about him? And how can they hear without a preacher? And how can they preach unless they are sent?[14]

We are the messengers that carry the message. It demands boldness and fearlessness and selflessness, putting the call above our own desires, understanding that the world may hate and reject us the way Christ was hated and rejected, but carrying the message wherever we’re sent.

Mark 12:6 – 6 He still had one to send, a beloved son. Finally he sent him to them, saying, ‘They will respect my son.’

God is not naive. He knew exactly what would happen when He sent His Son to earth. But He is hopeful. He wants people to repent and reconcile. To lay their weapons down in surrender. This group of farmers already deserved death. But the Master is merciful.

Mark 12:7-8 – 7 But those tenant farmers said to one another, ‘This is the heir. Come, let’s kill him, and the inheritance will be ours.’ 8 So they seized him, killed him, and threw him out of the vineyard.

This is absolute folly. Maybe these guys convinced themselves that they had killed all the servants and that, hopefully the owner was dead, too, so if they kill the son, there’s no one left.[15]

The point here is that the tenant farmers are being presented as wicked and stupid to an insane degree.[16] Jesus does so to highlight how insane it is to reject God’s compassionate and generous offer of peace. “Come to Me,” He says, “And I will give you rest. I will give you peace. I will give you eternal life. I will forgive you and cleanse you and empower you and make you a new creation.”

Instead, many people reject the Son. They dishonor and insult the Lord of glory. In the parable, the farmers murder the son and desecrate his corpse, denying him even a proper burial. This was the ultimate insult in the ancient world.[17] But the son was the final offer of peace from the master.

Mark 12:9 – 9 What then will the owner, of the vineyard do? He will come and kill the farmers and give the vineyard to others.

For all their previous ability to resist the servants, once the owner comes, there’s not even any record of resistance. When he arrives, the only result is death. There’s no fight, only judgment.

Who are the others? You and me! Paul told the Jews that Jesus is Messiah. When they resisted and blasphemed, Paul said, “Your blood is on your own heads! From now on I will go to the Gentiles.”[18]

To close out His message, Jesus quickly pivots to a second metaphor in verses 10 and 11.

Mark 12:10-11 – 10 Haven’t you read this Scripture: The stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone. 11 This came about from the Lord and is wonderful in our eyes?”

Jesus ties His parable of wicked farmers killing the son to this Scripture about the builders rejecting the cornerstone. The Son is the stone. Not only had they read it, this was one of the Psalms they all sang every year at Passover – the feast they’re celebrate that very week. For centuries they had been repeating these words. Now here’s Jesus saying, “You’re the rejecters and I am the cornerstone.”

This was controversial, not only because it condemns the leaders, but Jews thought that the stone being rejected was the nation of Israel and that the builders were the other nations of the world.[19]

But now Jesus reveals that He is the cornerstone. Which means that He is the new temple.[20] It is a broadside against the Levitical system, which was coming to an end. The veil would be torn so that all of us could have access to the Father and be blessed by His generosity and grace.

How did the farmers/builders/religious leaders feel about it?

Mark 12:12 – 12 They were looking for a way to arrest him but feared the crowd because they knew he had spoken this parable against them. So they left him and went away.

Ah, so they did understand on one level. And here they live out the very parable they’re angry about. They go out to conspire how to kill the Son. I wonder if the irony was lost on them.

When Genghis Khan swept through the Khwarazmian Empire, there were cities who surrendered. Sadly, Genghis’ son was nothing like the Son of God. One city surrendered and were promised mercy. When they opened the gates, the people were slaughtered. One ancient historian says, “It was a memorable day for weeping and wailing.” 700,000 people died that day.[21])

When we surrender to the Son of God, He not only spares our lives, He ransoms our lives. He brings us into His Kingdom as citizens and partners. He frees us. He equips us. He assigns us. He sends us. He grows harvest after harvest in our lives. He becomes the cornerstone of our lives, our families, our communities. Name another King like this!

References
1 David Frank   The Classical Origins And Modern Expressions Of “Don’t Shoot The Messenger”  Cambridge University Press
2 https://bigthinkmedia.substack.com/p/the-insult-that-sparked-genghis-khan
3 David Garland   The NIV Application Commentary: Mark
4 John Walvoord and Roy Zuck   The Bible Knowledge Commentary: An Exposition of the Scriptures
5 Craig Keener The IVP Bible Background Commentary: New Testament (Second Edition)
6 R.T. France   The Gospel Of Mark
7 Walter Wessel   The Expositor’s Bible Commentary, Volume 8: Matthew, Mark, Luke
8 William Lane   The Gospel Of Mark
9 Acts 7:52
10 Robert Utley   The Gospel According To Peter: Mark And I & II Peter
11 Psalm 103:8
12 Lamentations 3:22-23
13 Romans 8:7
14 Romans 10:14-15
15 BKC
16 Keener
17 James Brooks   The New American Commentary, Volume 23: Mark
18 Acts 18:5-6
19 Brooks
20 Ben Witherington   The Gospel Of Mark: A Socio-Rhetorical Commentary
21 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Merv_(1221

Bye, Bye Baby (1 Samuel 1:19-28)

Hollywood loves to fawn over method actors. It’s when an actor fully takes on the behavior and mentality of a character they’ve been cast to play until the production has finished. Even when the cameras aren’t rolling, they will demand people refer to them by the character’s name. They will use the character’s voice. They will act not as themselves, but as the part they’re playing.

Daniel Day-Lewis is notorious for method acting. On Gangs Of New York he developed pneumonia because he wouldn’t wear modern clothing for warmth between takes.[1] On The Crucible, he refused to bathe.[2] On Last Of The Mohicans he wouldn’t eat anything he didn’t hunt himself.

But it was his 1989 role on stage as Hamlet that stands out the most. One night, after Act 1, Scene 5, Day-Lewis walked off stage and collapsed in sorrow and exhaustion and refused to go back out. He claimed he hallucinated the ghost of his father and had been dialoguing with him for weeks.

Why does he keep method acting? He says, “I most enjoy the loss of self.”[3] I would argue his antics are the absolute glorification of self.

Why talk about method acting? Well, when reading this text I was thinking about a person fully devoting themselves to a role. You see, Hannah had gone to the Lord and poured out her heart. She recognizes God as the the King of the universe, the Director of life. And then she describes herself as the Lord’s servant. Not as an aristocrat’s wife. But as a trusting maidservant, ready to be directed and asking Her Master to give her an additional role as mother to a son.

She promised that, if she got the role, she would totally dedicate herself. That she would willingly, joyfully, return this boy to the Lord and that he would live all his days as a Nazarite in God’s service.

Today she gets the part. We watch the lengths she goes to performing this role. Never flinching. Carrying out her devotion to the Lord, no matter what it required. She lived the part God gave her.

1 Samuel 1:19 – 19 The next morning Elkanah and Hannah got up early to worship before the LORD. Afterward, they returned home to Ramah. Then Elkanah was intimate with his wife Hannah, and the LORD remembered her.

This family wasn’t perfect, but this is a faithful and Godly family. Every year they came to Shiloh to worship God. While there, they’re up early to participate in the daily morning sacrifice.[4] That wasn’t specifically required of regular people. Yet here they are, together in worship.

In fact, our text begins and ends with worship. They lived life as worshippers. Not just in the ritualistic sense. Theirs was a lifestyle of worship in their choices, their activities, their relationships, and, yes, their schedule. It was part of the regular family calendar.

“[They] got up early to worship the LORD.” Look at chapter 1 and note how many times you can see that name in all caps. It’s the name Yahweh. 12 times in 10 verses today. He is the focus. He was the focus of Hannah’s life and Elkanah’s life. In their minds, on their lips, directing their activities.

The name Yahweh is interesting to study. We’re not sure how it’s pronounced. Scholars believe in Moses’ day the Name would’ve been four syllables, not two.[5] The name “connotes God’s nearness, His concern for man, and the revelation of His redemptive covenant.”[6] That Name, that glorious and fearful Name, is all over these verses. His house. His presence. His power. His kindness.

We’re told He remembered Hannah. It’s not that He forgot – the Lord can never forget you. In the Old Testament, to “remember” means to act on their behalf.[7] How did the Lord act for Hannah? First of all, He went home with them! They go home and there is the Lord right inside their tent with the family. He acts in their regular life experience.

God doesn’t only want involvement with you during prayer times or during Sunday mornings. His overt desire is to involve Himself in every aspect and phase of your life. He wants to nourish and bless your whole life, from the most intimate aspects all the way out to your ultimate legacy.

When Moses asked God about His name in Exodus 3, His response was essentially, “I Am present is what I Am.”[8] The LORD is present with you, today. Remembering you and acting on your behalf.

1 Samuel 1:20 – 20 After some time, Hannah conceived and gave birth to a son. She named him Samuel, because she said, “I requested him from the LORD.”

Samuel is a normal name to us, but scholars say that Hannah used wordplay here – maybe even an acrostic.[9] The name can mean “He who is from God,”[10] “Offspring of God,”[11] “Asked from God.”[12]

Hannah knows this baby is not a coincidence. He is living, breathing proof that God remembers His people. He remembered Noah in the flood. He remembered Abraham when He destroyed Sodom. He remembered Rachel and gave her Joseph.[13] He remembers His covenant forever.[14]

1 Samuel 1:21-22 – 21 When Elkanah and all his household went up to make the annual sacrifice and his vow offering to the LORD, 22 Hannah did not go and explained to her husband, “After the child is weaned, I’ll take him to appear in the LORD’s presence and to stay there permanently.”

After Daniel Day-Lewis left the stage that night playing Hamlet, he quit the show. He broke his contract. Despite the responsibilities he had to the production, despite his agreement with the producers, he was done. In fact, he never returned to acting on the stage again.

What about Hannah? The boy she asked for had been born. Is she reneging on her promise? The answer is no. There’s no hesitation or procrastination here. A little one needed to be nursed and delivering an infant to Old Eli was not a wise or realistic course of action.

And it wasn’t a problem that she didn’t attend the annual festival. Under the Mosaic Law, women were not commanded to go each year – men were.[15]

So, she would wait. But already we can sense just how commited she would have to be. Who here would give up their child? Hannah, of course, loves her boy. Where we read “child” she used a tender term. Typically it would be used of young men in the height of their powers, but mothers would also use it of baby boys.[16] Something like, “the Little Man,” or, “the Big Guy.”

We can imagine the love and affection radiating from Hannah as she holds Samuel in her arms. But she said, “I’m going to take him to appear before the Lord’s face.”[17] That’s what she literally said.

I cannot imagine what her mother’s heart felt at the prospect of handing over her precious baby boy after only a few short years. But it is clear, her servant’s heart was full of faith, knowing that while Samuel was lit by the shining face of Yahweh, he would be safe and he would be loved.

1 Samuel 1:23 – 23 Her husband, Elkanah, replied, “Do what you think is best, and stay here until you’ve weaned him. May the LORD confirm your word.” So Hannah stayed there and nursed her son until she weaned him.

Mothers of the time typically weaned at three years of age.[18] Not a long time to have a child in the house. But long enough to be tempting to forget a vow made to the Lord. Notice – Elkanah doesn’t scold his wife or shoot her down. He’s starting to live with her in understanding. But as he gives her personal encouragement, he also encourages her to be sure to keep her word to the Lord.

After the Hamlet debacle, Daniel Day-Lewis’ doctor told him to quit, so he did.[19] Elkanah takes their vows seriously. Under the Law, when a husband heard a wife make a vow, if he didn’t veto it, he was responsible for it, too.[20] But we see here he trusts his wife. They’re partners together in this vow to the Lord. But he does a great job here leading his family spiritually, with grace and integrity.

Manuscripts are divided here. Some say, “May the Lord establish your word,” meaning Hannah. Others, “May the Lord establish His word.” Each gives us something to think about. We have duties and responsibilities to the Lord. We’ve promised our lives to Him. At the same time, He has a word for our lives. A plan and a will for us. Promises that He keeps every day as we walk with Him.

In other words, we don’t just interact with God because we want things from Him. We recognize He wants things for us and from us. A life for us to live according to His direction.

1 Samuel 1:24-25 – 24 When she had weaned him, she took him with her to Shiloh, as well as a three-year-old bull, half a bushel of flour, and a clay jar of wine. Though the boy was still young, she took him to the LORD’s house at Shiloh. 25 Then they slaughtered the bull and brought the boy to Eli.

This family was clearly sincere in their worship. We’ve seen they scheduled their worship. But here, we see how their worship was sacrificial. To offer your child to the Lord’s service is something beyond costly. But then, on top of that, they gave a lavish gift to the Lord’s house.

Where it says there a three-year-old bull, many scholars believe it actually means three bulls.[21] And the amount of flour and wine is also three times the normal amount.[22] Why would they do this? Well, clearly this family believes in worshiping God with heart and word and calendar and wallet.

Now listen: If you don’t give Christ your heart, He doesn’t want your bulls. With that said, if you’re a Christian, you are commanded to give of your resources to God’s work. The New Testament does not tell you the amount you have to give or where you have to give. Instead, it gives the principles that our giving should be regular, cheerful, and sacrificial.[23] All three are exampled by this family.

Let me pause to say that we are so thankful to anyone who has ever or continues to donate to our church. That’s how we’re able to do the things we do. And for those of you who give to other ministries, we are thankful for you, too. It’s between you and the Lord how you contribute to His work on the earth. On our side, we try hard to never coerce people to give. Opportunity, yes, but never pressure. Because we’re commanded to not compel people or strong-arm them or shake people down. That’s why we don’t pass a bag. That’s why we don’t put up thermometers.

But back to our text – I believe there’s another reason why they brought a triple sacrifice to the Tabernacle that day. It’s likely Samuel was three years old, meaning Hannah had sat out of the family trip three times. And now, here they are, giving a triple offering. Why? Because this family took their vows, their devotion, their worship seriously. They didn’t just show up when they felt like it or tack on worship when it was convenient. They oriented their lives around worshiping God.

You know, Daniel Day-Lewis speaks about how much he loves the process of “loss of self.” But it’s always at the cost of others. While filming My Left Foot, he refused to leave his wheelchair and made crew members lift him over equipment to move him from place to place. He also demanded they spoon-feed him, as his character was unable to move his arms.[24] People talk about his dedication and sacrifice, but it’s those around him who have to foot the bill. Not Elkanah and Hannah. They have a sincere, steadfast, sacrificial worship that focuses not on self, but on Yahweh.

1 Samuel 1:26-28 – 26 “Please, my lord,” she said, “as surely as you live, my lord, I am the woman who stood here beside you praying to the LORD. 27 I prayed for this boy, and since the LORD gave me what I asked him for, 28 I now give the boy to the LORD. For as long as he lives, he is given to the LORD.” Then he worshiped the LORD there.

This must’ve been a hard day for Hannah, but when it came she didn’t flinch. She gave testimony of God’s faithfulness. And notice, even when she references herself, it’s not about her righteousness or her greatness. It’s all about the Lord. She uses Yahweh’s name four times in three sentences. A simple testimony, but so powerful. An Old Testament equivalent of “I was blind but now I see.”

Daniel Day-Lewis is often asked about his Hamlet crash out. In one interview he said, “I lived with the part for eight months…I was beyond caring.”[25] So he quit and never looked back. He had 8 months of commitment and no more.

Hannah was dedicated to her role as servant. She was still dedicated in her role as mother. Both were anchored in worship. Both were the true loss of self for the glory of God. Full commitment.

Hannah had been despondent, heart-broken, not eating. Now, she’s healthy, she’s full of deep contentment and joy, difficult though this part to play was. But Samuel would not only be a relief to Hannah. We’ll find out soon enough that the whole nation needed relief from the terrible wickedness of Eli’s two sons. And what has God done? He has orchestrated events so that Samuel is brought to the Tabernacle. Here’s relief, in toddler form. It would take a few years, but Samuel would grow, and God would be with him. And eventually, by God’s power and providence, the prdators Hophni and Phineas would be replaced by the prophet Samuel. God remembered Hannah, but He remembered Israel’s need, too. And used the lives of His people to play these parts not just for entertainment, but for edification.

God remembers you. He has a plan for your life. Do you know what it is? Are you walking in it? Is your life anchored in the worship of God? Not just something that you do if it’s easy or convenient, but like the pattern seen here? Worship that is sincere, scheduled, sacrificial, steadfast and selfless?

We are called to act as God’s servants. Not that we’re faking or pretending, but a faith in action. Enacting God’s stage directions in our lives. We called to leave our old character behind and take on the character of Jesus – dying to self and conforming to His image.

To do so requires devotion. To love the God Who loves us with all our heart, all our souls, all our minds, all our strength. In that sense, to never break character, but to be truly transformed into the character of Jesus and to live out the parts He has given us to play not for the fleeting glory of the stage, but the eternal glory of our Savior.

References
1 https://www.slashfilm.com/818565/going-method-for-gangs-of-new-york-made-daniel-day-lewis-sick/
2 https://www.joblo.com/daniel-day-lewis-how-method-acting-was-used/
3 https://www.beyondcriticism.com/20038/from-the-archives-what-drove-daniel-day-lewis
4 Robert Bergen   The New American Commentary, Volume 7: 1, 2 Samuel
5 Theological Wordbook Of The Old Testament
6 TWOT
7 CSB Study Bible Notes
8 TWOT
9 Bergen, CSB Study Bible Notes
10 P. Kyle McCarter   1 Samuel: A New Translation With Introduction And Commentary
11 David Toshio Tsumura   The New International Commentary On The Old Testament: The First Book of Samuel
12 Bergen
13 John Woodhouse   1 Samuel: Looking For A Leader
14 Psalm 111:5
15 James Smith   The Books Of History
16 Robert Alter   The David Story
17 Alter
18 Dale Ralph Davis   1 Samuel: Looking On The Heart,   Ralph Klein   Word Biblical Commentary, Volume 10: 1 Samuel
19 https://www.nytimes.com/1989/09/16/theater/london-hamlet-loses-star-to-illness.html
20 Numbers 30:10-15
21 Davis, Tsumura
22 John Walton, Victor Matthews, & Mark Chavalas   The IVP Bible Background Commentary: Old Testament
23 1 Corinthians 16:2, 2 Corinthians 9:6-7, Mark 12:42-44, 2 Corinthians 8:2-3
24 https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1579473/Daniel-Day-Lewis-aims-for-perfection.html
25 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0SFvaootAL8

Authority Politics (Mark 11:27-33)

“Everyone has a plan until they get hit.” That is probably Mike Tyson’s most famous quote in a long catalog of memorable maxims. Over the years, people have embellished the line to make it more hard-hitting. Usually you hear it repeated as, “Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the face.” But Iron Mike confirmed the simpler version when asked about it back in 2012.[1]

The quote has taken on a life of its own, but Tyson first said it back in 1987 before fighting Tyrell Biggs for the undisputed heavyweight championship. It was billed as “The Clash For The Crown.” When they entered the ring, Biggs was undefeated. He was also 12 pounds heavier than Tyson.[2] People had been asking Mike what he was going to do. “[Biggs] is going to move, he’s going to dance. He’s going to do this, do that,” “He’s going to give you a lot of lateral movement.”

But Iron Mike wasn’t worried. He said, “Most talkers, they can’t handle it.”[3] And he was right. Biggs threw a lot of sharp jabs, but after seven rounds, “Tyson hit Biggs with a left hook that sent Biggs to canvas and almost out of the ring.” He was on his feet before the 10 count, but it was clear who was going to win this fight.

On the Tuesday and Wednesday before His crucifixion,[4] Jesus contended in a multi-round fight with some heavy hitters who wanted the crown for themselves. From Mark 11:27 to 12:37, there are five conflict episodes stacked together. And Jesus’ opponents weren’t just out for a belt or bragging rights. They wanted to knock Jesus out. They wanted Him discredited and destroyed. They had quite a strategy to take Him down…or at least they thought they did. We’ll find that every time they try to land a blow on Jesus, every time they throw a jab, Jesus delivers a spiritual left hook sending them out of the ring to regroup, re-conspire, and try again round after round.

Mark 11:27-28 – 27 They came again to Jerusalem. As he was walking in the temple, the chief priests, the scribes, and the elders came 28 and asked him, “By what authority are you doing these things? Who gave you this authority to do these things?”

The chief priests, the scribes, and the elders are the three groups that made up the Sanhedrin.[5] This probably wouldn’t have been the whole 72 of them, but a delegation that represented the whole. They came to challenge the Lord and try to put Him in His place.

His place, in their minds, was to be under their authority. That’s what they cared about. Notice, when they came to ask Him about why He stopped the commerce in the Temple and flipped all the tables, they don’t bother arguing about right and wrong, lawful or unlawful. They didn’t really care about that. They didn’t care about the prophecies of Isaiah or Jeremiah or the Father’s intention to bring Gentiles into the family of God. They cared about authority. They’re not concerned with theological integrity, but with power and control.

Power can be a terribly addictive narcotic. It can cloud the mind and warp a person’s attitude and interactions with others. These guys were obsessed with power and convinced that they were the most important, most consequential people in the nation. The irony is their nation was occupied and oppressed by a much more powerful nation – Rome. But these religious leaders were constantly on a power trip.

Christians, sometimes we get some measure of power. Maybe at work. Maybe in our community. We need to remember all that Jesus has been teaching His disciples in Mark about Kingdom power and Kingdom greatness. We do well to remember that we are called to humility, to deference, and to not thinking more highly of ourselves than we ought. As Paul bluntly puts it in Galatians 6: “You are not that important.”

Now, if Jesus was merely a man, this would’ve been an incredibly intimidating situation. The Sanhedrin is the nation’s executive, legislative, and judicial government rolled into one.[6] These are heavy hitters, determined to focus all their attention and ability on silencing this Teacher from Nazareth. But Jesus was not just a man. He’s the GodMan. He is not intimidated. In fact, He saw them coming and met them head on.

This situation is a direct fulfillment of what Jesus predicted back in Mark 8:31. He said that the elders, the chief priests, and the scribes would reject Him. And here is Jesus, coming again into the ring to fight so we could be redeemed. We’ll watch Him do it round after round, going the distance till the work was done.

Here’s what’s interesting: They want to know what authority Jesus had to do and say the things He was doing and saying. In other words, “What are Your credentials? What gives You the right, the status, to dare to disagree with us?”

It’s true, Jesus had no “formal” training. He had no pedigree, humanly speaking. But here’s the stark truth: Everyone knew Jesus had more authority than the scribes, the pharisees, the elders, the chief priests. What did Mark say all the way back in chapter 1? The people “were astonished because Jesus was teaching them as one who had authority, and not like the scribes.”[7] Even as they debate here, it’s clear that Jesus holds all the true power.

Mark 11:29 – 29 Jesus said to them, “I will ask you one question; then answer me, and I will tell you by what authority I do these things.

Jesus demonstrates total authority, right here. See, they came and said, “We want to point out that we never gave you any authority.” But Jesus doesn’t need it, so their complaint makes no impact. The punch doesn’t land. I’m guessing some people listening in the crowd rolled their eyes.

Now, the question is: Why not just say “Because I’m the Messiah?” Why not just have heaven open, angels descend, and silence these craven scoundrels once and for all?

It’s because Jesus always wants faith. That we choose to believe Him based on revelation. Based off His word. Not based off some sort of sign or manifestation to prove it. And Jesus knew their hearts. They didn’t want to know, they wanted Him gone. They had seen the signs. They had heard the teachings. It was undeniable, yet they denied it. And when hearts are hard like that – when hearts are closed to truth – God does not smash His way in. He says, “Fine. Stay in your ignorance and rebellion. I’m not going to force you to accept the truth.”

There are many times in the Gospels where someone will come and ask Jesus something but it’s not asked in humility or faith or true searching. In those cases, Jesus usually asks them something back. He asks something deeper to reveal the heart behind the question. Not to just win an argument, but to expose truth.

This is why He taught so often in parables. So that only those who truly wanted to know, who truly wanted to seek God, would follow up and then have those wonderful secrets explained to them.

Mark 11:30 – 30 Was John’s baptism from heaven or of human origin? Answer me.”

When He says, “John’s baptism,” Jesus means the totality of John’s ministry.[8] But why bring up John after all this time? If I’m honest, John seems almost superfluous. Did he really do that much? Was he really that necessary?

The answer is, yes! He was the forerunner of the Messiah. He was an essential part of God revealing Who the Christ was. And Jesus’ ties His ministry to John’s here. It wasn’t just that John was doing his thing and then Jesus came and did His thing. John was sent from God as part of Jesus’ work.

If John was sent by God, then Jesus must also be sent by God. Because John said that the One Who was coming, the One he was preparing people for, was from heaven. and would baptize people with the Holy Spirit. And John identified Jesus as that Person – the eternal Son of God.[9]

So, if John was a true prophet, Jesus is the Messiah they’ve been waiting for. If John was just making things up – if he was a liar – then they as the leaders of Israel had the duty of stopping him from teaching lies and prophesying falsely. At least of warning the people. They were out there, listening to John preach. And many people were convinced by his message.

You know, Mike Tyson once discussed his punching strategy. He said, “I’m not trying to punch him in the nose. I’m trying to punch the soft tissue behind his nose.”

When Jesus asked this question, it wasn’t just to deflect and it wasn’t just to push His opponents into a corner they couldn’t get easily out of. He was punching into a much deeper spiritual truth.

John was in the wilderness preaching that a person could repent and be saved without offering any sacrifices in the temple. A “baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins.”[10] If John’s baptism was from heaven, the temple was obsolete.[11] At least it would be after the Lamb of God laid down His life. And of course, that’s exactly what happened. But with one question the Lord lays out just how powerful He really was.

So, the Sanhedrin is absolutely on the ropes. Let’s see their response.

Mark 11:31-32 – 31 They discussed it among themselves: “If we say, ‘From heaven,’ he will say, ‘Then why didn’t you believe him?’ 32 But if we say, ‘Of human origin’ ”—they were afraid of the crowd, because everyone thought that John was truly a prophet.

John’s spiritual authority was never in question among the people of Israel. Did you know even Josephus, the Jewish historian, says John was a “good man,” who commanded the Jews in righteousness and piety toward God. And that John was so beloved and respected that when Herod’s army was destroyed it was because of God’s displeasure toward Herod for murdering John.[12]

Understand – Josephus was no Christian. That’s how revered John was by everyone other than Herod.

Now, this is a comedic moment in the temple. This official delegation, full of pomp and venom, confront Jesus. They think they’re ambushing Him and are going to knock Him out. Jesus asks them one question and they have to say, “Time out! Give us a second.” Then they go huddle up and discuss what they’re going to say. And they’re downright scared to answer. Did you see them stop mid-sentence in verse 32? “But if we say, “Of human origin…” The sentence just dies there.

Mike Tyson’s famous quote, “Everyone has a plan until they get hit,” doesn’t end there. No one ever says the rest of the line, but here’s what Iron Mike said in full: “Everybody has a plan until they get hit. Then, like a rat, they stop in fear and freeze.”

That’s exactly what happens to the chief priests, the scribes, and the elders here. They are exposed as phonies, as hypocrites. They did not care if John was a prophet. They only cared about holding onto their own power and influence over the crowds, who they did not care about or respect.

Mark 11:33 – 33 So they answered Jesus, “We don’t know.” And Jesus said to them, “Neither will I tell you by what authority I do these things.”

We don’t know?!? What a joke. It’s their job to know! They are the ones who are tasked with maintaining the spiritual and doctrinal integrity for the nation! That’s the job! To know whether John was a prophet from God or a false prophet who needed to be stoned! If you don’t know, then what are you here for?

Jesus has no interest in playing games with them. They don’t want truth, they want status. If they had really been seeking God, like Nicodemus (a member of the Sanhedrin) did, He would’ve responded to them like we see in John chapter 3. But for those who don’t care, the truth is withheld.

They could’ve had an answer to their original question if they really wanted one. R.T. France writes, “For those who will look below the surface there is a clear enough answer.”[13] And Jesus will give the answer to those listening into this debate in the very next passage. He will teach a parable which reveals exactly Who He is for those who are interested in really learning.

Mike Tyson beat Tyrell Biggs in a TKO. His victory was clear, but it wasn’t a Hollywood knockout. Biggs was powerless, but still standing.

The chief priests, the scribes, and the elders limped away from this round only to come back for more. Each time, Jesus showed just how much authority He had. This wasn’t just about Jesus being a great debater. It’s that His absolute power and authority and right-ness could not be denied.

And yet, many continually deny it. May we live in acceptance, not denial of Christ’s authority over heaven, over earth, over our lives as we follow Him.

References
1 https://rowansimpson.com/quotes/punch/
2 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Tyson_vs._Tyrell_Biggs
3 https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2012/11/09/mike-tyson-explains-on
4 John Walvoord and Roy Zuck   The Bible Knowledge Commentary: An Exposition of the Scriptures
5 Archibald Robertson   Word Pictures In The New Testament
6 James Brooks   The New American Commentary, Volume 23: Mark
7 Mark 1:22
8 Walter Wessel   The Expositor’s Bible Commentary, Volume 8: Matthew, Mark, Luke
9 John 1:30-34
10 Mark 1:4
11 David Garland   The NIV Application Commentary: Mark
12 Flavius Josephus   Antiquities Of The Jews XVIII v.2
13 R.T. France   The Gospel Of Mark

Squall In The Family (1 Samuel 1:1-18)

Who is in charge here?!? That’s usually a question that gets asked when things have gone wrong. In 1100 BC Israel,[1] things had gone very wrong.

It was the time of the Judges. A time defined by moral and political chaos. One of the darkest eras of Israel’s history.[2] Some of those closing chapters of Judges are hard to stomach because of how ruined society had become, not only outside of Israel, but among God’s people.

1100 BC was also a time of historic transition. The world was transforming. The Late Bronze age was ending and the Early Iron Age began. New iron technologies were influencing every phase of life. In Canaan, societies were changing from city-states to united monarchies. The “great” empires of Egypt or the Hittites no longer dominated. Instead, it was a time of many smaller kingdoms.[3]

These trends would ultimately drive God’s people to demand a king of their own. They thought that would not only make them more respectable in the eyes of the peoples around them, but surely a king would bring some stability, some sanity to the chaos. Remember the closing verse of Judges: “In those days there was no king in Israel; everyone did whatever seemed right to him.”[4] There was no Moses or Joshua to lead the people. The judges had been sporadic and geographically limited. In the end, they failed to unite the people. If only a king would save us!

Into that setting comes the book of Samuel, which gives the history of how Israel went from Theocracy to Monarchy. But of course, the history books of the Bible aren’t only meant to give us history. They are given to teach us theology. To show us the character and nature and faithfulness and grace of God. To illustrate truths that are explained more directly in other parts of the Bible.[5]

Now, I said the “book of Samuel” on purpose. What we call First and Second Samuel are one single book. The issue was, when the Hebrew Bible was translated into Greek in the 3rd century BC, they used these standard-sized scrolls and one scroll wasn’t enough for the whole thing. And so they broke it up into two parts.[6] So, I’ll go with what we’re used to and refer to the two books.

They introduce us to three main characters: Samuel, Saul, and David. But through their stories they teach us major spiritual principles about what happens to our institutions and societies when our leaders will not submit to God. About what happens to our own lives and families when we trust God or when we doubt Him. Through these three lives we learn the biggest point of the book: Who is king? Who is in charge? Who is really ruling and reigning over our lives?

Now who wrote Samuel? Samuel dies halfway through the book. The truth is, we don’t know. The book is anonymous. It’s not named Samuel because he’s the author, but because of how prominent he was in this transition period. He is the last judge and is then used by God to be the kingmaker.

One theory of authorship is that Samuel wrote portions and the rest were finished by the prophets Nathan and Gad.[7] Another theory is that the book was compiled later by King Josiah.[8]

Based off internal clues, it seems it must’ve been written before the exile to Babylon.[9] Interesting bit of trivia: the oldest of the Dead Sea Scrolls found thus far contain portions of Samuel.[10]

So we’ve got upheaval and major political change. Imagine if America transitioned to a monarchy in the next few years! We’ve got a book full of intrigue and battles, giants and betrayal and the establishment of the greatest kingly dynasty in the history of mankind. It’s a big story. So how does the book start? With a tender telling of a broken-hearted woman from the hill country of Ephraim.

1 Samuel 1:1-3 – 1 There was a man from Ramathaim-zophim in the hill country of Ephraim. His name was Elkanah son of Jeroham, son of Elihu, son of Tohu, son of Zuph, an Ephraimite. 2 He had two wives, the first named Hannah and the second Peninnah. Peninnah had children, but Hannah was childless. 3 This man would go up from his town every year to worship and to sacrifice to the LORD of Armies at Shiloh, where Eli’s two sons, Hophni and Phinehas, were the LORD’s priests.

Some introductions are in order. In fact, the book presents us with seven people and, as it does, gives some important foreshadowing.

The first is Elkanah. Based off his lineage, his household, and his ability to travel every year, there’s good reason to believe he was a wealthy member of the aristocracy.[11] But we also learn he was a faithful believer. In a time when people did what was right in their own eyes, he went year after year to Shiloh to worship God. Shiloh was about 20 miles north of Jerusalem and was the headquarters both politically and religiously since the time of Joshua.[12] That’s where the Tabernacle was set up.

Next, we have his two wives. Hannah was the first and, we’ll see, the love of Elkanah’s life. But in that time and culture you must perpetuate the family line through male children. And so, Elkanah eventually took a second wife, named Peninnah. Not a very pleasant lady, we’ll see.

We’re also introduced to Eli and his two sons. They will figure very prominently in the coming passages. And already we get a clue that something is not quite right. Our author says, “this was during the time when these two guys were priests.” And both of their names are Egyptian names.[13] So we make a note that something is up. All is not well in the family of Eli.

The seventh Person we’re introduced to is God Himself. Notice the name: The LORD of Armies. Your version may have The LORD of Hosts. This is the very first use of this name for God in the Bible.[14] Why? Because what is Samuel all about? Israel demanding a king. The establishment of the monarchy. And right from the start the Bible wants to remind us that God is King. He is not the King of a single city-state or the King of a single nation or even the King of an empire. He is the King of kings. He sits enthroned over Israel’s armies, over the hosts of heaven, over all heavenly creatures, over all creation, enthroned forever between the cherubim. Heaven is His throne and earth is His footstool. And our part is to bow to Him as King because He is our King, as well.

Now, seeing an Israelite family with two wives, one who is unable to have children, should immediately grab our interest. This is how many important, dramatic, glorious stories begin in the Old Testament. Abraham and Sarah. Isaac and Rebekah. Jacob and Rachel. Samson’s parents. As readers, anticipation should start building immediately.

It’s easy for us to read the story. It was much harder to live it. Hannah’s story begins with many years of intense heartache. Perhaps you’re facing heartache today. The Lord sees and He knows and He loves you. All of us can be encouraged by the fact that, as one commentator notes, “God’s tendency is to make our total inability His starting point.”[15]

1 Samuel 1:4-8 – 4 Whenever Elkanah offered a sacrifice, he always gave portions of the meat to his wife Peninnah and to each of her sons and daughters. 5 But he gave a double portion to Hannah, for he loved her even though the LORD had kept her from conceiving. 6 Her rival would taunt her severely just to provoke her, because the LORD had kept Hannah from conceiving. 7 Year after year, when she went up to the LORD’s house, her rival taunted her in this way. Hannah would weep and would not eat. 8 “Hannah, why are you crying?” her husband, Elkanah, would ask. “Why won’t you eat? Why are you troubled? Am I not better to you than ten sons?”

It’s hard for some of us to imagine such a bad family dynamic. For others, you know the hurt of having an enemy in your own home. These were long and difficult days for poor Hannah.

I’d like to make a quick aside here: Sometimes we wonder why it seems like God was ok with polygamy in the Old Testament. The truth is, He wasn’t. It was never what He wanted. He gave a clear pattern and boundary in Genesis. Polygamy is never shown in a positive light in the Bible. Far from it. It always brings problems and pain. God is merciful and forgiving, but He did not want it.

Let’s bring it up to date. We don’t really deal with polygamy, though things like that are becoming more normalized in our godless culture. But listen – God’s sexual ethic is not prudish or stifling. It is good. If you want fulfillment relationally and sexually, follow God’s design.

But back to our text – Hannah is struggling. Years of struggle. Peninnah would go out of her way to actively hurt her feelings and taunt her and belittle her.

Obviously she was not a nice lady, but she was probably jealous herself. The words there indicate Hannah was the one true object of Elkanah’s love.[16] But that doesn’t excuse Peninnah’s behavior.

For his part, Elkanah tried to comfort his wife, but he really didn’t do a good job. He acted like the stereotypical man. He gives Hannah a huge portion of food but she can’t eat all of that. It only highlights that she has no kids to eat it with. He says, “Aren’t I enough for you?” Actually, the words he said could be translated, “Don’t I treat you as if you had 10 sons?”[17] So, he tried to make her feel better, but clearly he did not understand his wife. And he seemed to allow this family dysfunction.

The big question is: Why did God do this to Hannah? Our author clearly assigns responsibility to the Lord twice.

We know why it happened to Hannah and how it’s going to turn out so good. But we don’t always know why God allows hard things in our lives. But remember the promise: God, Who loves us, will work all things together for the good. That doesn’t always mean relief from barrenness or healing from sickness or removal of suffering. Sometimes God asks us to walk through very hard things. But He sees and knows. He has grace and mercy for you in any day of difficulty or decade of difficulty.

1 Samuel 1:9-11 – 9 On one occasion, Hannah got up after they ate and drank at Shiloh. The priest Eli was sitting on a chair by the doorpost of the LORD’s temple. 10 Deeply hurt, Hannah prayed to the LORD and wept with many tears. 11 Making a vow, she pleaded, “LORD of Armies, if you will take notice of your servant’s affliction, remember and not forget me, and give your servant a son, I will give him to the LORD all the days of his life, and his hair will never be cut.”

In her pain, in her ongoing distress, where did Hannah go? She went to the Lord. She knew God had allowed this in her life, she’s overwhelmed with sadness, but she did not curse God. She did not reject Him. She leaves the feast and chooses faith. She chooses relationship with God. Pleading, yes. Questions, yes. Sorrow, yes. But through the tears she says, “You are the Lord of Armies and I am Your servant.” She did not know if He would grant her request, but she knew He would hear her.

And in her plea we see her dive deeper into the ways of God. “Give me a son and he will live as a Nazarite.” Could it be that she found hope in the Samson story? After all, Samson’s mother had been childless many years, too. But what happened? The Lord intervened. But here Hannah doesn’t just ask to be like Samson’s mom, she promises that her son would do what Samson would not. “His hair will never be cut.” Her son would be faithful where Samson had been faithless.

If you are sorrowing today, you do not have to hide it from the Lord. He hears the sound of your weeping.[18] He puts your tears in His bottle.[19] He can be trusted to love you and comfort you.

1 Samuel 1:12-14 – 12 While she continued praying in the LORD’s presence, Eli watched her mouth. 13 Hannah was praying silently, and though her lips were moving, her voice could not be heard. Eli thought she was drunk 14 and said to her, “How long are you going to be drunk? Get rid of your wine!”

Poor Hannah! She is just so misunderstood by the people around her. Here’s Eli – the spiritual leader of Israel – condemning her as a wicked and worthless woman.

Why in the world would Eli jump to this conclusion? Well, maybe the Tabernacle had a regular stream of drunkards coming in. That sort of corruption was certainly the norm for his own sons who were defiling the Lord’s House every day. But this scene really reveals a lot about Eli.

Notice: Hannah didn’t go to him for prayer or to get an oracle from God. She bypassed him altogether. As faithful believers, she and Elkanah would not have thought very highly of Eli. And his reaction here reveals that he couldn’t recognize true piety when he saw it.[20]

1 Samuel 1:15-18 – 15 “No, my lord,” Hannah replied. “I am a woman with a broken heart. I haven’t had any wine or beer; I’ve been pouring out my heart before the LORD. 16 Don’t think of me as a wicked woman; I’ve been praying from the depth of my anguish and resentment.”

17 Eli responded, “Go in peace, and may the God of Israel grant the request you’ve made of him.” 18 “May your servant find favor with you,” she replied. Then Hannah went on her way; she ate and no longer looked despondent.

Hope is kindled! Hannah’s deep sorrow has been replaced by a deep confidence in the Lord. Her situation is the same but now she has a promise. And she knows that God’s grace changes things.

She says, “May your servant find favor.” It’s interesting: Her name means “Gracious woman,”[21] or, “Favor with God.”[22] And her prayer is that God would work His grace in her life. That she would become who she was created to be. That her life would be defined and overflowing with grace.

And it wasn’t an empty hope. It wasn’t just a placebo. In verse 8, she was so upset she couldn’t eat. Now in verse 18 she’s eating. She’s feasting with the family – yes, even Peninnah. God has done a work of grace in her heart despite the difficulties of her situation.

It’s a beautiful start to a monumental book. But we have to ask, why start with Hannah and Samuel instead of David’s mom? Or maybe pick up with Ruth and carry on the story?

Because Samuel is not really about David. Of course, he is the main character – one of the most significant in the whole Bible. I mean, he has his own covenant with God like Abraham did. I don’t say this to diminish David.

But this book is really about something deeper. That no matter what’s going on in your life, in the world around us, the wars, the changes in culture, God is in charge. Christ is the true King.

The book starts with Hannah because through her God gives us Samuel. And Samuel is the agent God uses to anoint the first kings of Israel. And we’ll see that both Saul and David are beholden to Samuel and after him the prophets like Nathan. Because they are God’s representatives. The kings of Israel are, in actuality, appointed to be vice-kings. Allowed to rule as long as they obey the true King. They are, in fact, merely stewards on temporary thrones. Even though the nation wanted to throw off Theocracy and was often fighting with themselves like this family, God was still in charge.

The other reason the book starts with Hannah is because of what comes in chapter 2. The song of Hannah is not just a nice thank you to the Lord for giving her a son. It contains the theological purpose of this book. It is the key to the interpretation of everything that follows.[23]

In her song we will hear that God is the Savior. That He is holy. That He is the rock. That He changes the fortunes of people. In fact, we’ll get seven examples of God changing things – flipping them on their heads. Why? Because He is the real King, the true King. And we will learn in her song and in these stories that if you oppose Him, you will be shattered. And most of all, we learn that God will send the messiah. That’s the very last word of her song. Did you know David is called God’s “messiah” in this book? He is – messiah, small m. Sent to deliver Israel. But as we follow his story, we’ll find that a human messiah – a small m messiah – is not enough to save us. Because he, too, needs saving. But that’s why God will promise that the Son of David will be the ultimate Messiah, capital M. The King of kings, capital K. The Leader Who will never fail, never be defeated, never make a mistake, never let us down.

In the darkest days of Israel’s history, God sends the light of hope. And we can live today in the power of grace because the Light has come. The Light of the World, the Son of David. The King Who is coming back one day, but Who is in charge right now. A King we bow before, a King we honor, a King we serve and celebrate.

References
1 Dale Ralph Davis   1 Samuel: Looking On The Heart
2 David Toshio Tsumura   The New International Commentary On The Old Testament: The First Book of Samuel
3 Tsumura
4 Judges 21:25
5 Bill Arnold   The NIV Application Commentary: 1 & 2 Samuel
6 Robert Alter   The David Story
7 Ralph Klein   Word Biblical Commentary, Volume 10: 1 Samuel
8 Alter
9 1 Samuel 27:6
10 Tsumura
11 Arnold
12 Theological Wordbook Of The Old Testament
13 P. Kyle McCarter   1 Samuel: A New Translation With Introduction And Commentary
14 Tsumura
15 Davis
16 Klein
17 McCarter
18 Psalm 6:8
19 Psalm 56:8
20 James Smith   The Books Of History
21 Robert Bergen   The New American Commentary, Volume 7: 1, 2 Samuel
22 Tsumura
23 John Martin   Studies In 1 And 2 Samuel, Part 1

Tree Speech (Mark 11:12-25)

There is a tree that grows at Syracuse University known as The Tree of 40 Fruit.[1] It is a living, growing art project of professor Sam Van Aken, who has grafted the tree in such a way that it does, in fact, bear 40 different varieties of stone fruit every year. Peaches, plums, apricots, nectarines, cherries, and almonds all grow on this tree, along with their unique leaves and blossoms.

The first Tree of 40 fruit was planted in 2011.[2] Others can be found growing at the University of Southern Indiana, Colby College in Maine, Roanoke College in Virginia, and various museums on the east coast. You can’t plant a Tree of 40 fruit seed. You have to graft each branch, year by year. But the result is both beautiful and bountiful.

In our text, Jesus inspects a fig tree. It’s mature and well-supplied with all it needs. After all, it’s growing in a town whose name means “House of Figs.”[3] But Jesus doesn’t find a tree with many varieties of fruit. He doesn’t find any figs. He doesn’t even find the precursor to fruit on the tree. He then does something we’ve never seen Him do before: He works a destructive miracle. Then He goes into the temple and violently disrupt what was happening there, only to go back to the fig tree and give the disciples what, on first listen, seems like an unattainable teaching about true faith.

What is going on? Is this a scene where, as one infamous commentator dares to suggest, Jesus “wastes” His miraculous power because He was in an “ill-temper?”[4]

No, this isn’t Jesus losing His cool. Something prophetic and theological is happening in this text. It has many ties to many other passages of Scripture. So, let’s listen to what our Lord wants to reveal as we see Him curse a fig tree, cleanse His Father’s house, and counsel His followers about faith.

Mark 11:12 – 12 The next day when they went out from Bethany, he was hungry.

Did Jesus get sick? We’re not specifically told, but a question like that helps us gauge our assumptions about Jesus’ humanity. He is fully God and fully Man. We see Him tired in the Gospels. We see Him thirst. And here, He was hungry. Not hangry – that’s not why the tree gets cursed, but the Lord experienced humanity in a real and comprehensive sense.

It makes sense that He was hungry. They’re doing a lot of walking in these passages but the first meal was eaten at midmorning, not straightaway like we usually do.[5] But more important than the hunger is the connective work Mark is bringing into this text. “The next day.” In the last passage, Jesus had just come into Jerusalem, entered the temple and examined everything there, then He left. “The next day.” Mark wants to tie these scenes together.

And he’s not only tying this text to the last, he’s also going to use this “sandwich” technique we’ve seen him use before.[6] Remember when it was the story of Jairus’ daughter being raised from the dead? It starts one story, then interrupts the telling with a separate story, then he returns to the first story. He does this a few times in his Gospel to develop themes and what these situations reveal.

Remember: The Gospels are not just a list of biographical facts. They are carefully constructed literary works of inspiration, given that we might know truth. We must understand this fig tree story in the context of Jesus’ entry into the temple in verse 11, His return to the temple in verse 15, and in connection with the many passages of Scripture that are tied to what we see in this scene.

Mark 11:13 – 13 Seeing in the distance a fig tree with leaves, he went to find out if there was anything on it. When he came to it, he found nothing but leaves; for it was not the season for figs.

Why would He expect figs if it’s not the right season? Well, Jesus wasn’t actually hoping to find a fig for His hunger. He’s not trying to solve a problem, but preach a sermon. He’s acting out a prophetic parable for His disciples. This would first remind them of the parable He told in Luke 13 about a master examining a fig tree, finding no fruit, and demanding it be cut down. It should also remind them of Micah 7, where God laments the fact that when He came looking for faithful people in the land of Israel, He found none. He said it was like finding no early figs, which the Lord craves.[7]

Our God craves spiritual fruit in our lives. He’s looking for growth. He’s looking for faithfulness. He examines our lives, just as He examined the temple and this fig tree. Does He find fruit?

We’ll get back to the personal application at the end. But Christ’s main teaching was about the national situation. And to do that, the fig tree was a great illustration. Figs were incredibly important in Israel. They were the most fruitful of all trees and their fruit was often used to produce the firstfruits offerings required in the temple.[8]

Now, fig trees have an interesting phenomenon called the breba crop. These are small green figs that appear at times even before the leaves.[9] They taste bad and are not normally eaten,[10] but they signal a true crop of fruit is coming. This tree had no ripe figs and no breba figs, but lots of leaves. It was leafy by sterile. Good for nothing. Soaking up light and water, but giving no crop.

This image is the opposite of what Jews hoped for, ideally and prophetically. In Haggai, in Micah, in Zechariah, we’re given the ideal image of the Messianic age: You will sit under your own fig tree and gather its fruit. Whereas in Jeremiah 8, when pronouncing God’s judgment on Israel, the image is “There will be…no figs on the fig tree, and even the leaf will wither.”[11]

Mark 11:14 – 14 He said to it, “May no one ever eat fruit from you again!” And his disciples heard it.

He wanted them to hear it. This isn’t irritation, it’s instruction. He’s trying to help the disciples understand what is at stake personally and nationally as Christ heads into Passion week.

When the Master came to inspect the fig tree of Israel, did He find faith? Did He find obedience? Did He find fruit? In some cases He did on the individual level, but not on the national level. For thousands of years, Israel had recited Proverbs 27:18:

Proverbs 27:18 – 18 Whoever tends a fig tree will eat its fruit, and whoever looks after his master will be honored.

But they did not look after their Master, they did not tend the spiritual fig tree, and judgment would be the result.

But why did Jesus curse the tree? Seems “mean” to us, right? He could’ve just done a miracle of fruit producing like He had done with the loaves and fishes. But it’s not actually about the physical fruit and His physical hunger. This is about Israel and faith and obedience.

God will not force fruit to grow in your life if you will not cooperate with Him. Now, He is the Author and Finisher of our faith – He will complete the work He began in you – but spiritual growth does not happen if we refuse to walk with God and obey Him and present ourselves as sacrifices.

Mark 11:15-17 – 15 They came to Jerusalem, and he went into the temple and began to throw out those buying and selling. He overturned the tables of the money changers and the chairs of those selling doves, 16 and would not permit anyone to carry goods through the temple. 17 He was teaching them: “Is it not written, My house will be called a house of prayer for all nations? But you have made it a den of thieves!”

Usually when I read this text, my first interpretation is that Jesus was upset that the money changers were ripping off pilgrims coming to offer sacrifice. And that is true – but that’s only half of it.

First, let’s understand the scam. This system had only started in 30AD.[12] The high priest’s family bought their priesthood from Rome and they actually owned the booths that the merchants used.[13] When you came, you had to convert your money into the temple shekel, and they would add a surcharge on when you did. On top of that, things like doves would be tripled in price.[14] It was quite a racket – one that put a burden on people trying to worship God. That’s a big no-no in God’s eyes.

But there was another layer here, one that Jesus specifically called out in the two Old Testament Scriptures He quoted. The first was Isaiah 56:7 which reminded Israel that God’s plan was not to isolate the Jews, but that ultimately all the Gentile nations would be brought into the family of faith.

But instead of being a light to the Gentiles, the leaders of Israel made it impossible for any Gentile God-fearers to join in. The temple of Jesus’ time was segregated into various courts. You had the court of the men, for Jewish men, the court of the women, and then the court of the Gentiles. It was a big area where anyone seeking the God of Israel could come in and pray. But now it was overrun with commerce. All these booths, all the animals, all the transactions happened there.

So, you’re a Gentile, who God really loves and wants to come and find faith, but instead of being able to pray, you’re dealing with thousands of sheep and birds and merchants and pilgrims and animal poop and noise. Gentile worshippers were effectively pushed out though God wanted to graft them in, like the Tree of 40 fruits!

Jesus had already cleared this nonsense out once at the beginning of His ministry. But they went right back to it. Now, at the end of His ministry, He does it again. This time He also quotes Jeremiah 7, “where Jeremiah condemns the idea that the temple is a safe haven for Judah in its sin.”[15]

Sadly, the leaders of Israel rejected God’s mercy and His patience and His warnings. They kept bringing robbers into the temple. And in the end they would reap what they sowed. In 66 AD, Josephus records that “robbers” took possession of the temple and slaughtered the priests.[16] Josephus used the same word for robbers that Mark used.

Mark 11:18 – 18 The chief priests and the scribes heard it and started looking for a way to kill him. For they were afraid of him, because the whole crowd was astonished by his teaching.

Jesus essentially brings the activity of the temple to a stop. At least for the moment, He shut down the cash cow for the corrupt family of the High Priest. But what was worse news for them was the multitudes of people were in agreement with Jesus. “Yeah! These guys are ripping me off!”

And so, the chief priests and scribes decided it was time to kill Jesus. Of course, the Pharisees and the Herodians were like, “What took you so long?” They’ve been plotting to kill Jesus since chapter 3! But now we have a unified conspiracy: Pharisees, Sadducees (represented by the High Priest and chief priests), the scribes, the Herodians, and nearly all the Sanhedrin.

Mark 11:19 – 19 Whenever evening came, they would go out of the city.

I love this because, despite the power wielded by all those involved in the conspiracy against Jesus, despite the power of Rome, despite everything going on, it’s clear that Jesus is in charge. He comes and goes as He pleases because He would accomplish what His Father sent Him to do. But now, Mark closes the sandwich with a few more challenging verses.

Mark 11:20-21 – 20 Early in the morning, as they were passing by, they saw the fig tree withered from the roots up. 21 Then Peter remembered and said to him, “Rabbi, look! The fig tree that you cursed has withered.” 

This tree was an object lesson. On the national level, Israel was spiritually dead. From the roots up. Look at the corruption of their leaders. Instead of nourishing their people, they exploited them. Look at the temple, defiled with commerce. It was fruitless and ruined.

Mark 11:22-24 – 22 Jesus replied to them, “Have faith in God. 23 Truly I tell you, if anyone says to this mountain, ‘Be lifted up and thrown into the sea,’ and does not doubt in his heart, but believes that what he says will happen, it will be done for him. 24 Therefore I tell you, everything you pray and ask for—believe that you have received, it and it will be yours.

Doesn’t this seem to come out of nowhere? What does this have to do with Israel and the coming judgment? And how can we take these verses other than to think, “Well, if I’m honest, I’ll never have faith like that?” If I really was a Christian, shouldn’t I be going around working crazy miracles?

Well, first of all, these words also connect back to Old Testament prophecy. This brings us back to Zechariah 4, where the Lord spoke to Zerubbabel about how God can overcome any difficulty, even a mountain standing in our way. It’s that famous passage that says, “Not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit, says the Lord of Hosts.”

Also, we need to understand that this is not the only time Jesus taught these words to His disciples. These same phrases are used multiple, different times in both Matthew and Luke.

Let’s try to put ourselves in the place of the 12. Jesus has been saying things that are totally different than what you’ve always assumed about the Messiah, about the Kingdom and when and how it is established. And now, throughout Mark 11 through 16, Jesus is going to suggest that He Himself is going to replace the temple.[17] He has totally rejected all the leaders of their nation.

So, if you’re one of the 12, your entire traditional belief system has been upended by this interaction with the fig tree and Jesus’ actions in the temple.[18]

So now, Jesus gives them personal comfort and instruction that God has not proclaimed them as fig-less trees. God has not given up on them, even if His glory has departed from the temple. We can have faith in God and it’s important that our faith is founded, focused, and flowing from His will and His power, not traditionalism or nationalism or materialism. Instead of relating to God through dead formality, we can commune with Him with living and power-filled faith. And when we’re walking with Him, nothing is too hard for Him to accomplish in and through our lives. And that’s how we bear fruit. Not through legalism. Not through traditionalism. Not through nationalism. Through personal, obedient faith.

Mark 11:25 – 25 And whenever you stand praying, if you have anything against anyone, forgive him, so that your Father in heaven will also forgive you your wrongdoing.”

And now we inspect the tree of our own lives. It’s easy to see the deadness of a Sadducee. It’s easy to write off the temple when it’s full of scammers. But Jesus encourages the disciples – and us – to carefully examine our own lives. Are we growing in spiritual fruit? God is a forgiver. He was willing to forgive the merchants, the Pharisees, even the High Priest himself if they would repent. So, if we think we’re living for God, if we think we’re walking with Him, but we’re not like Him, we’re more like this leafy but sterile tree.

May God save us from being a tree like that. May the Lord cleanse the temple of our hearts from any corrupt merchant we’ve given space to. Instead, may we grow in many fruits. Fruits of forgiveness. Of repentance. Of obedience. Of worship. Fruit of all kinds as the Lord continues to graft onto our lives, to cultivate in our lives, and to reap a harvest of His powerful grace as we grow in Him.

References
1 https://www.samvanaken.com/tree-of-40-fruit-2
2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ik3l4U_17bI
3 John Walvoord and Roy Zuck   The Bible Knowledge Commentary: An Exposition of the Scriptures
4 T.W. Manson   The Cleansing Of The Temple
5 James Brooks   The New American Commentary, Volume 23: Mark
6 Ben Witherington   The Gospel Of Mark: A Socio-Rhetorical Commentary
7 Micah 7:1
8 William Telford   The Barren Temple And The Withered Tree
9 Brooks
10 William Lane   The Gospel Of Mark
11 Jeremiah 8:13
12 Witherington
13 Robert Utley   The Gospel According To Peter: Mark And I & II Peter
14 Utley
15 Craig Keener The IVP Bible Background Commentary: New Testament (Second Edition) 
16 Keener
17 Witherington
18 Utley

Now I Pray Me Down To Sleep (Psalm 4)

How often do you get a good night’s rest? The answer might depend on what state you live in. The states with the highest percentage of bad sleep are Kentucky, West Virginia, and Hawaii. Finally a list California isn’t in the worst spot! The best states for sleep? Colorado, Vermont, and Minnesota.[1]

We all have nighttime rituals before heading off to bed. Usually that includes a sweep through the house to make sure the doors are locked. Why? Because we live in a frightening world with some very real dangers. And the dark of night tends to turn our molehills into mountains and amplify those anxious situations, those confusing decisions, those difficult circumstances of life.

Even the smallest bump in the night can set our hearts racing as we wonder what sort of creature could’ve made it and how many more bumps till they’re inside the house! Some of you are very early risers. You’re up and at ‘em well before sunrise. Have you noticed that a bump in the early morning is not nearly as scary as a thud in the night?

We’re between book studies right now. It’s always nice to take a pitstop in the Psalms because not only are they full of theological treasure, they’re also very relatable and encouraging. In Psalms, we find the full range of human experience and emotion. Prayers when things are good and when they are very bad. Songs written by people who had absolute assurance of God’s ability and others who wondered when God was going to come through. People rejoicing and people despairing.

Psalm 4 is a nighttime song. David hopes to get a good night’s rest. But as was so often the case, he was facing some very scary enemies. We don’t know the specific setting, but he was dealing with some sort of rejection or revolution. The Absalom rebellion is a good candidate, because Psalm 3 and 4 are thematically and linguistically a pair.[2] How could David get a good night’s rest?

As David lays himself down to sleep, part of his evening ritual is not only to call out to God, but to sing about what is true about God’s love for His people. We don’t know whether he composed this in the comfort of his palace, or while laying on the dirt, exhausted, after crossing the Jordan before Absalom could kill him.  We’ll find that he could’ve written these same words from either position.

The point of Psalm 4 is that our circumstances are not what determines whether life is good or not. Rather, David declares to us that rest and joy – the good life – is found in the love of God.

Psalm 4:1 – For the choir director: with stringed instruments. A psalm of David. 1 Answer me when I call, God, who vindicates me. You freed me from affliction; be gracious to me and hear my prayer.

We learn in verse 2 that David is in trouble. He boldly asks God to hear and answer by His grace. In the middle is that all-important testimony: God vindicates and God frees from affliction. The term refers to distress or being in a tight corner.[3]

Undoubtedly everyone here faces some sort of pressure. Maybe not as lethal as David had to face, but some difficulty. Some cloud on the horizon. Some tight corner.

David knew the Lord would not leave him hanging. But he still spoke to God about what was going on. Strong faith doesn’t mean we talk to God less about our lives. The Lord wants us to commune with Him day by day. Not to just mechanically or ritualistically pray, but pray without ceasing.

“You freed me from my distress.” David had been in a tight corner, but Who was in his corner with him? A Christian has God’s presence and power in every circumstance. God in your corner. Not to be subservient to your will, but to be with you to accomplish His good purposes for you.

Now here’s what’s amazing: It would be enough if God only freed us. Here we are, guilty sinners on death row. But God gives us a pardon and then does more. He is also willing to hear when we call and answer us back and continually pour out His grace on our behalf. He takes the guilty, gives them a pardon, then makes them sons and daughters. Presidents and governors don’t do that!

David knew he could count on the grace of God. And we should, too. God is a Savior and a Shepherd. Charles Spurgeon writes, “God does nothing by halves and He will never cease to help us until we cease to need.”[4] He does not grow weary of helping us or hearing from us.

Psalm 4:2 – 2 How long, exalted ones, will my honor be insulted? How long will you love what is worthless and pursue a lie?

The “exalted ones” refer to the prominent, wealthy, powerful leaders of Israel.[5] They were in opposition to David at the time. This group had it all. And this was their chance to gain power even over the king himself. David speaks in verse 2 to warn them about the folly of their choices.

Worldly success is not always an indicator of truth or God’s favor. We need to clear our minds of this idea that, if God is happy with me, I’ll always get more in this life. Or that God’s best goal for my life is always upward mobility and greater accumulation of material things. Just because someone is successful doesn’t mean they’re on the right path. In fact, David says that these particular fellows loved what is worthless and pursued a lie. The term he uses can refer to an empty sack.[6]

Jesus gave a similar warning in the parable of the sower. He said that the deceitfulness of wealth can choke out the word of God and the growth of spiritual fruit in our lives.[7]

As Christians, we want to be sure we understand what God considers success – what greatness looks like to Him. God’s view of success is in loving service, in humility, in obedience, in sacrificial living, and that’s what we should pursue, not the things the unbelieving world around us calls great.

Psalm 4:3 – 3 Know that the LORD has set apart the faithful for himself; the LORD will hear when I call to him.

What a great and tender promise that God will always hear us when we call. This is not the only place where we are reminded that God will hear. This is God’s heart for us when we cry out to Him:

Isaiah 65:24 – 24 Even before they call, I will answer; while they are still speaking, I will hear.

A God Who loves and listens. A God who hears and answers. He answers His people. Those David calls “the faithful.”

What does it mean to be one of “the faithful?” The word comes from that wonderful Old Testament term for God’s love, hesed. The faithful are those who are recipients of God’s hesed.[8]

In human society, promotion and status are often given to those who perform at a certain level for an extended period of time. What merits you to be recognized or awarded or commissioned?

But God doesn’t give grace based on our merit. And good thing, too, because none of us could ever earn or deserve God’s favor or His grace or His attention. Instead, God pours out His grace on those who will receive it because He loves us. “The faithful” are those who abide in His love. And not only do we receive it, but “the faithful” also become characterized by hesed themselves.

What have you been set apart for? We call out to God in prayer, but remember: God has called you. He’s called you to be saved. He’s called you to walk in a path that He has carved out for you.

2 Timothy 1:9 –  9 He has saved us and called us with a holy calling, not according to our works, but according to his own purpose and grace, which was given to us in Christ Jesus before time began.

If you’re a Christian here today, what has God called you to do? Ephesians 4 says you’ve received a calling you’re meant to walk in. Something you’ve been marvelously chosen for.[9] That’s another way you can translate “set apart.”

So what has God set your life apart for? If you aren’t sure, start by asking what spiritual gifts the Lord has given you. What opportunities are available to you? Where has God placed you and who do you interact with? All of us need to answer His call. We need to hear Him the way He hears us.

Psalm 4:4 – 4 Be angry and do not sin; reflect in your heart while on your bed and be silent.   

Originally, this verse is directed at the exalted ones of verse 2. But then, in Ephesians, Paul quotes this verse and applies it directly to Christians, as well.

When we find ourselves angry or agitated or excited or disturbed,[10] we should pause and reflect on the word of God, on the leading of God, the heart of God, to put our lives in perspective.

The Christian life should be a thoughtful life. Not letting our fears or emotions have the helm, but calmly considering what is true. What is God’s opinion and direction and intention? Having the spiritual fruit of self-control so that our reactions don’t lead us into sin or unfaithfulness.

Psalm 4:5 – 5 Offer sacrifices in righteousness, and trust in the LORD.

David was in trouble – maybe life-threatening trouble – and here’s his advice: Offer sacrifices before the resolution. It wasn’t, “Once the Lord comes through, be sure to pay Him back.” It was, “Be in fellowship with the Lord, worship the Lord and trust Him, because, after all, He’s good for it.”

Our relationship with God is always the priority over the resolution of problems. Rather than worry about the specific resolution or depressurization, the questions are: Can we trust the God Who loves us? The God Who has set us apart for something marvelous? Is God faithful? We find the answer in the Psalms. Where we see people struggling with intense difficulty asking those same questions and coming to the conclusion again and again that, yes, God is faithful, He is able, He really does love us, He will not allow us to slip through the cracks.

So I can trust and worship and bring my life as a sacrifice before I see the resolution of problems in my life. But listen – it’s not enough to give God lip service. It’s not that He wants you to go through the motions of spirituality. Remember: The Psalms also tell us that for sacrifices to be acceptable to the Lord we must have clean hands and a pure heart, meaning we truly repent and believe.

Psalm 4:6 – 6 Many are asking, “Who can show us anything good?” Let the light of your face shine on us, LORD.

People were asking, “How can we get the good life?” David’s reminder is simple, but counter-cultural. The good life is not found in circumstances, but in covenant with Yahweh. If God’s face is shining on us, then we can be sure He is working all things together for the good of those who love God and are called according to His purpose.[11]

It seems though that some of David’s friends were struggling with trusting God. They “wanted to see rather than believe.”[12] Faith means we actively choose to believe even though we don’t see. That we trust what God has revealed. That we trust His character. That we pursue closeness with Him, knowing that’s the good life. That He will show us what is truly good.

Psalm 4:7 – 7 You have put more joy in my heart than they have when their grain and new wine abound.

In this song, David describes the life of a believer as faithful, as thoughtful, and as experiential. I don’t mean we go through life chasing religious experiences. But David can look back on what the Lord has done in his life. “You have put joy in my heart.” David had a living testimony of the faithfulness of God. He walked with God and, as a result, he knew God to be true and faithful.

This is what God promises: As we walk with Him, He will provide things the world cannot supply. Peace and joy and contentment and perspective and endurance and eternal purpose.

There’s nothing so far in this song to indicate that David’s negative circumstances had changed. But we see the calm and the rest running through his mind as he lays down to sleep.

If your happiness is dependent on circumstances, what are you going to do when you’re in the valley of the shadow of death? When the pressure is greater than you can bear? There are times when grain abounds, but what happens if the crop doesn’t come in? Will your life crumble apart? Is the weight of your life hanging on circumstances or on covenant?

Jesus’ wants to make your joy complete.[13] Joy in every circumstance. In the palace or on the run. And David had it, so he was able to rest even when his own son was trying to assassinate him.

Psalm 4:8 – 8 I will both lie down and sleep in peace, for you alone, LORD, make me live in safety.

Today people talk about “safe spaces.” Christians, you are safe in the Lord. That doesn’t mean we won’t suffer or face tight corners. But no matter what happens, God will never leave or abandon us.

Hopefully Psalm 4 gives us not only things to think about, but truths to rest in. God loves you! He has set you apart for a marvelous purpose. He has called you to be a meaningful portion of His good work. His hesed will not only shield us, but transform us, and give us the supply we need for the pressure we face. And along the way, He will hear us, He will free us, He will put joy in our hearts. Our part is to abide in His love, live by His perspective, and trust Him. Trust Him with our futures, our choices, our goals, our reactions, our whole lives. And to rest in His grace, no matter what state we find ourselves in.

References
1 https://www.sleepfoundation.org/sleep-news/why-cant-hawaii-sleep-best-worst-for-insufficient-sleepers
2 Christopher Ash   The Psalms: A Christ-Centered Commentary, Volume 2
3 Derek Kidner   Psalms 1-72
4 Charles Spurgeon  The Treasury Of David, Volume 1
5 Willem VanGemern   The Expositor’s Bible Commentary, Volume 5: Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs
6 Theological Wordbook Of The Old Testament
7 Mark 4:19
8 TWOT
9 J.J. Stewart Perowne   Psalms
10 Ash
11 Romans 8:28
12 Spurgeon
13 John 16:24