PAPER 173
- MONDAY IN JERUSALEM
Early on this
Monday morning, by prearrangement, Jesus and the
apostles assembled at the home of Simon in
Bethany, and after a brief conference they set
out for Jerusalem. The twelve were strangely
silent as they journeyed on toward the temple;
they had not recovered from the experience of
the preceding day. They were expectant, fearful,
and profoundly affected by a certain feeling of
detachment growing out of the Master's sudden
change of tactics, coupled with his instruction
that they were to engage in no public teaching
throughout this Passover week.
As
this group journeyed down Mount Olivet, Jesus
led the way, the apostles following closely
behind in meditative silence. There was just one
thought uppermost in the minds of all save Judas
Iscariot, and that was: What will the Master do
today? The one absorbing thought of Judas was:
What shall I do? Shall I go on with Jesus and my
associates, or shall I withdraw? And if I am
going to quit, how shall I break off?
It
was about nine o'clock on this beautiful morning
when these men arrived at the temple. They went
at once to the large court where Jesus so often
taught, and after greeting the believers who
were awaiting him, Jesus mounted one of the
teaching platforms and began to address the
gathering crowd. The apostles withdrew for a
short distance and awaited developments.
1.
CLEANSING THE TEMPLE
A
huge commercial traffic had grown up in
association with the services and ceremonies of
the temple worship. There was the business of
providing suitable animals for the various
sacrifices. Though it was permissible for a
worshiper to provide his own sacrifice, the fact
remained that this animal must be free from all
"blemish" in the meaning of the Levitical law
and as interpreted by official inspectors of the
temple. Many a worshiper had experienced the
humiliation of having his supposedly perfect
animal rejected by the temple examiners. It
therefore became the more general practice to
purchase sacrificial animals at the temple, and
although there were several stations on near-by
Olivet where they could be bought, it had become
the vogue to buy these animals directly from the
temple pens. Gradually there had grown up this
custom of selling all kinds of sacrificial
animals in the temple courts. An extensive
business, in which enormous profits were made,
had thus been brought into existence. Part of
these gains was reserved for the temple
treasury, but the larger part went indirectly
into the hands of the ruling high-priestly
families.
This
sale of animals in the temple prospered because,
when the worshiper purchased such an animal,
although the price might be somewhat high, no
more
Page 1889
fees
had to be paid, and he could be sure the
intended sacrifice would not be rejected on the
ground of possessing real or technical
blemishes. At one time or another systems of
exorbitant overcharge were practiced upon the
common people, especially during the great
national feasts. At one time the greedy priests
went so far as to demand the equivalent of the
value of a week's labor for a pair of doves
which should have been sold to the poor for a
few pennies. The "sons of Annas" had already
begun to establish their bazaars in the temple
precincts, those very merchandise marts which
persisted to the time of their final overthrow
by a mob three years before the destruction of
the temple itself.
But
traffic in sacrificial animals and sundry
merchandise was not the only way in which the
courts of the temple were profaned. At this time
there was fostered an extensive system of
banking and commercial exchange which was
carried on right within the temple precincts.
And this all came about in the following manner:
During the Asmonean dynasty the Jews coined
their own silver money, and it had become the
practice to require the temple dues of one-half
shekel and all other temple fees to be paid with
this Jewish coin. This regulation necessitated
that money-changers be licensed to exchange the
many sorts of currency in circulation throughout
Palestine and other provinces of the Roman
Empire for this orthodox shekel of Jewish
coining. The temple head tax, payable by all
except women, slaves, and minors, was one-half
shekel, a coin about the size of a ten cent
piece but twice as thick. By the times of Jesus
the priests had also been exempted from the
payment of temple dues. Accordingly, from the
15th to the 25th of the month preceding the
Passover, accredited money-changers erected
their booths in the principal cities of
Palestine for the purpose of providing the
Jewish people with proper money to meet the
temple dues after they had reached Jerusalem.
After this ten-day period these money-changers
moved on to Jerusalem and proceeded to set up
their exchange tables in the courts of the
temple. They were permitted to charge the
equivalent of from three to four cents
commission for the exchange of a coin valued at
about ten cents, and in case a coin of larger
value was offered for exchange, they were
allowed to collect double. Likewise did these
temple bankers profit from the exchange of all
money intended for the purchase of sacrificial
animals and for the payment of vows and the
making of offerings.
These temple money-changers not only conducted a
regular banking business for profit in the
exchange of more than twenty sorts of money
which the visiting pilgrims would periodically
bring to Jerusalem, but they also engaged in all
other kinds of transactions pertaining to the
banking business. Both the temple treasury and
the temple rulers profited tremendously from
these commercial activities. It was not uncommon
for the temple treasury to hold upwards of ten
million dollars while the common people
languished in poverty and continued to pay these
unjust levies.
In
the midst of this noisy aggregation of
money-changers, merchandisers, and cattle
sellers, Jesus, on this Monday morning,
attempted to teach the gospel of the heavenly
kingdom. He was not alone in resenting this
profanation of the temple; the common people,
especially the Jewish visitors from foreign
provinces, also heartily resented this
profiteering desecration of their national house
of worship. At this time the Sanhedrin itself
held its regular meetings in a chamber
surrounded by all this babble and confusion of
trade and barter.
Page 1890
As Jesus was about to begin his address, two
things happened to arrest his attention. At the
money table of a near-by exchanger a violent and
heated argument had arisen over the alleged
overcharging of a Jew from Alexandria, while at
the same moment the air was rent by the
bellowing of a drove of some one hundred
bullocks which was being driven from one section
of the animal pens to another. As Jesus paused,
silently but thoughtfully contemplating this
scene of commerce and confusion, close by he
beheld a simple-minded Galilean, a man he had
once talked with in Iron, being ridiculed and
jostled about by supercilious and would-be
superior Judeans; and all of this combined to
produce one of those strange and periodic
uprisings of indignant emotion in the soul of
Jesus.
To
the amazement of his apostles, standing near at
hand, who refrained from participation in what
so soon followed, Jesus stepped down from the
teaching platform and, going over to the lad who
was driving the cattle through the court, took
from him his whip of cords and swiftly drove the
animals from the temple. But that was not all;
he strode majestically before the wondering gaze
of the thousands assembled in the temple court
to the farthest cattle pen and proceeded to open
the gates of every stall and to drive out the
imprisoned animals. By this time the assembled
pilgrims were electrified, and with uproarious
shouting they moved toward the bazaars and began
to overturn the tables of the money-changers. In
less than five minutes all commerce had been
swept from the temple. By the time the near-by
Roman guards had appeared on the scene, all was
quiet, and the crowds had become orderly; Jesus,
returning to the speaker's stand, spoke to the
multitude: "You have this day witnessed that
which is written in the Scriptures: `My house
shall be called a house of prayer for all
nations, but you have made it a den of
robbers.'"
But
before he could utter other words, the great
assembly broke out in hosannas of praise, and
presently a throng of youths stepped out from
the crowd to sing grateful hymns of appreciation
that the profane and profiteering merchandisers
had been ejected from the sacred temple. By this
time certain of the priests had arrived on the
scene, and one of them said to Jesus, "Do you
not hear what the children of the Levites say?"
And the Master replied, "Have you never read,
`Out of the mouths of babes and sucklings has
praise been perfected'?" And all the rest of
that day while Jesus taught, guards set by the
people stood watch at every archway, and they
would not permit anyone to carry even an empty
vessel across the temple courts.
When
the chief priests and the scribes heard about
these happenings, they were dumfounded. All the
more they feared the Master, and all the more
they determined to destroy him. But they were
nonplused. They did not know how to accomplish
his death, for they greatly feared the
multitudes, who were now so outspoken in their
approval of his overthrow of the profane
profiteers. And all this day, a day of quiet and
peace in the temple courts, the people heard
Jesus' teaching and literally hung on his words.
This
surprising act of Jesus was beyond the
comprehension of his apostles. They were so
taken aback by this sudden and unexpected move
of their Master that they remained throughout
the whole episode huddled together near the
speaker's stand; they never lifted a hand to
further this cleansing of the temple. If this
spectacular event had occurred the day before,
at the time of Jesus' triumphal arrival at the
temple at the termination of his tumultuous
procession through the gates of the city, all
the while loudly acclaimed by the multitude,
they would
Page 1891
have
been ready for it, but coming as it did, they
were wholly unprepared to participate.
This
cleansing of the temple discloses the Master's
attitude toward commercializing the practices of
religion as well as his detestation of all forms
of unfairness and profiteering at the expense of
the poor and the unlearned. This episode also
demonstrates that Jesus did not look with
approval upon the refusal to employ force to
protect the majority of any given human group
against the unfair and enslaving practices of
unjust minorities who may be able to entrench
themselves behind political, financial, or
ecclesiastical power. Shrewd, wicked, and
designing men are not to be permitted to
organize themselves for the exploitation and
oppression of those who, because of their
idealism, are not disposed to resort to force
for self-protection or for the furtherance of
their laudable life projects.
2.
CHALLENGING THE MASTER'S AUTHORITY
On
Sunday the triumphal entry into Jerusalem so
overawed the Jewish leaders that they refrained
from placing Jesus under arrest. Today, this
spectacular cleansing of the temple likewise
effectively postponed the Master's apprehension.
Day by day the rulers of the Jews were becoming
more and more determined to destroy him, but
they were distraught by two fears, which
conspired to delay the hour of striking. The
chief priests and the scribes were unwilling to
arrest Jesus in public for fear the multitude
might turn upon them in a fury of resentment;
they also dreaded the possibility of the Roman
guards being called upon to quell a popular
uprising.
At
the noon session of the Sanhedrin it was
unanimously agreed that Jesus must be speedily
destroyed, inasmuch as no friend of the Master
attended this meeting. But they could not agree
as to when and how he should be taken into
custody. Finally they agreed upon appointing
five groups to go out among the people and seek
to entangle him in his teaching or otherwise to
discredit him in the sight of those who listened
to his instruction. Accordingly, about two
o'clock, when Jesus had just begun his discourse
on "The Liberty of Sonship," a group of these
elders of Israel made their way up near Jesus
and, interrupting him in the customary manner,
asked this question: "By what authority do you
do these things? Who gave you this authority?"
It
was altogether proper that the temple rulers and
the officers of the Jewish Sanhedrin should ask
this question of anyone who presumed to teach
and perform in the extraordinary manner which
had been characteristic of Jesus, especially as
concerned his recent conduct in clearing the
temple of all commerce. These traders and
money-changers all operated by direct license
from the highest rulers, and a percentage of
their gains was supposed to go directly into the
temple treasury. Do not forget that authority
was the watchword of all Jewry. The prophets
were always stirring up trouble because they so
boldly presumed to teach without authority,
without having been duly instructed in the
rabbinic academies and subsequently regularly
ordained by the Sanhedrin. Lack of this
authority in pretentious public teaching was
looked upon as indicating either ignorant
presumption or open rebellion. At this time only
the Sanhedrin could ordain an elder or teacher,
and such a ceremony had to take place in the
presence of at least three persons who had
previously been so ordained. Such an ordination
conferred the title of "rabbi" upon the teacher
and also qualified him to act as a judge,
"binding and loosing such matters as might be
brought to him for adjudication."
Page 1892
The rulers of the temple came before Jesus
at this afternoon hour challenging not only his
teaching but his acts. Jesus well knew that
these very men had long publicly taught that his
authority for teaching was Satanic, and that all
his mighty works had been wrought by the power
of the prince of devils. Therefore did the
Master begin his answer to their question by
asking them a counter-question. Said Jesus: "I
would also like to ask you one question which,
if you will answer me, I likewise will tell you
by what authority I do these works. The baptism
of John, whence was it? Did John get his
authority from heaven or from men?"
And
when his questioners heard this, they withdrew
to one side to take counsel among themselves as
to what answer they might give. They had thought
to embarrass Jesus before the multitude, but now
they found themselves much confused before all
who were assembled at that time in the temple
court. And their discomfiture was all the more
apparent when they returned to Jesus, saying:
"Concerning the baptism of John, we cannot
answer; we do not know." And they so answered
the Master because they had reasoned among
themselves: If we shall say from heaven, then
will he say, Why did you not believe him, and
perchance will add that he received his
authority from John; and if we shall say from
men, then might the multitude turn upon us, for
most of them hold that John was a prophet; and
so they were compelled to come before Jesus and
the people confessing that they, the religious
teachers and leaders of Israel, could not (or
would not) express an opinion about John's
mission. And when they had spoken, Jesus,
looking down upon them, said, "Neither will I
tell you by what authority I do these things."
Jesus never intended to appeal to John for his
authority; John had never been ordained by the
Sanhedrin. Jesus' authority was in himself and
in his Father's eternal supremacy.
In
employing this method of dealing with his
adversaries, Jesus did not mean to dodge the
question. At first it may seem that he was
guilty of a masterly evasion, but it was not so.
Jesus was never disposed to take unfair
advantage of even his enemies. In this apparent
evasion he really supplied all his hearers with
the answer to the Pharisees' question as to the
authority behind his mission. They had asserted
that he performed by authority of the prince of
devils. Jesus had repeatedly asserted that all
his teaching and works were by the power and
authority of his Father in heaven. This the
Jewish leaders refused to accept and were
seeking to corner him into admitting that he was
an irregular teacher since he had never been
sanctioned by the Sanhedrin. In answering them
as he did, while not claiming authority from
John, he so satisfied the people with the
inference that the effort of his enemies to
ensnare him was effectively turned upon
themselves and was much to their discredit in
the eyes of all present.
And
it was this genius of the Master for dealing
with his adversaries that made them so afraid of
him. They attempted no more questions that day;
they retired to take further counsel among
themselves. But the people were not slow to
discern the dishonesty and insincerity in these
questions asked by the Jewish rulers. Even the
common folk could not fail to distinguish
between the moral majesty of the Master and the
designing hypocrisy of his enemies. But the
cleansing of the temple had brought the
Sadducees over to the side of the Pharisees in
perfecting the plan to destroy Jesus. And the
Sadducees now represented a majority of the
Sanhedrin.
Page 1893
3.
PARABLE OF THE TWO SONS
As
the caviling Pharisees stood there in silence
before Jesus, he looked down on them and said:
"Since you are in doubt about John's mission and
arrayed in enmity against the teaching and the
works of the Son of Man, give ear while I tell
you a parable: A certain great and respected
landholder had two sons, and desiring the help
of his sons in the management of his large
estates, he came to one of them, saying, `Son,
go work today in my vineyard.' And this
unthinking son answered his father, saying, `I
will not go'; but afterward he repented and
went. When he had found his older son, likewise
he said to him, `Son, go work in my vineyard.'
And this hypocritical and unfaithful son
answered, `Yes, my father, I will go.' But when
his father had departed, he went not. Let me ask
you, which of these sons really did his father's
will?"
And
the people spoke with one accord, saying, "The
first son." And then said Jesus: "Even so; and
now do I declare that the publicans and harlots,
even though they appear to refuse the call to
repentance, shall see the error of their way and
go on into the kingdom of God before you, who
make great pretensions of serving the Father in
heaven while you refuse to do the works of the
Father. It was not you, the Pharisees and
scribes, who believed John, but rather the
publicans and sinners; neither do you believe my
teaching, but the common people hear my words
gladly."
Jesus did not despise the Pharisees and
Sadducees personally. It was their systems of
teaching and practice which he sought to
discredit. He was hostile to no man, but here
was occurring the inevitable clash between a new
and living religion of the spirit and the older
religion of ceremony, tradition, and authority.
All
this time the twelve apostles stood near the
Master, but they did not in any manner
participate in these transactions. Each one of
the twelve was reacting in his own peculiar way
to the events of these closing days of Jesus'
ministry in the flesh, and each one likewise
remained obedient to the Master's injunction to
refrain from all public teaching and preaching
during this Passover week.
4.
PARABLE OF THE ABSENT LANDLORD
When
the chief Pharisees and the scribes who had
sought to entangle Jesus with their questions
had finished listening to the story of the two
sons, they withdrew to take further counsel, and
the Master, turning his attention to the
listening multitude, told another parable:
"There was a good man who was a householder, and
he planted a vineyard. He set a hedge about it,
dug a pit for the wine press, and built a
watchtower for the guards. Then he let this
vineyard out to tenants while he went on a long
journey into another country. And when the
season of the fruits drew near, he sent servants
to the tenants to receive his rental. But they
took counsel among themselves and refused to
give these servants the fruits due their master;
instead, they fell upon his servants, beating
one, stoning another, and sending the others
away empty-handed. And when the householder
heard about all this, he sent other and more
trusted servants to deal with these wicked
tenants, and these they wounded and also treated
shamefully. And then the householder sent his
favorite servant, his steward, and him they
killed. And still, in patience and with
forbearance,
Page 1894
he
dispatched many other servants, but none would
they receive. Some they beat, others they
killed, and when the householder had been so
dealt with, he decided to send his son to deal
with these ungrateful tenants, saying to
himself, `They may mistreat my servants, but
they will surely show respect for my beloved
son.' But when these unrepentant and wicked
tenants saw the son, they reasoned among
themselves: `This is the heir; come, let us kill
him and then the inheritance will be ours.' So
they laid hold on him, and after casting him out
of the vineyard, they killed him. When the lord
of that vineyard shall hear how they have
rejected and killed his son, what will he do to
those ungrateful and wicked tenants?"
And
when the people heard this parable and the
question Jesus asked, they answered, "He will
destroy those miserable men and let out his
vineyard to other and honest farmers who will
render to him the fruits in their season." And
when some of them who heard perceived that this
parable referred to the Jewish nation and its
treatment of the prophets and to the impending
rejection of Jesus and the gospel of the
kingdom, they said in sorrow, "God forbid that
we should go on doing these things."
Jesus saw a group of the Sadducees and Pharisees
making their way through the crowd, and he
paused for a moment until they drew near him,
when he said: "You know how your fathers
rejected the prophets, and you well know that
you are set in your hearts to reject the Son of
Man." And then, looking with searching gaze upon
those priests and elders who were standing near
him, Jesus said: "Did you never read in the
Scripture about the stone which the builders
rejected, and which, when the people had
discovered it, was made into the cornerstone?
And so once more do I warn you that, if you
continue to reject this gospel, presently will
the kingdom of God be taken away from you and be
given to a people willing to receive the good
news and to bring forth the fruits of the
spirit. And there is a mystery about this stone,
seeing that whoso falls upon it, while he is
thereby broken in pieces, shall be saved; but on
whomsoever this stone falls, he will be ground
to dust and his ashes scattered to the four
winds."
When
the Pharisees heard these words, they understood
that Jesus referred to themselves and the other
Jewish leaders. They greatly desired to lay hold
on him then and there, but they feared the
multitude. However, they were so angered by the
Master's words that they withdrew and held
further counsel among themselves as to how they
might bring about his death. And that night both
the Sadducees and the Pharisees joined hands in
the plan to entrap him the next day.
5.
PARABLE OF THE MARRIAGE FEAST
After the scribes and rulers had withdrawn,
Jesus addressed himself again to the assembled
crowd and spoke the parable of the wedding
feast. He said:
"The
kingdom of heaven may be likened to a certain
king who made a marriage feast for his son and
dispatched messengers to call those who had
previously been invited to the feast to come,
saying, `Everything is ready for the marriage
supper at the king's palace.' Now, many of those
who had once promised to attend, at this time
refused to come. When the king heard of these
rejections of his invitation, he sent other
servants and messengers, saying: `Tell all those
who were bidden, to come, for, behold, my dinner
is ready. My oxen and my fatlings
Page 1895
are
killed, and all is in readiness for the
celebration of the forthcoming marriage of my
son.' But again did the thoughtless make light
of this call of their king, and they went their
ways, one to the farm, another to the pottery,
and others to their merchandise. Still others
were not content thus to slight the king's call,
but in open rebellion they laid hands on the
king's messengers and shamefully mistreated
them, even killing some of them. And when the
king perceived that his chosen guests, even
those who had accepted his preliminary
invitation and had promised to attend the
wedding feast, had finally rejected his call and
in rebellion had assaulted and slain his chosen
messengers, he was exceedingly wroth. And then
this insulted king ordered out his armies and
the armies of his allies and instructed them to
destroy these rebellious murderers and to burn
down their city.
"And
when he had punished those who spurned his
invitation, he appointed yet another day for the
wedding feast and said to his messengers: `They
who were first bidden to the wedding were not
worthy; so go now into the parting of the ways
and into the highways and even beyond the
borders of the city, and as many as you shall
find, bid even these strangers to come in and
attend this wedding feast.' And then these
servants went out into the highways and the
out-of-the-way places, and they gathered
together as many as they found, good and bad,
rich and poor, so that at last the wedding
chamber was filled with willing guests. When all
was ready, the king came in to view his guests,
and much to his surprise he saw there a man
without a wedding garment. The king, since he
had freely provided wedding garments for all his
guests, addressing this man, said: `Friend, how
is it that you come into my guest chamber on
this occasion without a wedding garment?' And
this unprepared man was speechless. Then said
the king to his servants: `Cast out this
thoughtless guest from my house to share the lot
of all the others who have spurned my
hospitality and rejected my call. I will have
none here except those who delight to accept my
invitation, and who do me the honor to wear
those guest garments so freely provided for
all.'"
After speaking this parable, Jesus was about to
dismiss the multitude when a sympathetic
believer, making his way through the crowds
toward him, asked: "But, Master, how shall we
know about these things? how shall we be ready
for the king's invitation? what sign will you
give us whereby we shall know that you are the
Son of God?" And when the Master heard this, he
said, "Only one sign shall be given you." And
then, pointing to his own body, he continued,
"Destroy this temple, and in three days I will
raise it up." But they did not understand him,
and as they dispersed, they talked among
themselves, saying, "Almost fifty years has this
temple been in building, and yet he says he will
destroy it and raise it up in three days." Even
his own apostles did not comprehend the
significance of this utterance, but
subsequently, after his resurrection, they
recalled what he had said.
About four o'clock this afternoon Jesus beckoned
to his apostles and indicated that he desired to
leave the temple and to go to Bethany for their
evening meal and a night of rest. On the way up
Olivet Jesus instructed Andrew, Philip, and
Thomas that, on the morrow, they should
establish a camp nearer the city which they
could occupy during the remainder of the
Passover week. In compliance with this
instruction the following morning they pitched
their tents in the hillside ravine overlooking
the public camping park of Gethsemane, on a plot
of ground belonging to Simon of Bethany.
Page 1896
Again it was a silent group of Jews who made
their way up the western slope of Olivet on this
Monday night. These twelve men, as never before,
were beginning to sense that something tragic
was about to happen. While the dramatic
cleansing of the temple during the early morning
had aroused their hopes of seeing the Master
assert himself and manifest his mighty powers,
the events of the entire afternoon only operated
as an anticlimax in that they all pointed to the
certain rejection of Jesus' teaching by the
Jewish authorities. The apostles were gripped by
suspense and were held in the firm grasp of a
terrible uncertainty. They realized that only a
few short days could intervene between the
events of the day just passed and the crash of
an impending doom. They all felt that something
tremendous was about to happen, but they knew
not what to expect. They went to their various
places for rest, but they slept very little.
Even the Alpheus twins were at last aroused to
the realization that the events of the Master's
life were moving swiftly toward their final
culmination.
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