Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Reveler or Robber

 

And He began to teach and say to them, “Is it not written, ‘MY HOUSE SHALL BE CALLED A HOUSE OF PRAYER FOR ALL THE NATIONS’? But you have made it a ROBBERS’ DEN. (Mark 11:17 [NASB])

Jesus “began teaching them.” This word “teaching” (didasko) most often refers to the teaching of Scripture (the written word of God) from the Bible. In this passage, Jesus was in the outer court of the temple. The outer court was part of the temple. This outer court is where the non-Jew believers in YHWH could take part in worship with the Jews. It had also become the place where people could buy their sacrificial animals for their worship. This was especially helpful to people who traveled from afar to worship at the temple. They would not have to carry, cart, or lead the sacrificial animal as they traveled to Jerusalem.

If these merchants offered something necessary for worship, then in their minds, it was okay to sell the animals to the worship attenders. So, why was Jesus angry with them in this passage? The merchants were selling the animals for a price greater than they required in every other day of the week. The people could have bought an animal at the market any other day for less. In addition to this, these merchants received permission to sell the animals and to sell them for a higher price from the temple leaders—the priests. Why would the priests allow selling within the temple walls and for a higher price? Because the priests received part of the receipts from sales and the merchants had to get approval for each animal. The chief priest determined if the animal met the standards God required according to His law. (Remember, people often willfully misinterpret God’s laws for their own purposes.) The merchants and priests made money in the outer court instead of aiding the travelers to prepare their hearts, minds, spirits, and bodies to worship YHWH.

What did Jesus teach the people in this passage? He used an Old Testament prophecy about the temple to compare what it had become to what God intended it to be. In Isaiah 56:7 and Jeremiah 7:11. God spoke through these two prophets. In Isaiah 56:7b, God said through Him, “Their burnt offerings and their sacrifices will be acceptable on My altar; for My house will be called a house of prayer for all the peoples.” God made promises to everyone who obeyed Him and came to Him in worship. When people—Jews and Gentiles—came to God’s house to worship Him, then He would accept their sacrifices and people would know His house is a house of prayer. The worship of YHWH by people would be known and told to people everywhere so that they, too, would want to worship God in His house (Vs. 8b). Though these first eight verses sound like Isaiah prophesied about God’s promises and joy for the people of Judah, verse nine bursts that bubble. He wrote, “All you wild animals, all you animals in the forest, come eat.” God told the people they could have had the promises of their covenant with God and could have had joy in worshipping Him. Instead, they would become prey to their predators. God would allow other nations to overtake His people because they forsook their promises to Him.

God spoke through His prophet in Jeremiah 7:11. He said, “‘Has this house, which is called by My name, become a den of robbers in your sight? Behold, I Myself have seen it,’ declares the LORD.” Before this verse, God did not couch His condemnation of the people in lovely promises, as Isaiah had done when He wrote what God told Him. Jeremiah prophesied to Judah about the people turning their backs on God.

When Jesus spoke to the people in the outer court of the temple—the merchants, priests, and people buying or using the outer court as a shortcut instead of walking around the outside of the temple wall—He used Isaiah’s and Jeremiah’s prophesies. These prophesies are the ones about which people would have heard taught and read, that God judges people who distracted others from the purpose His temple. That purpose is to worship YHWH. God said His temple is to be “a house of prayer.” A house of prayer is where a person intentionally goes seeking God by praying, listening for His voice, listening to Scripture readings, meditating, listening to the teaching of His word. Being with God begins with intentionality. It requires a heart seeking God, one praying and seeking Him, His will, knowledge, understanding, and direction, and seeking to worship Him with confession, repentance, praise, and thanks.

Jesus spoke to the people in the outer courts of the temple before Passover week. His purpose for entering Jerusalem then was to fulfill prophecy (Zechariah 9:9) and to make public His claim to be the Messiah and the King of Israel. Jesus rode into Jerusalem as a king, but on a humble donkey’s colt and not a war stallion like earthly warrior kings. He accepted the homage of the people for the first time in His ministry. Jesus did not tell them to be quiet about who He is. After that day, of people acknowledging Him as the Messiah, Jesus left Jerusalem. The purpose of His entry happened.

The next day, when Jesus returned to Jerusalem and the temple, He did so with the acceptance and acknowledgement by the people of who He is. When He entered the temple, Jesus challenged the priests, merchants, and moneychangers about what they were doing in the outer court of the temple. The authority by which He did this and the peoples’ recognition of Him as King of Israel made His actions more potent and caused more alarm in the religious leaders’ minds and hearts. Instead of the temple of God being called a “House of prayer,” the King of Israel called it a den of robbers. Jesus did more than that; He proclaimed that they, these three groups of people, had turned the temple into a robbers’ lair—a place where robbers felt relaxed and secure in what they did. This implied the religious leaders’ consent of these merchants and moneychangers in the temple flagrantly extorting the temple worshippers.

Whenever Jesus speaks, people need to listen. Matthew 21:13 records this same episode in Jesus’ ministry. Matthew wrote the chief priests and scribes became indignant after Jesus sent the “robbers” out of the temple court (Matthew 21:15). Mark wrote the chief priests and scribes were afraid of Jesus and began seeking a way to kill Him (Mark 11:18). These religious leaders, by their permission, also were robbers. When Jesus spoke, people responded. Some fled. Some fought. Some feted. Even now, Jesus calls to each person. He speaks to them in the person’s context, whatever is happening in his/her life and whatever he/she needs. A huge number of people run when they feel Him convicting them or calling them to Himself. They flee. Some people try to disprove Jesus as the Christ or that any God exists. They fight. By doing this, they rob other people of the chance to hear about Jesus then. Other people knew a God had to exist and waited with longing in their hearts for there to be more to life than what they see and experience. When these people feel the Spirit convicting them and hear Jesus calling to them, they turn to Him with open arms and then tell everyone they meet about Him. These people fete Jesus; they revel, rejoice, and celebrate.

Today, we each get to decide for ourselves who Jesus is for us. People have told us of His story of love for us. We have heard His voice and felt His conviction in our hearts. Each of us in our own way has been robbers. We have taken our lives to live for ourselves. We have refused to acknowledge who God and His Son are. Some of us may have even slandered God. Those are the actions of the priests, scribes, merchants, and moneychangers. Today, Jesus is right in front of you—in your heart, mind, and spirit. He calls you to acknowledge Him as your Messiah and King—your Savior and Lord. Instead of fighting or fleeing, join others and fete Jesus. Rejoice in Him and because of Him and what He did for you.

Who do you choose to be—reveler or robber?