annotated_annals/content/bible_journal/luke_11:27-32.md

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2022-12-11 10:08:34 -05:00
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title = "Luke 11:2732"
date = "2022-12-11"
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### [Read the passage.](https://biblia.com/bible/esv/Lk11.27-32)
While Jesus was talking about demons and the state of people's souls, a woman
calls out a blessing on His mother. It seems to me like an odd time for it, but
perhaps she really enjoyed what Jesus was saying. Or maybe she was trying to
change the subject. In any carse, Jesus responds by saying it is better to be
blessed by keeping God's word.
Jesus moves on to address the insincere requests for Him to perform a sign.
It's hard to tell if this was immediately after the previous teaching, later
that day, or some other time. All we know is "when the crowds were increasing."
(_v. 29_) He tells them that the only sign they would get is the sign of Jonah,
alluding to the three days the prophet spent inside the fish, cut off from the
world. In the same way, Jesus would spend three days in a tomb to then emerge
preaching a message of repentance.
However, the queen of Ethiopia and the men of Ninevah from Jonah's time will
both rise up and condemn the Jews of Jesus's day at the time of judgement. Each
of them responded to God's message correctly, and they did not have as much
knowledge and resources available to them as the Jews did. King Solomon did not
perfectly follow God's commands in acquiring wives and wealth, to his
detriment, but the queen of Ethiopia still came a great distance to learn the
wisdom God had given him. Jonah was a rebellious, racist prophet, and yet the
Ninevites listened to God's call for repentance through him. How bad will it be
for the Jews who heard the very Son of God Himself speak directly to them and
reject Him?
How bad will it be for us, who have the entirety of Scriptures translated into
our native languages, updated every few years, with instant access to it and
also to the writings of the greatest minds who have studied it for _millenia_,
and still don't pay attention to it?
* * *
Have mercy on us, for we deserve all the judgements You have promised.