41 lines
		
	
	
	
		
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			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
		
		
			
		
	
	
			41 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			2.1 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
|  | +++ | |||
|  | title = "Luke 7:24–35" | |||
|  | date = "2022-11-18" | |||
|  | +++ | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | ### [Read the passage.](https://biblia.com/bible/esv/Lk7.24-35)
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | When John's disciples leave with their answer, Jesus begins teaching the crowds | |||
|  | about John, and his role in God's plan. He starts with the question, "What did | |||
|  | you go out to see?" and gives some obviously wrong answers as a rhetorical | |||
|  | device. This is to get the listeners to be introspective and think about why | |||
|  | they were interested in hearing what this hermit in the wilderness was saying. | |||
|  | John warned of coming judgement and of the need for repentance to avoid the | |||
|  | wrath of God. But why did the people think he was right about it? Because he | |||
|  | was "a prophet", and then Jesus asserts that he was more than just any prophet, | |||
|  | but the prophesied forerunner to the Messiah. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | In verse 28, Jesus says no one born of woman is greater than John, but everyone | |||
|  | in the kingdom of God is greater than John. Is He saying John isn't in the | |||
|  | kingdom of God, that he isn't saved? No, I think He's showing how great a | |||
|  | difference there is between a physical birth and a spiritual rebirth. You can | |||
|  | do all these good deeds, know a lot of truth, even have your life be predicted | |||
|  | in Scriptures, but it doesn't matter at all if you aren't in God's kingdom. The | |||
|  | people who had been baptized by John understood what Jesus was getting at, and | |||
|  | they agreed, because it lined up with what they had already heard from John. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | The Pharisees and experts of the Law of Moses didn't agree with this, because | |||
|  | they were banking their spiritual future on their good works and their | |||
|  | knowledge of the truth. They rejected both John and Jesus, so Jesus calls out | |||
|  | their contrariness. He compares them to children who don't want to play | |||
|  | anything that someone else suggests. John lived an ascetic life, to an extent | |||
|  | that he was accused of mental illness. Jesus feasted and attended parties with | |||
|  | sinners and religious outcasts, so they called Him a glutton and a drunkard. | |||
|  | These are the same critics, and they weren't satisfied by anyone's message but | |||
|  | their own. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | * * * | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | Let us be receptive to Your message, and not cling to our own paths, which will | |||
|  | not bring us to You in the first place. |