Luke 19:41–48
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							|  | @ -0,0 +1,48 @@ | ||||||
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|  | title = "Luke 19:41–48" | ||||||
|  | date = "2023-01-21" | ||||||
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|  | 
 | ||||||
|  | ### [Read the passage.](https://biblia.com/bible/esv/Lk19.41-48) | ||||||
|  | 
 | ||||||
|  | Amidst all of the excitement of the Messiah coming to Jerusalem, with all the | ||||||
|  | people praising God for fulfilling His promises, when Jesus sees the city He | ||||||
|  | starts crying. And these aren't tears of joy, but of sadness. He explains why | ||||||
|  | in His lament that Jerusalem doesn't know what's actually happening in it, in | ||||||
|  | spite of all the hubbub and uproar that is presently happening around Him. | ||||||
|  | Furthermore, it will not know because the city will be besieged and destroyed, | ||||||
|  | and it cannot know because they have been hidden. | ||||||
|  | 
 | ||||||
|  | This is a hard thing to come to grips with. God prevented the people from | ||||||
|  | knowing what Jesus was really about, and thus the city was judged with | ||||||
|  | destruction in A.D. 70. One might question how that is fair and just. I'm not | ||||||
|  | sure I can fully answer that, but I can assert that it must be, because God is | ||||||
|  | entirely just. I can also point out that if He hadn't, then Jesus might not | ||||||
|  | have been crucified which would leave all of us in our sins forever, prove God | ||||||
|  | a liar, and make all of reality a contradiction. But we have seen things like | ||||||
|  | this througout the Luke's account, where plain truth is hidden from people | ||||||
|  | until the proper time. The only proper response is to trust in God's | ||||||
|  | unchangeable character and goodness. | ||||||
|  | 
 | ||||||
|  | Luke spends less time on the cleansing of the temple, but all four Gospel | ||||||
|  | writers include the event. The merchants who had set up shop in the temple were | ||||||
|  | providing legitimate services; travelers would not necessarily bring their own | ||||||
|  | sacrificial animals with them on a journey, and only a certain kind of coin was | ||||||
|  | accepted as offerings. Having a place near the temple to get these things was | ||||||
|  | convenient. However, it seems clear that the priests didn't care about the | ||||||
|  | worship any Gentiles would offer because these merchants were set up in the | ||||||
|  | only place the Gentiles were allowed in the temple. They had forgotten that | ||||||
|  | Israel was supposed to be a blessing to all nations by being a visible sign of | ||||||
|  | the Lord's goodness to the whole world. | ||||||
|  | 
 | ||||||
|  | After cleansing the temple, Jesus begins teaching there every day. We are also | ||||||
|  | told that "principal men of the people" are now trying to find a way to kill | ||||||
|  | him along with the chief priests and scribes. I would not be surprised to learn | ||||||
|  | that these men are the owners of the businesses Jesus disrupted. But Jesus is | ||||||
|  | still extremely popular, so they aren't able to move against Him publicly or | ||||||
|  | they would cause a riot. | ||||||
|  | 
 | ||||||
|  | * * * | ||||||
|  | 
 | ||||||
|  | Your goodness and Your power are the only hope we have for this life or the one | ||||||
|  | to come. | ||||||
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