annotated_annals/content/bible_journal/luke_7:24-35.md
2022-11-18 07:49:14 -05:00

41 lines
2.1 KiB
Markdown
Raw Permalink Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

+++
title = "Luke 7:2435"
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.