Friday, June 8, 2012

Day 8: The Plot, and the Parables, Thicken (Chapters 22-24)

You know how it's getting worse with the religious leaders?  The middle of these three chapters is devoted to a long and passionate harangue against the hypocrisy of those who lead others, who put heavy religious obligations on others, but (in Jesus' view) do not follow their own teachings.    In some versions, this chapter contains this phrase, over and over, "Woe to you!" 

The most vivid of Jesus' sayings in this chapter is the one that describes the Pharisees as a cup whose outside has been cleaned and shiny, but who, on the inside, keep getting dirtier and dirtier.   I have to wonder:  were the Pharisees all really this evil?  What is going on?  (I am considering Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea, both religious leaders themselves who appeared to be friends of Jesus, though they are featured in another Gospel.)

I can't help but think of these as angry words of Jesus, which does (I can't help it) make me think back on Jesus' words in the Sermon on the Mount:  "Everyone who is angry with their brother or sister will be in danger of judgment."  Hmmmm.

In chapter 22, is the first of three parables of judgment:  the wedding banquet.  On the one hand, there is the king who sends a gracious invitation to a huge and wonderful party.  Why would anyone not come?  Then, on the hand, there is the inexplicable indifference and hostility of the intended guests (killing the messengers?  Isn't this a little over the top?)  And then there is the terrible reaction of the king.  Then again, there is the great scene of the servants going out and calling EVERYONE -- good and evil, to come to the wedding banquet.  No checking to see who is acceptable and who is not.  But then there is the one poor soul without wedding clothes.  Good news?  Bad news?  pick your verse.

And chapter 24 is a small sample of what we call apocalyptic writing:  Jesus warning people about what will happen at the end of times.  There are wars and rumors of wars, visions and images of fear and destruction.  And though many people have tried to name the day and the hour, "nobody knows when that day or hour will come, not the heavenly angels and not the Son.  Only the father knows."   Still, it seems that we are fascinated with trying to figure it out.  Why?

Two things to think about when we read chapter 24: 1) the destruction of the temple in Jerusalem in 70 A.D. probably seemed like the beginning of the end of times to many of the early Christians, and 2) soon will be the day and hour of the destruction of Jesus' body on the cross.

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