Showing posts with label Sign of Jonah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sign of Jonah. Show all posts

Saturday, November 20, 2021

Matthew 16:1-12 - Watch Out for That Yeast!


Watch Out for That Yeast! - November 20, 2021

Matthew 16:1-12, The Message - Some Pharisees and Sadducees badgered him again, pressing him to prove himself to them. He told them, “You have a saying that goes, ‘Red sky at night, sailor’s delight; red sky at morning, sailors take warning.’ You find it easy enough to forecast the weather—why can’t you read the signs of the times? An evil and wanton generation is always wanting signs and wonders. The only sign you’ll get is the Jonah sign.” Then he spun around and walked away.

On their way to the other side of the lake, the disciples discovered they had forgotten to bring along bread. In the meantime, Jesus said to them, “Keep a sharp eye out for Pharisee-Sadducee yeast.”

Thinking he was scolding them for forgetting bread, they discussed in whispers what to do. Jesus knew what they were doing and said, “Why all these worried whispers about forgetting the bread? Baby believers! Haven’t you caught on yet? Don’t you remember the five loaves of bread and the five thousand people, and how many baskets of fragments you picked up? Or the seven loaves that fed four thousand, and how many baskets of leftovers you collected? Haven’t you realized yet that bread isn’t the problem? The problem is yeast, Pharisee-Sadducee yeast.” Then they got it: that he wasn’t concerned about eating, but teaching—the Pharisee-Sadducee kind of teaching.

 

                Back when we were in Matthew 12, we hear Jesus having almost the same encounter with the Pharisees – the Pharisees asking for a sign and Jesus scolding them.  He tells them again that “the only sign you’ll get is the Jonah sign.”  Here’s a couple of excerpts from the reflection on Matthew 12:38-45 about what Jesus is suggesting:

                We need to hear Jesus’s warnings to those who should know better, because the warnings are      for us as well.  Don’t continue to demand proof as a basis for faith when all the proof necessary has already been given.  Only people who have already steeled themselves against such proof                and betrayed the faith insist on signs being given.   

                Jesus says that the only sign that will ever be given for such rebels is “the sign of Jonah.”  Jonah   was willingly thrown into the sea by those in peril so that those in peril might be saved from the              wrath all around them.  Long before He is crucified, Jesus alludes to his ultimate sign;  he will die            at the hands of those who oppose Him, but their “victory” is actually their once-and-for-all   defeat.  Truth will prevail in the end.  And the “generation” that fought against truth and             brought others down with them will find themselves in a worse situation than they were in                 before.

Right after this happens for a second time, the disciples forget to bring bread to the next place where they and Jesus will be staying.  Jesus says to them, “Keep a sharp eye out for Pharisee-Sadducee yeast.”

The disciples think Jesus is mad about not having bread. 

                We should note a sad irony here.  First, the disciples have just witnessed Jesus, on two occasions producing enough bread for thousands of people from meager resources.  It is no wonder that Jesus is incredulous at the pure lack of faith that He would be worried about not having enough bread.  “Teaching! Teaching! I’m talking about the faithless teaching of the Pharisees, you dolts!,” is what Jesus seems to be saying.

                The Pharisees are not the only ones missing the signs.  Those closest to Jesus can’t seem to see what has been happening right before their eyes in the time they have been with Jesus.  I find it interesting that Matthew would be completely honest about his own lack of faith in his telling of the story.  He is one of the disciples who are clueless about what Jesus has been trying to tell them for months.  I think Matthew does this because he knows that if the disciples struggled to see what God was doing right in front of them, than his readers will also struggle.  Matthew knows that his struggle is our struggle as well. 

                I am currently reading a book that contends that we humans tend to embrace information as true if we simply hear it enough times or if it already seems to confirm what we already think.  For instance, what would you say if I asked how you calculate a dog’s age equivalent in human years?  Multiply by 7, right?  Unfortunately, there is no science behind this.  It is a saying that has simply been repeated over and over since the 1300’s.  We embrace it as true because we have heard it represented as truth our whole lives.  This is the warning Jesus is making to His disciples (and us).  They have blindly embraced the faithless teaching of the Pharisees and it has caused them to be blind to what is happening right in front of them.  They worry about bread when Jesus has just supernaturally provided bread to thousands multiple times. 

                Sometimes, perhaps even many times, we need to let go of, or at least question, the “truths” that have been represented to us as “truth and nothing but the truth” so much that we can’t see truth right before us. The truth is that God is always doing something right before us, but we often don’t perceive it because we see through “faithless filters.”  You will be provided for by our Savior and any “teaching” that causes you to doubt that, no matter how long you have believed it, should be questioned.  God is not angered by the frivolous mistakes we make; he is saddened by our lack of faith.

 

Question:  Are there any notions (yeast) that you have always accepted as true that are getting in the way of your trusting God completely?

 

Prayer:  Lord I believe, help me in my unbelief!  Amen.

 

Prayer Focus:  Pray for the homeless as we move into the colder months of the year.

 

Song: Oh Me Of Little Faith - Matthew West

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RykT6VN584Y

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Matthew 12:38-45 - The Sign of Jonah

 


Daily Devo w/ Pastor Eric October 26, 2021

The “Sign of Jonah”


Matthew 12:38-45, NLT - One day some teachers of religious law and Pharisees came to Jesus and said, “Teacher, we want you to show us a miraculous sign to prove your authority.”

But Jesus replied, “Only an evil, adulterous generation would demand a miraculous sign; but the only sign I will give them is the sign of the prophet Jonah.  For as Jonah was in the belly of the great fish for three days and three nights, so will the Son of Man be in the heart of the earth for three days and three nights.

“The people of Nineveh will stand up against this generation on judgment day and condemn it, for they repented of their sins at the preaching of Jonah. Now someone greater than Jonah is here—but you refuse to repent.  The queen of Sheba will also stand up against this generation on judgment day and condemn it, for she came from a distant land to hear the wisdom of Solomon. Now someone greater than Solomon is here—but you refuse to listen.

“When an evil spirit leaves a person, it goes into the desert, seeking rest but finding none.  Then it says, ‘I will return to the person I came from.’ So it returns and finds its former home empty, swept, and in order.  Then the spirit finds seven other spirits more evil than itself, and they all enter the person and live there. And so that person is worse off than before. That will be the experience of this evil generation.”

 

We rejoin the spirted conversation between Jesus and the Pharisees/religious teachers.  After being warned by Jesus that they are teetering on the edge of sin that is unforgivable, the leaders ask Jesus for a sign to prove he has authority to say such harsh things to them.  Remember, they have witnessed several “signs” already, including demon-exorcisms, countless healings, and even a resurrection or two.  So Jesus, who isn’t a show-us-a-miracle traveling road show, refuses to perform on-demand for the leaders who will no more be swayed from their murderous intent than they have been up until now.  Instead, Jesus’s critique of them continues.

“Only an evil, adulterous generation would demand a miraculous sign; but the only sign I will give them is the sign of the prophet Jonah.”(v. 39)

Once again, Jesus stops short of actually calling the leaders evil and adulterous, but He might as well have.  But as I have encouraged us to do before, let’s not distance ourselves from the targets of Jesus’s polemic here.  We need to hear Jesus’s warnings to those who should know better, because the warnings are for us as well.  Don’t continue to demand proof as a basis for faith when all the proof necessary has already been given.  Only people who have already steeled themselves against such proof and betrayed the faith insist on signs being given.    

                Jesus is angry and one of the words he uses here helps us understand why – generation (“only and evil, adulterous generation…”).  Jesus is making a charge against specific individuals; he’s leveling an evaluation of an entire generation.  Implied here is the troubling thought that, not only have these leaders turned against the God they claim to serve, they are leading and will continue to lead others to do the same.  Jesus is not just calling out evil. He is calling out systemic evil.  When Nineveh was called out by Jonah, they repented.  When the Queen of Sheba heard about the wisdom of Solomon, she traveled across the world to hear it personally.  But now, God-in-the-flesh is standing before these leaders and they continue to demand proof and cast doubts into the hearts of their followers.  Shame, shame.

                This grave warning still calls out all who persist in setting themselves against obvious truth and leading others to do the same.  Jesus says that the only sign that will ever be given for such rebels is “the sign of Jonah.”  Jonah was willingly thrown into the sea by those in peril so that those in peril might be saved from the wrath all around them.  Long before He is crucified, Jesus alludes to his ultimate sign;  he will die at the hands of those who oppose Him, but their “victory” is actually their once-and-for-all defeat.  Truth will prevail in the end.  And the “generation” that fought against truth and brought others down with them will find themselves in a worse situation than they were in before.

                It’s extremely hard to resist the temptation to conclude that Jesus’s warning is not for us.  But every generation recorded in the Bible and all the generations since the last word of the Bible was scribbled down have struggled with embracing the obvious signs they have already been given in favor of looking for a sign that will never come.  I already have all the “proof” I will ever need that I should follow Jesus with all that I have.  You have that proof as well.  This leads to a very uncomfortable question.

 

Question:  Why do we continue to resist truth we already know deep in our hearts is right? 

 

Prayer:  Have mercy on us Lord when we refuse to receive the truth You offer – the truth that could set us free.  Help us let go of our resistance even when it is so hard to do so, lest we become part of a generation that stands on the wrong side of Your warning.  Amen.

 

Prayer Focus:  Pray for the healing of divisions within the worldwide church. 

 

Song:  Come Tear Down the Walls/I Surrender All - Revere

https://youtu.be/pJhvXhA2CxU?t=103