Wednesday, January 21, 2026

NEW TESTAMENT BIBLE STORY-- GOSPELS #10


 New Testament Bible Story

Chapter Ten:

Christ's Early Teaching and Healings

Some rejected Jesus
     John the baptist had already told his disciples that the
time was very near when he, John, must decrease in his work for
God, and the one called Jesus, the Messiah, must increase in His
work for the Lord. That time had now come.
     John was a very outspoken prophet and minister of the
Eternal God. He often called a spade a spade, laid in on the
line, put the cards on the table as they say. He was this way
with other religious leaders as we have seen. He was this way
with even some of the secular rulers of the Government of Rome.
He was not afraid to call sin what it was, sin. So disturbed did
a few Roman governors get that finally they could stand it no
longer, and John was thrown into prison.
     
     Jesus, on hearing this news withdrew from Galilee, and
leaving Nazareth He went and dwelt in Capernaum by the seaside,
which was in the territory of the tribes of Zebulun and Naphtali
where those tribes lived before they were deported by the
Assyrians way back in about 720 B.C.
     This was actually a fulfillment of that written about by
Isaiah, "The land of Zebulun and the land O Naphtali, towards
the east, across the Jordan, Galilee of the Gentiles - the people
who lived in darkness have come to see a wonderful light, and for
those who sat in the place and in the shadow of death, light has
dawned upon them" (Isaiah 9:1-3).
     This is another instance that makes prophecy interesting to
say the least. For as you read Isaiah 9, not many would gather
from it that it would have a fulfillment in this account of Jesus
going to stay there as recorded by the Gospel of Matthew
(Mat.4:12-16).

     It was from that time forth that Christ really began to
proclaim, "The time is fulfilled, and the Kingdom of God is at
hand, repent, and believe in the gospel" (Mark 1:14,15).

     Then Jesus returned to Galilee with great power from the
Spirit. Much report went out concerning Him into all the
surrounding region. And He taught in their synagogues,
being well received and praised and glorified by all (Luke 4:
14,15). 
JESUS RETURNS TO NAZARETH AND IS REJECTED 
     Jesus was a regular Sabbath synagogue attender, and on
returning to His home town Nazareth, where He spent much of His
childhood, He naturally went to church on the Sabbath day. 
     Part of the service was to always have someone read from the
Scriptures. Jesus stood and all knew He was willing and wanting
to read from God's holy word. He was handed the book of Isaiah,
the ancient prophet. Jesus opened the book and deliberately
found a certain passage, and He began to read:

     "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed
     me to preach good news to the poor, He has sent me to
     proclaim freedom to the  captives and to give sight to the
     blind, to set at rest and peace those who are oppressed, to
     proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord."
     
     He then stopped reading, closed the book and sat down. How
He read those words must have caught the attention of every
single person in the building, for it is stated that all eyes
were fixed on Him. If they thought His presence and voice was
dynamic, they certainly were not expecting His next words to
them.
     "Today this very Scripture has been fulfilled right in your
sight and your hearing."

     They really did not quite "get it" - they all continued to
speak well of Him and wondered at the eloquent words coming from
His lips. 
     Then they began to mutter among themselves, "Isn't this
young fellow the son of Joseph." And by that they were meaning
to say that Jesus was just the son of a tradesman, a carpenter,
not the son of some prince, or king, or prestigious rich person
who could have been given some expensive and honored education in
the top Universities within the lands of the Roman Empire.

     Jesus knew their thoughts, how they were thinking He could
amount to no great acclaim, for to them He was just a "no-body"
like themselves.
     Christ answered them, "Doubtless you will quote to me the
proverb, 'Physician, heal yourself; what we have heard you did
over in Capernaum, well do here also in your own place of
upbringing.'"
     He went on speaking, "It is a truth that no prophet is
acceptable in his own home land.  I tell you, there were many
widows in Israel in the days of Elijah, when the heavens
were shut up for three years and six months, when there was a
great famine in all the land. And Elijah was sent to none of them
but only to one widow of Zarephath in the land of Sion. And there
were many lepers in Israel in the time of the prophet Elisha; and
none of them were cleansed, but only Naaman the Syrian."

     Oh, they got the message now alright.  He was now telling
them that many who should have "been with it" and should have had
God with them, were out in left field, sat on the grass eating
their lunch, when they should have been part of the big ball
game, and playing on the winning team. On the team where the only
true Holy God was captain, and Jesus as His vice-captain. If they
had been spiritually mental and ready to join that team then
miracles would have happened to them as it did to that one widow
and to that Naaman the Syrian. Jesus was telling them they just
were not alert and driving in the drivers seat, but were curled
up in the back seat, sleeping.

     Oh, yes, they got the picture this time, and were they ever
white hot with anger.
     So full of wrath they were that they pushed Him along out of
the city, to a brow of the hill that the city was built on. There
they were planning to actually throw Him down head-first, with a
possible result being death. They were ready to kill Him.
     Jesus must have looked at them at this point in such a way,
and with the very power of the Spirit of God flowing from Him,
they were stunned. Just could not move, could not bring
themselves to throw Him down the cliff. Jesus, we are told,
simply walked through the middle of the crowd and went His way
(Luke 4: 16-30).

PETER, ANDREW, JAMES, JOHN, ARE OFFICIALLY CALLED 
TO JESUS' MINISTRY, AFTER A GREAT CATCH OF FISH

     Jesus had already been with some of the men who would now be
called by Him to follow Him on a constant basis during His
ministry. We have seen this in past chapters.
     There was a time of overlapping of the ministry of John the
baptist and the ministry of Jesus. Jesus had been out here and
there, getting His feet wet as we might say, easing into the main
full time work that was now ahead of Him. He had, on some of
those occasions taken along a number of men, all whom we could
classify as "His disciples."
     Now, it was time for picking ones whom He wanted to follow
Him on a daily basis, as a way of life with Him, until the time
for His death.

     The Gospel writer that covers this account in-depth is Luke.
He takes eleven verses to fill us in on the details of these four
men (Peter, Andrew, James and John) being called from their
normal secular work jobs to full time in Jesus' ministry.

     Jesus was by the lake of Gennesaret. He was preaching to
them the word of God. The crowd grew and grew, until they were
pressing all around Him. He saw two boats, empty, for the
fishermen were washing their nets on the shore. Jesus climbs into
one, which belonged to Peter, and asked him to move it out, away
from the shore. Now He could teach the people and not have them
pressing too close to Him.
     After the teaching session, Jesus asked Peter (and it would
seem Andrew his brother was with him, if we look at the other
Gospel writers) to pull further out into the water. This they
were glad to do as they could cast their nets out to pull in some
fish. Not far away was another fishing boat with James and John,
also two brothers, and with them was their father Zebedee. They
were fishing partners with Peter and Andrew.

     Peter was not sure if he really wanted to cast out his net
for they had worked all night and had caught not one fish. Jesus
said, "Go out into the deep and put down your nets for a catch."
     "Well...okay," said Peter, "For you we will do so, but I
do not see the point of all this, for we got nothing all night
long."
     
     It was not long before Peter's face turned into a look of
astonishment. The catch of fish was so great the nets were
breaking. So Peter called on their friends and fellow
fishermen, James and John, in the boat nearby, to come and help
them. The help was given and both boats were filled so full with
fish that they were close to sinking.
     Simon Peter was so awe stuck at all this, he knew he was in
the presence of God in the flesh, Immanuel , and that hit him
like a plank of wood between the eyes, that he, Simon Peter, was
a sinner. He cried out for Jesus to leave Him, saying, "Depart
from me, O Lord, for I am a sinful man."

     All the men that were there were just as astonished.  But
all this was done to teach those men something much more
permanent in nature. Something of far more important value than
catching mere physical fish. Jesus said to Peter and the others,
"Do not be afraid; from this time forth you will be catching
men."
     Of course Christ was meaning that their new job was to catch
or bring people into the spiritual family of God, into the
Kingdom of God, by proclaiming the Gospel of salvation.

     Jesus now beckoned those four men to put away being
fishermen and to be with Him as part of His daily life disciples.
They immediately obeyed and went with Him. Zebedee (the father of
James and John) and some hired hands were not called to go with
Jesus, they stayed and presumably continued the fishing
partnership and business, but without Peter, Andrew, James and
John ( Luke 5:1-11; Mat.4:18-22; Mark 1:16-20; ).

TEACHING IN CAPERNAUM

     Back to Capernaum goes Jesus, and on the Sabbath day He
immediately goes to the synagogue and teaches. They were, it is
written, astonished at His teaching and His words, for they knew
He was teaching them as one having authority, being very sure of
Himself, and that what He taught was the very truth of God. This
was indeed different to them, for the scribes taught in no such
way, for they were not at all sure many times as to what the
Scriptures taught or said, or how to understand them ( Mark
1:21,22 ).

JESUS HEALS A MAN WITH A DEMON

     As He was teaching in the synagogue there came up to Him a
man possessed with a demon.  "Ah, why are you having anything to
do with us, Jesus of Nazareth?" the demon cried out in a loud
voice through the man. "I know who you are, others may not,
but I sure know who you are. You are the Holy One, of God" the
demon cried out further.
     "Be quiet, and come out of him," answered Jesus.  
     The demon throw the man to the ground, but did not hurt him.
Then the demon came out of him as Jesus commanded.

     The people around were all shocked with amazement. "What is
this word He speaks? For with authority and with power He
commands the evil spirits, and they come out of people."

     So, the report of the mighty words and powerful acts of
Jesus spread into all the surrounding regions (Luke 4:33-37).

JESUS HEALS PETER'S MOTHER-IN-LAW AND OTHERS

     After the synagogue meeting was over Jesus was invited over
to the house of Peter and Andrew. James and John were invited to
come also. There in the house was Peter's mother-in-law, who was
very sick with a fever.
     He came in and took her by the hand, so lifting her up, and
the fever immediately left her. She was now able to serve them
and provide them with physical food for a good Sabbath meal. Yes,
others may have been able to have done all that, but Jesus wanted
this relatively small sickness that this lady had to be gone from
her, so she could also enjoy a fine Sabbath meal with them.  It
was a small kindness miracle that Jesus did, somewhat like when
He turned water into wine at the wedding feast we read about
earlier.

     When evening had come, and the sun was setting, many brought
friends and relatives who had various sicknesses, to Him to be
healed.
     You will notice, this large work of healing was not done on
the Sabbath, but after the Sabbath was over, when the sun was
setting and the evening had come. Jesus did a few Sabbath
healing, but the large numerous healings were not on the Sabbath
day. It took much effort and work and strength out of Jesus,
after doing healing upon healing. Jesus would often have to go
away by Himself into the hills to refresh Himself after
spending hours healing people. Such hard continous work was
clearly not what He wanted to do during the Sabbath hours.

     At this healing session many demons came out of people
crying, "You are the Son of God."  Yet, He rebuked them and
told them not to speak, because they knew He was the very Christ.
     For some reason, known perhaps only to Jesus, He did not
want this truth of Him being the Son of God shouted around.  At
this particular time Jesus had a reason, although we are not told
what it was or why He told the demons to be silent with those
words.

PREACHING IN OTHER CITIES

     The next day, very early, Jesus was up and away to a lonely
spot where He could pray and meditate. But the solitude was not
to last long, as the people discovered where He had gone. They
would have kept Him there to continue to heal every kind of
disease, sickness, pain, and the paralytics, the epileptics and
those troubled with demons. His fame was spreading like
wild-fire, even into the land of Syria as well as all over
Palestine.

     Simon Peter and many other of His disciples came to Him and
told Him that everyone in that local area was searching for Him.
At the hearing of this, Jesus said to them, "Let us go on to the
next towns, that I may preach the good news of the Kingdom
of God there also; for that is why I am here, that is my job and
commission given to me of the Father. "

     And He went throughout Galilee, teaching and preaching in
the synagogues and casting out demons (Mat.4:23-25; Mark 1:35-39;
Luke 4:42-44).

CLEANSING A LEPER

     Coming from the secluded mountain spot and moving on to the
next town, great crowds of people were following Him, and out of
the crowd a man suffering from the disease of leprosy (a terrible
skin disease that can easily be passed on to others, hence
most people kept far away from those with that sickness) fell
before Him on his knees and cried out, "If you will, you can
make me whole and clean."

     Jesus looked upon him with great pity, stretched out His
hand and touched him (no one would ever touch a leper as they
knew they would likely come down with the same disease), and
answering him said, "I will make you whole. Be indeed clean."
And immediately the leprosy disappeared from his skin.

     Jesus, in sending him away, charged him to tell no person
what had happened to him, and added, "....but go, show yourself
to the priest, and offer for your cleansing what Moses commanded,
for a proof to the people."

     Christ was very respectful of all the word of God and
knowing that the Old Covenant had not yet in an official way been
replaced by the New Covenant, He expected people to abide by all
the laws and commandments, even the physical ceremonial ones that
had to do with offerings to be given through the priests at the
Temple in Jerusalem, concerning after being made clean from
certain diseases.

                .............................

Written in May 2001


NEW TESTAMENT BIBLE STORY-- GOSPELS #9

 


 New Testament Bible Story

Chapter Nine:

John Exalts Jesus

Jesus talks to the Samaritan women at the well
     Jesus and His disciples were once more in the land of Judea,
and John was near Salim, also baptizing many people who came to
him. He had not yet been put in prison, as later he was (John
3:22-24).


     John's followers got into a discussion with a Jew about the
rites of some of the purification laws. It must have triggered
something in their minds, because they came to John saying, 
"Teacher, He who was with you beyond the Jordan, to whom you
gave witness, He is not far away, also baptizing, and many are
going to Him. We are confused about where you stand with God and
what ministry is left for you to do."

     John looked at them in patient understanding at the
puzzlement showing on their faces, and explained to them:

      "No one can do anything that is truly of God unless it
comes from and is given to him to do from God.  You yourselves
heard me say openly to all that I am not the Christ, but that I
was sent by God to make and prepare a way before Him. The one who
has the bride is the bridegroom, and his friend, who stands
besides him to hear him, rejoices greatly to hear him. So it is
that I joy in hearing the voice of the Christ.  I am full of joy,
so I want you also to be. The Christ must increase in popularity
and ministry, while I must decrease. 
     "He who comes from above, who once lived in heaven with God,
is above all, much greater than I.  For he who is of the earth
and not from heaven, as I am, belongs to the earth, speaks as an
earthling. He who comes from heaven is then above all earthly
persons. He truly bears witness to that which He has both seen
and heard, as He once lived in heaven. Yet few will receive His
testimony. But for those who do, they will have set the seal to
attest to everyone that God is indeed true to His word and
promises. 
    "The very special one that God has sent utters the pure words
of that God. For to Him the Spirit is given not my measure, in
bits and pieces, but in its entire fullness. The Father God loves
the Son, and all things are committed into His hands. So he who
believes in the Son will have eternal life; he who does not obey
the Son shall not see eternal life, but will face the wrath and
punishment of God" (John 3:25-36).


JESUS TEACHES THE SAMARITAN WOMAN AT THE WELL


     Jesus heard via the grape-vine, that the Pharisee religious
party had heard that Jesus was baptizing and getting more popular
among the people than John. Jesus Himself did not do the literal
baptizing, but He had His disciples doing that for Him, yet
it was all under His authority.  All this was going to cause much
problems for Jesus, way sooner than He wanted or wished. So He
decided to leave the area of Judea and go back up north to
Galilee. Now, to go from Judea to Galilee you had to pass through
an area of land called Samaria.
     This was only a relatively small area of Palestine, and it
was not the famous land area of the Old Testament called Samaria.
You may want to look at the maps in the back of many Bible to
compare the Samaria of Jesus' day with that of the time of the
kings of Israel and Judah under what we call the Old Testament of
the Bible. There is a huge difference.
     For Jesus to go north and get back to Galilee He had to walk
through this small land area called Samaria (John 4:1-4).

     Within this little Samaria land was a people known as
Samaritans. They were a very religious people as a whole. The
Jewish Encyclopedia (that most large public Libraries posses) has
a long in-depth article on these people, who are still in
existence today in Palestine, though there is only about 1,000 of
them or less. 
     Those Samaritans claim descent from Jacob, one of the great
fathers of ancient Israel, and more specifically from Joseph, one
of the fathers of the twelve tribes of Israel. In the time of
Christ, they had their own Temple, Priesthood and sacrificial
system. They only accepted the books of Moses, the first five
books of the OT, as their Bible. They also looked for a coming
Messiah from God, but some of their basic religious teachings
(such as having their own Temple and priesthood) was so far from
what the Jews in Judea and Jerusalem taught, that the religious
Jews of Judea and the rest of Palestine, hated them with a
passion, and would have nothing to do with them. 

     When you also understand how most Jewish women were treated
and looked upon by many of the Jewish religious teachers of the
day, as kind of second class citizens, undeserving of much if any
attention when it came to religious matters, then what the
apostle John relates to us about Jesus meeting with and talking
"religion" to this Samaritan woman at a well, is all that more
amazing. What He did was certainly amazing to His disciples, as
they had grow up in a Jewish religious world that was many times
far removed from that which was really of God.

     Jesus came to a city of Samaria called Sychar. It was near
the field that Jacob had given to his son Joseph many centuries
earlier. There was a water well there called "Jacob's well." 
     Jesus was getting very tired from walking and sat down to
rest beside this well. It was nearing the hottest part of the
day, about noon. With the sun blazing down from above, the
coolness of the well, with the thought of a nice cold drink, was
very appealing to Jesus.
     At the same time up walks a woman from Samaria to collect
water from the well in her container.  Jesus' disciples had all
gone to the city to buy food. He had no container to drop down
into the well and retrieve any water. 
     "I would like you to give me a drink please" said Jesus to
the woman.  With utter astonishment the woman replied, "How on
earth is it that you being a Jew, talk and ask me for a drink,
when you know I'm a Samaritan woman?" 
     John informs his readers that the Jews had no dealings
whatsoever with Samaritans (John 4:5-9).

     Jesus now started on what would be a religious conversation
that would lead to great results  over the next two days.

     "If you knew the very gift of God that sits before you, and
who it actually is that is talking to you and asking you for a
drink of physical water, it would be you who would be asking Him
for the living water that He could give you."

     The woman again looked at Jesus in amazement and said, 
"Sir, you speak strangely, for you have no container to draw water
from the well which is very deep, so how could you possibly get
any what you call living water from it?  Are you greater than
our father Jacob who gave us the well, and drank from it himself,
as did also his sons and his cattle?"

     "Oh, everyone who drinks of this water," said Jesus, 
"shall thirst once more, but whoever drinks of the water that I
shall give them will never thirst. The water that I give will
become like a spring of water welling up and flowing constantly
to eternal life."
     The woman still not getting that Jesus was speaking about
spiritual matters, living spirit, Holy Spirit water remaining and
flowing within the believer, was eager to have some kind of
physical miracle, and so replied, "Sir, please give me this
water, that will make me never thirst again, and never have to
come to this deep well to draw out water. It is hard on my back
and arms to have to do this daily physical chore."

     Jesus knew she was not getting the insight of the true
message He was conveying to her. So He tried another approach.

     "Go, call your husband, and come back here" Jesus
requested.  "But I have no husband," replied the woman.
     "That is very true," responded Jesus, "for you have had
five husbands, and the one you are now with is not your husband,
so in saying you have no husband you have answered correctly
indeed."
     "I surely perceive you are a prophet," said the woman, and
then continued with, "Our fathers worshipped on this mountain;
and you Jews say that the main city to worship God at, is
Jerusalem."

     "Well lady," Jesus replied, "I can tell you this. The
hour is coming when you will not worship the Father either on
this mountain nor in Jerusalem. The hour is coming and even now
is, when the true worshippers will worship the Father in spirit
and in truth, for that is the kind of people the Father is
looking for to worship Him. God is spirit not flesh and blood,
and so those who worship Him must worship Him in spirit and
truth."

     Jesus was here referring to the time that was to come when
the armies of Rome under Titus would invade Palestine in 70 A.D.,
destroy Jerusalem and other places and scatter the Jews, so no
organized worship of God in some central location would take
place anywhere in that land. Then also Jesus was making a lesson
that certain physical things in the worship of God really meant
nothing to the Father unless the heart was right with Him.
Outward ceremony even in a place that God could approve of was
useless if the inner heart was not acceptable to Him.

     "I know the Messiah is coming, he who is called the Christ.
When he comes, he will be able to tell us all things, as you seem
to be able to do," the Samaritan woman said confidently, but
with a questioning mind as she looked at this man she had called
a prophet.

     "I who speaks to you am this Messiah," Jesus said kindly
but firmly to her.

     It was at this point, before she could answer or say
anything about what Jesus had just told her, that the disciples
returned from the city and stood there in shock to see Jesus
talking to a woman in private, and a Samaritan woman at that.
They were shocked but none was willing to question Jesus as to
the reason why. The woman knew what was going through the minds
of these other men and so quickly ran off back to the town,
leaving her water jar behind. She was too excited and amazed by
the whole event to worry about a water pot. 
     The only thing on her mind was to get back to town so she
could tell as many people as would listen, about a man who told
her all that she had ever done.  She asked them if it was
possible that this was the Messiah to come. She told them to go
and see for themselves, and many of them did head out of the city
to see the man she was telling them about (John 4: 10-30).
      
     Meanwhile, as all this was happening in the city, Jesus'
disciples were asking Him to eat of the food they had brought to
Him.  "I have food to eat of which you know nothing of,"  was
Jesus' reply to them.
     "Who has brought Him food while we were gone?" said some
disciples to others.
     Jesus then told them exactly what He was meaning. "My
nourishment comes from doing the will of God, who sent me, and
from finishing the work He sent me to do. Do you think harvesting
will not start until the summer is over, four months from now?
Take a look around you! There are vast fields ripening before
your eyes, and are ready for harvesting at this present time. The
harvesters are paid good wages, and the fruit they harvest is
people brought to eternal life. I'm not talking about fruits from
trees and vines. There is great joy for both the planter and the
harvester. You know what they say, 'One persons plants and
another person harvests.' That saying is very true, for I'm
sending you to harvest where you did not plant; others had
already done that work, and you will gather the harvest. "

     For centuries God had sent His servants to teach and preach
His word to the people of Israel. Before Jesus came to do the
work of God, there was John the baptist and his disciples
preparing the hearts of the people for Jesus' disciples to reap
what had already been planted in their hearts. It was a spiritual
harvest of food that Jesus was talking about, as the main and most
important food to eat and to get busy harvesting.


THE SPIRITUAL HARVEST IN SAMARIA


     The apostle John in his Gospel tells us that many Samaritans
from the city the woman came from, believed  her testimony that
the man she had encountered at the well did tell her things in
her life that were very true. Many went out to Jesus and asked
Him to stay in that town with them and expound more things to
them about God and His word. Jesus indeed did do so and stayed
with them for two days. 
     Because their hearts and minds were receptive to be
instructed and taught the truths of God, many more believed the
words of Jesus.
     They privately told the woman who first talked to Jesus at
the water well, this: "It is no longer because of your words
that we believe, for we have heard from Him ourselves, and we
know that this man is indeed the Savior of the world, the
promised Messiah, that God in His word said would one day come to
this earth. "

     After the second day of being with the Samaritans Jesus
departed and headed for Galilee. He did not go to His own town or
neighborhood for He had said that a true prophet of God is seldom
accepted and given honor by those who knew him running around,
going to school, and growing up in their community.
     When it comes to the true religion of God and someone boldly
teaching and preaching it, this is so very true. Many communities
will praise and honor a local person who gets fame, makes it big
time, in say, the movie industry, or singing or music arts, or
professional  sports. But teaching the truths of God, that call
for personal repentance and a change of life to conform to the
will of God, that is a whole new ball game, and most who have
known this person from a child, in the local community, will not
give much honor to them.
     Especially was this true of Jesus' community, for Jesus was
also preaching that He was the Messiah, the Son of man, and even
the Son of God. Those who had seen Mary and Joseph bring this
Jesus child home with them from Jerusalem, and had lived around
them for years, just could not accept Him as the Son of God, the
promised Messiah.

     Jesus was able to harvest a spiritual people into the
Kingdom of God from many parts of Palestine, and the area of
Samaria, but not so from His own area and town where He grew up
as a boy and young man.


AN OFFICIAL'S SON IS HEALED


     Arriving once more in Cana of Galilee, where He had made the
water into wine at the wedding feast, an official of some sort
from Capernaum came and begged Jesus to come and heal his son,
who was at the point of death (John 4:46-47).

     Jesus a little disconcerted because the man wanted Him to
literally go to Capernaum and do a miracle over the sick body of
his son, said to him, "Unless you see some physical signs and
wonders from my hands, you just will not have faith to simply
believe my words."

     The man's mind just did not really hear Jesus' words, but he
said once again to Him, "Sir, come to my city before my child
dies."
     Jesus answered him by saying, "Go back home, your son will
live."  These words did get through to the official, and he
believed them. So he started on the journey back to his town.
Before he arrived, his servants came out to meet him, and told him
that his son was alive and well.  He inquired of them as to the
time when his son recovered from near death.
     "Well it was at the seventh hour yesterday when the fever
left him," said his servants. With that information the father
knew that that was the exact hour when Jesus had said to him, 
"Your son will live."  The official and all his household
believed that this man called Jesus was from God and very
special.

     John tells us that this miracle was the second sign that
Jesus did when He had come from Judea to Galilee (John 4: 48-54).

                 ...........................


Written March 2001

NEW TESTAMENT BIBLE STORY-- GOSPELS #8

 



 New Testament Bible Story

Chapter 8:

Jesus Clears Out the Merchants from the Temple

Nicodemus comes to Jesus - born of the Spirit
     The apostle John early records a Passover that Jesus
attended in Jerusalem during His ministry. The Temple in
Jerusalem did not only consist of the sanctuary of the
"holy place" and "most holy place" (the Temple, as the original
Tabernacle in the time of Moses, was divided into two sections),
but also had different court-yards around it. It was a very
elaborate building indeed. You may want to take time to read
about it all in a good Bible Dictionary or Encyclopedia.
     It was in one of those court-yards of the Temple that Jesus
found those who were selling oxen, sheep, pigeons, and such
animals and birds, as well as money-changers (for people offering
money to the Temple priests for the service and upkeep of the
Temple, and who came from different parts of the Roman Empire, so
needing to exchange Roman money into Jewish money) used by the
people to fulfil the sacrifices that were prescribed by the laws
of Moses (see the first chapters of the book of Leviticus) under
the Old Covenant.
     The mindset and character of those selling and exchanging
money Jesus knew was far from pure and honorable. They were out
to line their own pockets, to rob the people, to cheat them, to
simply do a business and take advantage of the pure hearts of
the people coming to worship God at the Temple and fulfil the
laws of God as given to Israel through Moses.
     
     This is a good illustration that shows God accepted the
enlarged Temple structure, because the people as a whole accepted
it in their minds, as being and belonging to God and as an
extension of the holy Sanctuary proper. This shows that there is
a "spirit" of the law that goes beyond the "letter" of the law,
which God honors, sometimes even under the Old Covenant. The
original Sanctuary and Temple under Moses and Solomon, only
needed to be a tent or building of one structure divided into two
parts, a "holy place" and a "most holy place" inside just one
fenced area or court-yard. By the time of Christ, the Jews had
extended this building to include a number of court-yards. The
outer court-yard was where the merchants had set up their market
place. To them, and so to God, this was part of the overall
Temple of the Lord.
     Jesus could see that those merchants were making the very
House of God into something it was never intended to become - a
merchant market place for profit. 
     His anger grew more and more as He saw what was going on.
The Bible says, "Be angry, but sin not."  There is a time to
become righteously angry. Many passages show that God can and
does get righteously angry at times. Yet, it is always righteous
anger, without any sin. There are times we must get very upset at
sin and wrong doing. This was one of those times for Jesus.
     
     He made a long whip from string cords that came from boxes
and packages that were sent to those merchants or that were used
to tie up the animals they were selling.  Jesus whirling the whip
around His head, much like an American cowboy whirls his lariat
over his head when roping a steer, drove the animals out of the
Temple, and threw over the tables of the money-exchangers, the
coins rolling all over the place.
     As He was doing all this, He raised His voice and exclaimed
to those thieving and wrong minded merchants, "Take these things
away! You shall not make my Father's house into a house of
merchandise and business trade."

     The disciples of Jesus, many of them knowing much of what
was written in the word of God, remembered the verse where it was
written, "Zeal for Your house will consume me" (Ps.69:9).

     But, most of the Jews and merchants there, were not so
perceptive and so spiritually in tune with who the Messiah was or
what were the true ways of the Lord. They just looked at Jesus
and declared, "Who gave you this authority to do this thing,
drive out the merchants from the Temple? What sign will you give
us to demonstrate and prove what you have done has the authority
of God Himself behind it?"

     Jesus answered them by saying, "Destroy this temple, and in
three days I will raise it up."
     Once more the Jews had no idea what He was really speaking
about, and thought He was talking about the physical stone
building of the Temple they were all standing within. They,
laughing at Jesus said, "It has taken forty-six years to build
this Temple, and you say that if it was destroyed you could build
it back again in only three days. You must be out of your head,
vain and mad, by saying such words."
     Jesus was not speaking about the physical Temple in
Jerusalem, but was speaking about the temple of His body. The
Holy Spirit dwelling in Jesus made His body as like a temple of
holiness to God the Father. So it is with anyone who has God
dwelling within them (see 2 Cor. 6:16-18).
     Jesus was indeed giving them a sign of His power and
authority from God. He was foretelling them that one day though
the Jews would kill Him, He would rise from the dead after three
days. He was foretelling them of His resurrection to life and
glory.
     His disciples at the time, did not understand fully what
Jesus was referring to either. It was only after His resurrection
that they remembered those words of His, and clearly understood
then what He had told the Jews. All of this of course, after
Jesus' resurrection, helped the disciples to believe in no
uncertain way, all the Scriptures and all the words that Jesus
had spoken during His ministry.

     Because of the miraculous signs He did in Jerusalem at this
Passover celebration, many people were convinced that He was
indeed the Messiah. Well, in an outward kind of manner they were
convinced. But Jesus didn't trust them. He could see their deep
inner heart and He knew what people were really like, who were
not truly connected with God through humble repentance (John
2:13-25).

     No one for sure, needed to tell Him about human nature, what
it could do and think on the outside surface, but not be that way
in the depth of heart, especially when people would get offended
by what He would say and teach, and the way He would live. And
that is exactly what happened to many, even some of His
disciples, later on. They got offended in Him, upset, bewildered,
and confused, by things He said, and they walked away from Him.
     Though many believed on Him at that Passover, they did not
continue to believe on and in Him later on, as we shall see.

NICODEMUS COMES TO JESUS IN THE NIGHT

     There was a man by the name of Nicodemus, one of the leaders
in the Jewish Sanhedrin (a court of the Jews that decided certain
civil and religious matters, made up of leaders from the Pharisee
and Sadducee denominations, and respected Elders among the Jewish
people), and of the Pharisee religious party. He came to Jesus
secretly, by night, and confessed, "Rabbi, we know that you are
a teacher come from God; for no one can do these signs that you
do, unless God is with him."

     You will notice, Nicodemus did not say that they, leaders of
the Jews and leaders from his religious party, knew and admitted
that Jesus was the very Son of God. What he said was that they
knew He was a true teacher of the word of the Lord, that God was
with Him. 
     Yes, secretly, many of the Jewish leaders admitted this
among themselves, but would not openly declare it, for they
feared loosing their followers, who would then follow Jesus, who
like John the baptist, made it clear to them that He would not
become a member of one of their sects. They knew He was very
independent, hence a threat and to them,  a competition for the
support of the people.
     Nicodemus at this point in his life, would not come openly,
in the day time, to admit this to Jesus, no doubt fearing what
the other leaders of the Jews would try to do to him, certainly
in a spiritual position way, and maybe even in a physical way. So
he came at night, but did admit to Jesus that they knew God was
with Him.

     Jesus got right down to the foundation and goal of why
mankind was put on this earth, and what it would involve for
Nicodemus to attain it.
     "I assure you, unless you are born again, you can never see
the Kingdom of God."
     Nicodemus was taken a back by what Jesus said, "What do you
mean? How can an old man go back into his mother's womb and be
born again?"

     You will notice that Nicodemus clearly understood that Jesus
was talking about a "birth" - thinking Jesus was meaning that to
enter and see the Kingdom of God, a grown person somehow had to
re-enter the womb of his mother and be literally born once more.
     Jesus was not talking about that kind of physical birth, but
it was a birth that He was talking about.
     He went on to explain with a physical comparison, exactly
what you must become like in order to see and be in the Kingdom
of God.

     "The truth is, no one can enter the Kingdom of God without
being born of water and the Spirit. Humans give birth to that
which is physical but the Spirit gives birth to that which is
spirit. Do not get all wide eyed and amazed and try to make what
I'm telling you into some theological doctrine of the heart. For
being born again is like this: The wind blows and does things,
you can see the effect if may have, even hear it at times as it
works among physical objects, but you cannot see the wind, it is
invisible to the human eye. So then likewise is everyone who is
born of the Spirit."

     The words of Jesus are pretty plain and quite simple. Jesus
was telling Nicodemus that to enter the Kingdom of God, you do
have to be born in this physical world as a physical flesh and
blood person. You have to be conceived and grow in a sack of
water in your mother's womb, and after being nourished and
growing to a certain physical stage, then the water in the sack
brakes and you are born into the world of air breathing flesh and
blood creatures. That which is flesh is flesh. Everyone must
first be flesh before they can be later born of the Spirit and
become like the wind, invisible to the human eye.
     Jesus said that which is born of the Spirit IS spirit, and
He likened this Spirit to the wind - invisible but having
evidence that humans can relate to as indeed having effects
on the physical world around us.
     In John 4:24 Jesus said that God IS Spirit.  Many passages
in the Bible show that God does have form and shape, that He does
have a "body." The last chapters of the book of Revelation tell
us that one day God's children will actually see His "face." His
body is made of Spirit, not physical flesh, blood, and bone. God
lives in a different world, a world of a different dimension. He
lives in a "spirit" world that is, unless He chooses to reveal it
to the human eye, an invisible world to our vision of our
physical eyes.
     
     We know the Bible teaches there are good spirit creatures
called "angels" and there are bad and evil spirit creatures
called "demons." A few of the chief angels are mentioned by name
in the pages of God's word, such as Gabriel, whom we have seen
came to Mary to tell her she had been chosen to bear God's Son.
Then the chief fallen and sinful spirit creature is mentioned by
name also. We know him as being mainly called Satan, or the
Devil. We cannot see these spirit creatures unless they either
manifest themselves to us as if looking like humans, or if God
works a miracle with our eye sight, enabling us to see them,
which was granted to a few in the Old Testament (read 2 Kings
6 to see this truth).

     The book of Daniel is an interesting book in places. It
tells us a little about this basically unseen spirit world that
lies all around us.  It mentions a few specifics as to what
is happening among the "good" spirit creatures and the "bad"
spirit creatures that oppose each other.

     God is composed of Spirit in His invisible glory form. And
those who are to be His literal children, born of Him, who will
enter the Kingdom of God, will also be spirit, for as the apostle
Paul was inspired to write, "...Flesh and blood cannot inherit
the Kingdom of God..." (1 Cor.15: 50).  A large part of Paul's
fifteenth chapter of 1 Corinthians, is devoted to explaining the
"change" that is to come, that must come, to those in whom God
dwells (His sons and daughters, see 2 Cor.6:16) in order to
IN-herit, see and enter the Kingdom of God, at the resurrection
when the last trumpet sounds (see Matthew 24: 30-31).

     Jesus was saying the same thing to Nicodemus but in a
shorter, nut-shell way. Of course being born of God, born of THE
Spirit, means He must come and beget you first, making you in
this life time His child through the indwelling of His nature, or
Holy Spirit as the New Testament often calls it. All this means
you are converted to His mind and way of thinking and wanting to
live by His every word, as Jesus said we should (Mat.4:4).
     It means you remain His child to the end of your life. It
means no matter what the trials, tests, hardships, problems, no
matter what difficulties physically, mentally, or emotionally,
that life may bring, you endure and remain His child, loving Him
and doing His will to the end, until death.
     Then just as a child in its mother's womb has endured, been
nourished, grown, and is finally born, so it will be for the
child of God. He/she will one day be born of God, born of THE God
Spirit, and enter His Kingdom.

     Jesus was telling Nicodemus that that was the very purpose
as to why mankind was created upon this earth, to be born of the
Spirit, to become part of the invisible spirit world. This is far
greater than anything that science-fiction movies have ever
thought up.
     But old Nicodemus was befuddled by what Christ was telling
him. He just could not comprehend it and exclaimed in
bewilderment, "How can these things be at all possible?"

     "Are you a teacher in Israel " Jesus answered him, "Is it
not your job to read the Scriptures of the Lord, and to come to
understand what it says, and you know not these things that I
speak about? "

     Jesus was telling him that by reading and understanding and
believing the Scriptures, he should have already known what He
was expounding. Furthermore, Jesus told him, "But if you don't
even believe me when I tell you about earthly things such as
the wind and what I represented by it, then how can you possibly
believe the things going on in heaven? For I know what heaven is
truly like, as only I, the Son of Man, have come from heaven to
earth, and will return to heaven again."

     This last part of Jesus' statement here is very revealing if
we will but believe it for what it says. The King James
translation of the Bible in 1611 put it this way: "No man has
ascended up to heaven, but He that came down from heaven, even
the Son of man."

     Jesus, of all human beings to ever live and walk this earth,
is the only one to have been in heaven. The reality that death is
a sleep, and that we do not continue to think and act after
death, either in a heaven or a hell, is vividly brought out in a
later chapter of the Gospel of John, when we see how Jesus raised
a man called Lazarus back to life after being dead for four days.

     Jesus continued to tell Nicodemus, "And as Moses lifted up
the bronze snake (Num.21:9) on a pole in the wilderness, so I,
the Son of Man, must be lifted up on a pole, so that everyone who
believes in me can have eternal life in the Kingdom of God."
     Here Jesus is telling Nicodemus and all who read this, that
He, the Son of Man, was the Messiah, the Anointed One from God,
the one who would come from God, live a perfect live, never do
any wrong, take all sins of mankind upon Himself, die on a cross,
thus forgiving the sins of all those who would believe and accept
Him as the Saving Messiah. And in so doing they could have
eternal life.

     Jesus added yet more, to show and to amplify, the one main
purpose that God the Father had when He decided to create the
physical human kind:
     
     "For God so loved the world (the people in it) that He gave
His only Son, so that all who believe in Him do not have to
perish but can have eternal life. God did not send His Son into
the world to condemn it, but to save it, to give people a chance
for eternal life. There is no condemning those who trust and have
faith in Him. But those who do not have trust in Him are
condemning themselves for not believing in the only Son of God. 
Their condemnation is based on this fact: That light from heaven
came into the world, but they loved the darkness of sin and
wrong-doing more than the light of righteousness, for their
actions were evil. They do not like the light because they desire
to sin in the darkness. They stay away from the light because
they fear that the light will expose their sins, and then they
would have to make a choice to either live in the light or to
live in darkness.  But, those who want to do what is right come
to the light gladly, so all people can see that they are doing
the will of God " (John 3:1-21).

     Nicodemus, a religious leader of the Jews, came to Jesus by
night, secretly, and to be unseen. He admitted to Jesus that he
and others like him, knew He was from God, that God was with Him,
but stopped short of saying He was the Son of God, and the
saving Messiah to come.
     Jesus, got right down to business, hit the nail on the head,
pulled no punches, and not only told Nicodemus that He was the
Son of God, sent to save and give eternal life to those who would
believe on Him, but told him that the main purpose of God,
because He had so much love, was to save people to eternal life,
not to condemn them to death.
     Jesus said it was the purpose of God to have people born of
Him, born of the Spirit, and so be like Himself, to live in a
dimension that was mighty and powerful like the wind was at
times, and also invisible to the human eye, as also was the wind.
     Jesus told Nicodemus that to be born of the Spirit, would
mean you were willing to come to the light of truth and
righteousness, to be willing to have your wrongs and sins clearly
revealed to you by the light, and to walk in the ways of the Lord
God. Such people would then acknowledge that He Jesus, the
Christ, was the very Son of God, and would gladly come to the
light, so the light could lead and guide them into doing the will
of God.

     Jesus was teaching Nicodemus the purpose for human
existence, and the true and only way to salvation or eternal
life.

     This was also a kind but corrective rebuke to Nicodemus as
he had at this point in his life not yet come to acknowledge that
Jesus was the very Son of God, and so was still not yet in  the
mindset of loving all the light.

     It is a lesson everyone of us need to take to our heart and
mind. To walk in the light as He (God) is light. Then one day we
can be born of the Spirit, and see the Kingdom of God.

             ..................................

Written February 2001

NEW TESTAMENT BIBLE STORY-- GOSPELS #7

 


 New Testament Bible Story

Chapter Seven:

Jesus' Three Temptations from Satan

     Many of the servants and prophets of God before the time
Jesus was to enter His teaching ministry, had fasted (going
without food, and often without water also) for a certain number
of days, in order to really draw close to God, and put their mind
on the task that lay before them. Moses and the prophet Elijah
were two that it is said and written of them, that they fasted
for 40 days. Moses did it twice, so it is written in the book
of Exodus.
     Jesus was certainly no less than those two great men. He was
in fact greater than them.  So it should be no surprise for us
that Matthew and Luke both mention, "And Jesus, full of the Holy
Spirit, returned from the Jordan, and was led by the Spirit for
forty days in the wilderness, tempted by the Devil. And He ate
nothing in those days; and when they were ended, He was very
hungry" (Luke 4:1-2).

     Jesus needed to prepare Himself for the job ahead of Him. He
needed to draw very close to the Father, and Satan the Devil knew
he had one last big chance to do battle with Jesus and to try and
defeat Him before He even got started.

     At the end of the forty days Jesus was very hungry indeed.
Oh, the Devil may have tried tempting Him all along during all
those forty days, as His body began to weaken. Mark implies that
was the case, as he records that angels came to serve Him,
probably giving Him protection from evil Demons trying to hurt
Him in some way. But at the end of those forty days, when Jesus
was really physically weak and so very hungry, Satan himself,
personally, came to Jesus to tempt Him to do wrong, to sin, and
to sign up for his team against the God in heaven.

     The Devil with sarcasm in his voice, said to Jesus, "Now IF
you are the Son of God, command these stones to become bread."
     Actually, the Devil knew very well that Jesus was the Son of
God, so it was with a sarcastic voice he said those words, trying
to needle Jesus into getting upset at his seeming doubt that He
really was God's Son. 
     Satan hoped Jesus would slip up and angrily abuse His power
and authority, and do exactly as the Devil wanted Him to do -
make bread to eat, from stones. If He had, it would have all been
from the wrong motive under this seductive temptation from the
Devil.
     
     Jesus did not fall for this trick from Satan. He knew His
Bible, and replied to the Devil by quoting it.  He said, "It is
written, man shall not live by bread alone, but by every
word that proceeds from the mouth of God."

     Jesus left the desert and went to Jerusalem and ascended up
to the top of the pinnacle of the Temple. As He looked out over
the land before Him, Satan came along once more and said to Him,
"IF you are the Son of God, throw yourself down; for it is
written, 'He will give His angels charge over you' and 'On their
hands they will bear you up, less you strike your foot against a
stone.'"

     Not only was the Devil still being sarcastic and acting by
trying to put doubt into the mind of Jesus by saying, "If you be
the Son of God" but he was now even quoting Scripture to tempt
Jesus to abuse and play with His power and also the Father's will
that there should be no harm or death to His Son before the time
appointed.
     Jesus knew that no Scripture stood as an island unto itself,
but must always be understood in the light of all other
Scriptures written through the inspiration of God. So, Jesus,
knowing all the other Scriptures,  was able to answer the Devil
by saying, "Again, it is written, 'You shall not tempt the Lord
your God.' "

     It is very true that God can protect us from harm such as
falling from a high place, or if in a car accident, but because
we know that God can send angels to protect us from physical
harm, does not mean we deliberately jump from a ten story
building, or stand in front of an on coming train, to say to God
that we want Him to prove He will protect us.

     Jesus came down from the pinnacle of the Temple and went to
the top of one of the high mountains around Jerusalem.  He could
see far off into the distance. His mind knew many kingdoms of
different nations and empires were out there in the world,
including the great Roman Empire, that ruled much of the main hub
of the central world at that time.
     "Ah, see all these mighty kingdoms," said the Devil to
Jesus, "Do you see in your mind all the glory they have. Well, if
you will come on my side, worship me, and do my will, I will give
you control of all the world. You can in this physical life be
the greatest world ruler this earth has ever seen."

     Now, at this temptation, Jesus got righteously angry with
Satan. "Get out of here, be gone, Satan," was Jesus' reply to
him. "For it is written, 'You shall worship the Lord your God,
and Him only shall you serve.' " (Mat.4: 3-11).

     With those final words from Jesus, the Devil left Him.  For
the time being he left Him, for Luke recorded in his Gospel
account that Satan departed from Him, until an opportune time came
once more (Luke 4:13). 
     We are not told in any of the Gospels that the Devil ever
had another opportunity like that, to tempt Jesus to sin, as when
He fasted for forty days.

SOME OF THE RECORDINGS OF THE APOSTLE JOHN

     There are sections of the Gospel of John that are very hard,
if not impossible, to put into chronological order in the life
and ministry of Jesus Christ. There is no specific indication as
to when exactly they may have taken place during His ministry and
years of teaching and preaching, leading up to His death.
     Some, who have tried to compile a "harmony" of the Gospels,
trying to put it all in chronological order, have placed these
sections of John at the very beginning and very early on in the
public ministry of Jesus. 
     We also will do the same. Some from their very nature of
events are indeed at the beginning of Jesus' ministry, but some
others are not so clear that they were at the beginning.

JESUS' FIRST DISCIPLES

     It was the next day after John the baptist had baptized
Jesus in the river Jordan. The sun had risen over the desert
hills of Judea, the air was clean, the birds were singing
their merry songs. John was getting ready to once more proclaim
the salvation and the Kingdom of God to the people coming out to
hear him speak the words of God. He was reflecting on the
preceding day, how he had known somewhat of this one called
Jesus, that through the years he had borne witness to how perfect
and sinless this man was. He had known there was something
special about Him, but yet, not having any direct revelation from
God during those years, he was not sure if this Jesus was the
Messiah Christ to come.
     Then the Lord God had spoken to him and told him that the
one whom he would baptize and the one whom he would see the
Spirit of God descending like a dove and remaining upon Him, that
someone would be the very Son of God, the very promised Messiah.

     Oh, John surely knew now who the Anointed One was. And as he
was standing and talking to and teaching a few of his disciples,
who should walk by but Jesus once again.  John noticed Jesus the
Christ and said to those within ear distance of him, "Behold, the
Lamb of God!"
     Two of John's disciples heard what he had said, and
immediately started to follow Jesus. John had taught them that
one greater than he was to come, who would be the promised
Messiah. The two disciples knew this was the man for John had now
clearly pointed Him out to them. 

     Jesus knew two men were following Him. He turned and said to
them, "What do you seek?"
     They answering said, "Rabbi (which means Teacher), where are
you staying?"  To which Jesus replied, "Well, why don't you come
with me and see."
     They needed no more invitation than that, and so went with
Jesus and stayed with Him, as it was about 4 p.m. by the time
they arrived where He was lodging for the evening and the night.
     One of the two men was called Andrew, the brother of Simon
Peter, and this Peter is well known by those who have read the
four Gospels, being an outspoken and forceful man, who became one
of the inner twelve disciples chosen by the Lord Jesus, a little
later in His ministry.

     Andrew was very excited at finding this Christ (which word
meant Messiah to them). So excited was he that he just had to run
off and find his brother Simon Peter, and not only tell him the
good news of their find, but to bring Peter back with him to meet
Jesus.
     When Jesus sees Simon He knows his basic human character and
personality, and says to him, "So you are Simon the son of Jona.
You we shall call Cephas (in English we say Peter, and which
means, a stone or boulder)."

     I'm sure they had lots to talk about with each other that
evening. The next day  Jesus decided to go to Galilee. He wanted
to find a man called Philip and He did find him. And Jesus told
him to follow along and be one of His disciples. Philip happened
to also be from the same town as Andrew and Peter, the town of
Bethsaida (which word means, house or place of fishing), and is
situated on the north-east coast of the sea of Galilee. You may
want to look it up on a map which some Bibles contain.

     Well, Philip ran off to find a friend called Nathaniel, and
said to him in an exited joyous voice, "Oh friend, we have found
the man whom Moses and the prophets have written about, He is
called Jesus, comes from the town of Nazareth, and is the son of
the man called Joseph." 
     Nathaniel, with a slight grin, more like a smirk on his
face, answered by saying, "Oh, tell me another one. Can anything
good possibly come out of a pip-squeak town like Nazareth?"
     "Well, you come and see for yourself then, if you think you
have the answers to this whole expectation we are looking for,"
Philip answered back to him.

     Nathaniel was up to that challenge, and so off he went with
Philip to see for himself this man called Jesus the Christ.
     Jesus sees him coming from a little way down the road. He
looks intensely at him as he got closer and closer. When within
ear shot, Jesus raised His voice and said to Nathaniel, "Behold,
an Israelite indeed, and one in whom there is no deceit, an
honest man."
     "How do you know about me," Nathaniel asked Jesus.
     "Oh, I could see you under the fig tree, before Philip came
to you," replied Jesus, just astounding Nathaniel even more, for
he was very sure that neither of them had ever met or seen each
other before this moment.

     With wonder and joy in his voice, Nathaniel exclaimed,
"Teacher, you are the Son of God - the King of Israel!"

     At this faithful statement, Jesus said, "Do you believe all
this, believe that I am the Son of God, because I told you I saw
you under the fig tree?  This is really nothing as to the things
you will see. For you will see heaven open and the angels of God
going up and down upon the Son of Man."
     Jesus was pleasantly surprised  that Nathaniel could so
quickly come to recognize that He was the Messiah, the Son of the
Most High, and related to him the greater wonders he would yet
see one day. He would see the angels serving the Son of Man. 
     That is all that is ever said about what Nathaniel would one
day see. When it took place, if it was for Nathaniel's life time
in the flesh, and not when he shall be in the Kingdom of God, we
are not told (John 1:35-51).

JESUS ATTENDS A WEDDING AND PERFORMS A MIRACLE

     A few days later (according to the continued reading in the
Gospel by the apostle John), there was a marriage at Cana in
Galilee. Jesus, His mother and His disciples were all invited.
And they all went.
     A Jewish marriage back in those days could be a very large,
festive occasion, often celebrated for a number of days, even up
to a week in length. Good wine for all the guests was the common
drink, as people came and went, offering their congratulations
and best wishes for the bridegroom and his bride.
     So many people came to this wedding that all the wine was
used up, or as we would say today, "they ran out of wine."  
     Jesus' mother, knowing of course that He was from God, and
had special powers, came quietly to Him and said, "They have no
wine."  The way she looked at Him and the way she said those
words, Jesus knew instantly what His mother was requesting Him to
do.  Miraculously make more wine.

     Jesus Himself was not intending to do a public miracle, or
make some kind of a big show, at this wedding. He answered His
mother by saying, "O woman, this does not concern you and me. My
time has not yet come." Meaning He did not yet want to go public
with His miracle working power.

     But, His mother (as mothers often have an inner sense for
things) knew He would supply the needed wine. And so she told the
servants to do whatever Jesus instructed them to do.

     There were six stone water-pots in the area, used for the
Jewish ceremonial purposes, and held about twenty to thirty
gallons each. Jesus told the servants, "Fill those jars with
water." And when they had been filled to the brim, He told them
to dip some out and take it to the master of the wedding feast.
And the servants did exactly as Jesus told them to do.
     When the master of the wedding feast tasted the water (which
had been made into wine), not knowing where it had come from
(though, of course, the servants knew), he called the bridegroom
over saying to him, "Usually a host serves the best wine first,
then when everyone is full and has enjoyed the best wine, he
brings out the less expensive wines. But you have kept the best
until now!"

     Jesus not only did an instant water into wine miracle, but
"aged" it, as it is called in the wine making trade. The very
best wine must age for a long period of time. Some wines that
have been bottled for a hundred or so years, are classified as
the best, and are expensive to buy.

     This, John says, was Jesus' first open display of His
miraculous power. The servants knew who did this miracle and
would have soon whispered it to others, until everyone there
would have known it was Jesus who had turned water into the best
of wine. 
     With this miracle, the knowledge that He was the Messiah,
the Son of God, was deeper imbedded into the minds of Jesus'
disciples.

     After the wedding the apostle John tells us that Jesus went
to Capernaum for a few days, with His mother, His brothers, and
His disciples. 
     It is more than just interesting, that John puts Jesus'
"brothers" and His "disciples" into two distinct and separate
groups.
     We have evidence from the other Gospel writers also, that
Joseph and Mary had biological children, as most married couples
hope for when they marry. Jesus had brothers, well they would
have been what we term as "half brothers" - all having the same
mother (Mary) but not the same father. Joseph was not the father
of Jesus, as we have seen, God was His father (John 2: 1-12).

               ...............................

Written January 2001 

NEW TESTAMENT BIBLE STORY-- GOSPELS #6

 



New Testament Bible Story 

Chapter Six:

John Begins His Ministry

     We must not forget about John, the child born to the priest
Zachariah and Elizabeth his wife, also in a miraculous way. Many
years have now passed, a dozen or more, since the account of
Jesus at the Passover when at the age of twelve. It was now
the appointed time from God for John to fulfil his ministry, for
which he was especially born.

     It was in the days when Pontius Pilate was governor of
Judea, and Herod Antipas, the son of Herod the Great (whom was
the Herod in our previous chapters) was ruler over Galilee, that
John did his preaching and teaching in the wilderness of Judea.
He went into the region about Jordan and so fulfilled the
prophecy of Isaiah, "Behold, I send my messenger before your (the
Messiah's) face, who shall prepare your way."
     John preached a baptism of repentance, and so became known
as John the baptist.

     Luke says, "As it is written in the book of the words of
Isaiah the prophet, 'The voice of one crying in the wilderness:
Prepare the way of the Lord, make his paths straight. Every
valley shall be filled, and every mountain and hill shall be
brought low, and the crooked shall be made straight, and the
rough ways shall be made smooth; and all flesh shall see the
salvation of God' " (Isaiah 40: 3-5).

     Many prophecies have a dual meaning and fulfilment. As we
look at this prophecy in the fortieth chapter of Isaiah, as we
note the whole context before and after, it becomes evident that
this is one of those dual prophecies. It was to have a fulfilment
at the first coming of the Messiah, but it is to have a
fulfilment also at His coming with power and glory, with a strong
hand and when He is to rule and do much work during the time
the book of Revelation calls the 1,000 years (see Isaiah 40: 10,
11 with Rev.20: 1-4).

     The things to be made straight, the hills to be brought low,
the rough to be made smooth, and the salvation to be seen, in the
first fulfilment at the time of John and into Jesus' ministry,
was an analogy and typology of spiritual and repentance matters,
being humbled and finding the straight and smooth truths of the
salvation of God.

     Matthew records that John wore a garment of camel's hair,
and a leather girdle around his waist, and that a good part of
his diet was wild honey and locusts (Matthew 3: 4).

     There are strong indications from what the angel said about
John when announcing his birth to Zachariah and Elizabeth (which
we saw in earlier chapters), that John may have been under a
Nazarite vow (mentioned in Numbers 6) from birth. If so, then his
hair would have never been cut. By the time he started to preach
in the wilderness of Judea, his hair would have been extremely
long, probably reaching half way down his back or even more.
     From what Matthew records we may want to jump to the thought
that John looked something like a wild cave-man type person we
often see in school books on the history of mankind.
     This thought could be very wrong. Garments of camel's hair
could be spun and made to look quite attractive. It would also be
very warm for him as he faced the cold nights that could come in
the desert of Judea. We today do not think twice about wearing
leather belts around our waist, so a leather band around John's
waist should not cause us to think of him as a wild cave-man
type.
     Tens of thousands today eat wild honey in many different
countries around the world as part of their regular diet, so
nothing unusual about that per se. As John was preaching in the
wilderness, his honey eating would have been from the wild bees,
as opposed to those in towns and villages who had bee hives, and
so what we would call "domestic" bees.
     To our Western ear the strangest thing might be the fact
that John ate locusts. But, that is mainly because in our Western
nations we have never practiced eating locusts. We do not even
import them to eat as food.  God, in giving Israel His food laws
as found in Leviticus 11 and Deuteronomy 14, gave the laws
regarding what insects were fit to eat and which ones were not.
It was all a matter of how He had created them in the "cell" and
"atom" construction to jive with our cell and atom construction.
Some, for health purposes we could eat and some God has never
wanted us to eat. 
     The locust was within the "good" food laws as given in the
books of Moses. Maybe most of the city dwellers in Palestine,
were not in the habit of eating locusts, hence Matthew records
that John ate locusts. Different maybe, but certainly not outside
of the food laws of the Lord God.

     John preached and taught with such power and conviction the
Gospels say that most people from Jerusalem and all Judea with
the region about Jordan, went out to hear him, and most of them
were baptized by him in the river of Jordan, confessing their
sins.
     This was indeed a time of great spiritual revival and humble
repentance before God. John was preparing many hearts for the
coming of the work of the Messiah Jesus.

     John was indeed different from most of the religious
preachers of his day. He did not mingle with the established
popular religious leaders of the two main theological
groups or "denominations" as we would call them, the Pharisees
and the Sadducees. John lived in the desert and was certainly
known as an independent preacher of the word of God. 
     He also knew that much of the teaching and practicing
traditions of the Pharisees and Sadducees were way off base from
the truth of God's word. He knew that a great deal of their
theology was founded upon wrong ideas and interpretations of the
Scriptures, as well as man-made customs and traditions that had
crept into their religions over the centuries.
     He especially had insight into the heart and mind of most of
the teachers of those two religious parties. He knew they did not
want to know the pure truths of the Lord, that they were quite
content to maintain their religious positions with its "status
quo" - keep it as it had been for centuries. He knew they were
not of a humble, teachable, repentant mindset, willing to be
corrected and to change when shown and proven to be wrong in
their teachings, beliefs, and practices.

     John had become very popular with the masses of the people,
they thronged to go out and hear him speak the word of God. All
this of course was noticed by the religious leaders of the two
dominant denominations. 
     One day many of them as a group looked at each other and
said, "This man John is causing quite a commotion of sorts. The
people are flocking to hear him. Many are being baptized by him.
We as a group of theological leaders need to go and see this man
in action, so we can first-hand get a better plan as to how to
combat him and safe-guard our positions that we have held with
the people for so long a time."

     So, off they went into the desert by the river Jordan to
hear John preach, but it sure was not because they wanted to
repent of their wrong teachings and practices. Some were even
willing to be baptized by him in order to try and gain his
respect for them, and to fool the people into believing they were
really humble repentant fellows.
     Matthew records that John knew some of them were willing to
go as far as being baptized by him, but he knowing their hearts,
seeing them come, looked upon them with righteous anger, and
lifting up his voice with power and clarity, said to them in
front of all the crowds around about, " You brood of snakes! Who
warned you to flee God's coming judgment? Prove by the way you
live that you have really turned from your sins and turned to
God. Don't just say, 'We're safe - we're the descendants of
Abraham.' That proves absolutely nothing of and by itself. God
can change the stones here into children of Abraham. Being
physical flesh of anyone, even Abraham, does not automatically
mean you are the children of God in the spiritual sense."

     Looking upon them with further discontent, John went on to
say, " Even now the axe of God's judgment is poised, ready to
sever your roots. Yes, every tree that does not produce good
fruit will be chopped down and thrown into the fire."

     Most of the crowd hearing these words were sincerely struck
in the heart and wanted to know from John, in specific ways, what
they needed to do to be on the Lord's side and to have His love
and mercy and favor.
     John answered them by saying, " If you have two coats, give
one to the poor. If you have food, share it with those who are
hungry."

     John was telling them that real true Godliness, wanting to
walk with the Lord and to do His will and way of life, contained
a very practical aspect. You had to not only be religious in
beliefs and attending church, reading the Bible, praying, fasting
at times, but you had to serve others in a down-to-earth manner.
It meant giving to people in tangible ways, some of the physical
blessings that God had given you. A willingness to share with
others less fortunate than yourself, some of the physical goods
you possessed.

     Some of the corrupt tax collectors came to be baptized of
John, asking him what they needed to do to get their lives in
order with God. John told them, "Be honest, show your honesty in
how you collect taxes for the Roman government. Do not collect
more taxes than is required by the Roman authorities."
     Some you see, collected more taxes than required, so they
could line their own pockets with extra money, above that which
the Roman government paid them for collecting taxes.

     Even soldiers employed by Rome, came to John asking what
they should do to be in favor with God.  His rely to them was, "
Rob no one by violence or by false accusation." 
     It would have been relatively easy with the authority and
the physical skills and weapons they had as soldiers, to rob
people in a forceful and violent manner, as well as by false
accusation of alleged wrongs (people fearing what would happen to
them, and so paying the soldiers money) they could bring to
higher government leaders, which could have led to imprisonment
and even death. This would be termed "bribery" today. The
soldiers would say to people that they would report them as
having done this or that evil (when not having done so) unless
the person gave them a certain amount of money.

     John also told the soldiers to be content with their wages.
It is probably very easy when employed by the National Government
in work that is dangerous and could cost you your life, such as
those employed as soldiers and police and firemen, to moan and
groan and  complain that you should be paid a wage twice or three
times more than what you are receiving. While people with
dangerous jobs should be well paid, it is just a fact of economic
life that governments just do not have a never ending wealth of
money to pay astronomical wages to such persons in dangerous
government occupations. Hence John told them there comes a time
when such people must learn to be content with their wages.

     Luke in his third chapter records that many people were in
expectation of the coming of the promised Messiah. They knew the
time was near from what God had written in the prophets of old,
that the Messiah would appear. Some were questioning in their
minds if this promised Messiah was not in fact having its
fulfilment in this very unusual man who was preaching and
teaching the word of God with such power and conviction, in the
desert.  Many were thinking that John was indeed the Christ, the
anointed one to come.
     John himself answered them by saying, " I baptize with
water; but someone is coming soon who is greater than I am - so
much greater that I am not worthy to untie His sandals. He will
baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with fire. He is ready to
separate the chaff from the grain with His winnowing fork. Then
He will clean up the threshing area, storing the grain into His
barn but burning up the chaff with fire that cannot be put out."
     It is said that John used many such warnings and analogies
as he prepared the way for the Messiah to come.

     In the analogy above John was saying what the twentieth
chapter of Revelation and other passages of Scripture (such as
Malachi 4; Psalm 37; 2 Peter 3) tell us. Namely, that God will in
His plan give everyone a chance to know the truth, to repent, to
accept Jesus as the saving Messiah, and to enter the Kingdom of
God, through the power of the Holy Spirit. All that will refuse
shall be destroyed in a worldwide fire that shall burn them and
this earth up, that cannot be put out by humans hands, at the end
of the 1,000 year reign of Christ on earth. Then shall come the
new heavens and new earth and all that is foretold in Revelation
21 and 22.

     Luke also tells us that John was bold enough to publicly
criticize and denounce Herod Antipas, ruler of Galilee, for
taking Herodias, his brother's wife, and for many other wrongs he
had done. Herod finally put John in prison, but had no intention
of executing him, for he feared the people would rise up in armed
revolt against himself, as they held John with such admiration.
It was through some trickery that Herod gave command to execute
John. How that came about we shall see later.

     As to the story behind John's denouncing Herod Antipas for
his taking of his brother's wife, it goes like this.
     Herod's brother was called Philip, and his wife was named
Herodias. They had a daughter called Salome. Josephus the Jewish
historian of the first century, says that this marriage of Herod
Antipas with Herodias took place while he was on a journey to
Rome. He stopped at his brother's; fell in love with his wife;
agreed to put away his own wife, and Herodias agreed to leave her
own husband, and live with him. 
     There was no Roman or Biblical law from God that allowed
them to do such a thing. This was pure lusting after another
man's wife, which in the first century A.D. even Roman law
frowned upon men taking another man's wife through covertness.
     Then adding to all this, Herodias was grand-daughter of
Herod the Great, who was the father of Herod Antipas. This
relationship would have been classified as "incest" and not
allowed under God's law. Close relatives were not permitted to
marry under the laws of the Lord. As Herod was governor of a part
of Palestine, and so was also upholding Jewish laws, allowing
them freedom of religious faith and proclamation of it, John
would have felt quite at liberty to denounce Herod for this and
other wrong conduct in his life.


JESUS IS BAPTIZED BY JOHN


     Going back again to the time John was living and preaching
in the wilderness by the river Jordan, one day Jesus came to him
to be baptized. John was shocked at such a request from Christ
the Messiah, and with amazement said to Him, "It is I that need
to be baptized by you. Why on earth do you request to be baptized
by me? No, this should not be Lord. I do not understand why you
request this."
     Jesus, with a soft tone of voice and an understanding heart
as to why John would think this way, replied, "Let it be as I
request, for it is right and proper for me to fulfil all that is
the righteousness of God."
     John then understood when Jesus put it this way. For baptism
was something that John knew God had ordained for the New
Covenant age, as a part of the very perfection and righteousness
of Himself. John knew that Jesus wanted to set the full and
perfect example of doing all that was the will and the plan and
the righteousness of God. Although Jesus had never sinned, had
nothing to repent of, and so had no need to be baptized for the
remission of sins, John now knew Jesus wanted to set the perfect
example of doing God's will, and so consented to baptize Him in
the river Jordan.

     Jesus, after being baptized, went up out of the river
Jordan, and the heavens were opened, and John saw the Spirit of
God descend like a dove upon Him.  All three Gospel writers
(Matthew, Mark, and Luke)  relate that a voice came from heaven
saying, "This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased."

     Jesus had continued to grow in favor and in grace with the
Father in heaven during all of His life. His Father in heaven,
the one who can be our heavenly Father, was well pleased with all
that Jesus put His hand to do, especially as He now prepared
Himself to fulfil the reason as to why He had been born as a
human being. 
     
     The time had come for the Christ Messiah to fight one more
final battle against Satan the Devil, and then to march on into
His ministry of proclaiming salvation and the Kingdom of God to
those living in Palestine.


              ....................................


Written December 2000

Monday, January 19, 2026

PAUL'S USE OF THE OLD TESTAMENT-- SURPRISES INDEED!!!

 Get  ready  for  some  surprises


PAUL'S USE OF THE OLD TESTAMENT


From The Book by E. Earle Ellis


All Emphasis is by Keith Hunt


FROM CHAPTER 0NE.........PAUL AND HIS BIBLE


     The writings of the apostle Paul reveal a person immersed in

the content and teaching of the OT.  H.A.A. Kennedy, after a

study of Paul's religious terminology, found that practically

every leading conception in this field of Paul's thought had its

roots definitely laid in OT soil (H.A.A. Kennnedy, St. Paul and

the Mystery Religions, London, 1913, pp. 154-60).  Whether he is

giving a dogmatic proof (e.g. Rom.3:10-18), an analogy

(e.g. Rom.2:24), or an illustration (e.g. Rom.10:6-8), or merely

using language with which to clothe his own thoughts (e.g.

Rom.12:20; 1 Cor.15:32; 2 Cor.10:17; 13:1), the OT

appears frequently throughout the Pauline epistles.........

     The Pauline use of the OT appears in THREE DISTINCT forms: 

QUOTATIONS PROPER,  INTENTIONAL AND CASUAL 

ALLUSION, and DIALECTIC AND THEOLOGICAL THEMES.  

     The task of defining "quotation" in the Pauline literature

is rather difficult, and the decision in the end is somewhat

arbitrary. The apostle probably did not have OUR CONCEPT of

quotation marks; he certainly did not give it the sanctity which

characterises our literary usage.  Some references which are

introduced with an explicit citation formula echo only the TENOR

OF THE PASSAGE (e.g. 1 Cor.14:31); others, not given even the

dignity of an introductory conjunction, follow the OT text

verbatim ac literatim (e.g. 1 Cor. 15:32). 

     The gradation from quotation to illusion is so imperceptible

that it is almost impossible to draw any certain line.........


                THE NATURE OF THE QUOTATIONS


GENERAL ANALYSIS


     Paul quotes the OT NINETY-THREE TIMES (About one-third of

all New Testament quotations are cited by Paul)........

     Although the quotations are drawn from SIXTEEN OT books, 

THREE-FOURTHS of them are from the PENTATEUCH (thirsty-three),

ISAIAH (twenty-five), and the PSALMS (nineteen).

     The citations appear both SINGLY and in COMBINATION........


     FIFTY-ONE of Paul's citations are in ABSOLUTE or VIRTUAL

agreement with the LXX,  TWENTY-TWO of these are at VARIANCE with the Hebrew.  In FOUR passages Paul follows the Hebrew AGAINST the LXX;  THIRTY-EIGHT times he DIVERGES from BOTH.  Combined quotations show a much greater variation than the others.......


     The PRIORITY of the LXX in Pauline quotations has long been

recognised.......Swete affirms that more than HALF of the Pauline

QUOTATIONS were taken from the LXX without MATERIAL 

CHANGE and that, by any test, the LXX "is the principal source from which the writers of the New Testament derived their Old Testament

quotations........Affinities with the LXX are not only evident in

Paul's quotations but EXTEND to his GENERAL STYLE and VOCABULARY as well........"The careful student of the Gospels and St. Paul," concludes Swete, "is met at every turn by words and phrases which

cannot be fully understood without reference to their earlier use in the Greek Old Testament.


     The quotations show considerable distribution among the LXX

TEXT-FORMS, none of them being followed CONSISTENTLY.  Sometimes they agree with LXX-B, more often with LXX-A and LXX-F........In general, LXX-A appears to be more in accord with Paul's

quotations than the other manuscripts.......


     As noted above, there are a considerable number of

variations from the LXX in Paul's quotations.  To account for

them several hypotheses lie at hand:  a direct use of the Hebrew

or its employment to correct the LXX,  citations from an Aramaic

Targum or translation,  the use of the Greek translations,  or

free quotations from memory.

     Paul often gives the impression of quoting from memory, yet

the memory which was the storehouse of more than one language,

and one trained in Jewish methods of bringing together passages

from different books of the OT.  From a psychological viewpoint

it might be expected that one who knew the Scriptures in several

languages would be less ties to any text-form.........


     One of Paul's quotations shows remarkable resemblance to

Greek texts OTHER than the LXX.......It is probable that Paul was

acquainted with other Greek texts; however, the evidence is not

sufficient to draw any final conclusions......Nevertheless,

Aramaic texts of some type probably lie behind some of the

citations.......The variant in Eph.4:8 may also reflect a Targum,

but its immediate source is more probably an interpretive

rendering known to Paul and perhaps used in the early

Church.......


     As the above observations indicate, the text behind Paul's

quotations is a most DIFFICULT PROBLEM. While the Alexandrian

version probably had the character of an official translation for

the diaspora in certain areas and plays an important part in

Paul's usage, it CANNOT be regarded as the apostle's SOLE textual

source.  His fluency in Aramaic and Greek might, on first

observations, favour an ad hoc rendering.  However, affinities with other Greek texts and the familiar manner in which the quotations are often introduced SUGGEST that Paul made use of variant translations or renderings known to his readers.  Whether these were independent 

texts or merely revisions within the LXX family cannot be determined with certainty, but the EVIDENCE DOES NOT point to any great number of independent textual traditions or to a great abundance of Greek Targums. 

Some of Paul's variants show the influence of the Hebrew; other

can to traced to NO TEXT AT ALL - they are Paul's OWN RENDERING

in which he interprets and applies as he quotes.  

     The nature of the problem and the incomplete state of the

textual ecidence preclude any final adjudication of the matter;

the words of Stanley still remain relevant for several Pauline

passages: "(There is) not sufficient evidence to say whether this

(variation) arises from a reminiscence of the Hebrew text.....,

or from an Aramaic Targum, or from the use of an earlier form of

the LXX text."

     The inconclusive character of results obtainable from

textual criteria leads one to consider a solution, or at least a

partial solution, on other grounds.  There is always a

temptation to relieve oneself of textual difficulties by taking

recourse in "free paraphrase" or "interpretive rendering." 

Nevertheless, several factors, both in the textual analysis and

in the overall Pauline hermeneutics, INDICATE that the answer to

many of these problems MAY LIE in THIS direction.


                PAUL'S ATTITUDE TO SCRIPTURE


General Considerations


     Paul's use of the OT cannot be understood apart from his

attitude towards it.  To him the Scriptures are holy and

prophetic (Rom.1:2; 4:3); they constitute the very oracles

of God (Rom.3:1-2), and they "were written......for our learning"

(Rom.15:4).  All his important doctrines are buttressed by an

appeal to his Bible; to place the origin of Scripture in God,

Paul's phrase "God-breathed" (2 Tim.3:16) could hardly be

improved upon.  In his view of the OT the apostle is in agreement

not only with Christ and the other NT writers but also with the

whole of Judaism and the early Church.

     Although the OT is sometimes referred to by Paul as "the

law" (e.g. 1 Cor.14:21 with Isa.28:11-12),  "the writings"

(Col.2:14; cf 2 Tim.3:15),  or "the law and the prophets"

(e.g. Rom.3:21),  "the scriptures" is the prevailing usage. 

These designations probably stemmed from the three divisions of

the Jewish canon (Cf. Luke 24:44)............


     The essential difference between Paul and the Jews in their

employment of Scripture was an INTERPRETIVE one......In Paul's

eyes the Jews stood ON the Scriptures; though they extolled it,

they ERRED because they did not KNOW it (Cf. Matt.22:29).........


     In First and Second Corinthians Paul teaches expressly that

a correct understanding of Scripture is impossible without the

Holy Spirit (Cf. 1 Cor.2; 2 Cor.3:14)......The place of the

Spirit does not lesson the authority of the OT for Paul; nor

is there any antithesis between the Scripture and the

Spirit........


The Relation....To Other Authorities


     Besides the Scriptures there are several other authorities

to which Paul appeals to support his assertions.  There are the

law of nature, the conscience of the individual, his own

revelation from Christ or the Holy Spirit, and the teaching of

Christ as received through oral or written apostolic tradition. 

Although the natural order is the source of many analogies, it is

evoked only a few times as an AUTHORITY (Analogies of law -

Rom. 7:1-3; Gal. 3:15; 4:1ff,  occupations - Rom.9:21; 1

Cor.3:7,24ff, and natural phenomena - Rom.11:16-24; 1 Cor.12:14,

are common. The Ot is used in this manner as well, e.g. 

2 Cor.4:6,13, as is the example of Christ, e.g. 2 Cor.8:8-9. 

They serve only as illustrations, however, and not as an appeal

to authority; their propriety depends upon the authority of the

user or their appeal to the logic of the hearer);  in Rom.1:18ff

(cf. Rom.2:14ff) God's power and Deity are declared to be taught

by nature;  distinction between the sexes in manner of appearance

and dress is also in the very nature of things (1 Cor.11:14). 

The authority of the individual conscience plays an important

part for Paul:

Regarding the eating of food offered to idols, one's own

conscience is to be obeyed, and the conscience of others are not

to be offended (1 Cor.8:7ff; 10:25ff; cf. Rom.14:23. Also

Rom.2:15; 13:5 may be viewed as referring to a sort of universal

conscience);  by disobeying the voice of conscience the faith of

some has been made shipwreck (1 Tim.1:19). 

     Writing to the Galatians, the apostle grounds the very

nature of his Gospel in a personal revelation from Jesus Christ

(Gal. 1:12, 16ff; 2:5, but contrast Rom.1:2; cf. 1 Thes.4:15. 

The instances in Rom. 14:14, cf. 1 Cor.7:40, seem to be more in

the nature of a "witness of the Spirit" than specific revelation;

cf. Col.3:16);  it is only after citing this authority and the

witness of their own experience that the evidence of the OT is

brought to bear (Gal.3:1-5, 6ff).  

     The condemnation of the Corinthians for their desecrations

of the Lord's Supper is founded upon Christ's own words as to the

nature of that service (1 Cor.11:23ff);  Paul's command against

divorce is similarly based upon the known teaching of the Lord

(1 Cor. 7:10 with Matt.7:31; cf. 1 Cor.9:14 with Matt.10:10;

Gal.6:2 with John 13:34).  These appeals to other authorities are

not inconsistent with the apostles appeal to scriptural authority

(There are authorities inconsistent with Scripture which Paul

condemns: any authority contrary to his Gospel - Gal.1:8f - and

the wisdom of this world - 1 Cor.1-3; cf. Rom.1:22; Col.2:23. The

touchstone for judgment is not to go "beyond that which is

written" - 1 Cor.4:6).........


     This appeal to different authorities is at times found in

close combination though there seems to be no consistent pattern

of association.  For example, in 1 Cor.9:7-14 Paul proceeds from

the analogy of nature to the witness of the OT; immediately he

returns to another analogy, the practice of the temple, and

clinches the whole argument citing the command of Christ directly

bearing on the subject.  

     1 Cor.15:3-11 is even more noteworthy:  Christ's

resurrection is grounded in the OT, the apostolic tradition, and

Paul's personal revelation........

     Paul's OWN authority plays a MUCH LARGER role in his

epistles than is usually assigned to it.  A few times it is of a

very much qualified nature (Cf. 1 Cor.7:12, 25, 40), but for the

MOST PART it is ASSERTED with no indication of being anything

LESS thanb ABSOLUTE. He does not often state its basis, but it

appears to arise from his firm conviction of guidance from the

Holy Spirit and from his authority as an apostle. Paul

concludes his discussion of GLOSSOLALIA with the words: "If

anyone thinks that he is a prophet, or spiritual, he should

acknowledge that what I am writing to you is a command of the

Lord" (1 Cor.14:37. The verse may refer to a teaching of Christ;

but the words imply primarily the guidance of the Spirit....).  

     With reticence but firmness he warns the Corinthians in his

second letter of the AUTHORITY he has from the Lord (2 Cor.10:8;

13:10).  

     Instructions concerning the Christian's relation to the

State are enjoined WITHOUT CITING an authority (Rom.13:1-7 but

cf. Matt.22:21), as are his COMMANDS regarding spiritual gifts (1

Cor.12-14).

     MANY OTHER themes are developed at least in part WITHOUT

reference to ANY RULE apart from his OWN. It is true that

sometimes OT texts (e.g. Rom.2:13; cf. Rom. 10:5; Gal.3:12 with

Lev.18:5), and his former instructions (Former instructions from

Scripture or the apostolic traditions appear implied.....

1 Cor.6:3, 9, 15, 16; only the last instance is followed by an OT

citation, cf. 1 Cor.3:16; 2 Cor.6:16. It may, however, only

refer to their Christian commonsense), underline the words, but

they do not account for all of his paragenetic and doctrinal

teachings.

     It is impossible, of course, to know just how much knowledge

of the OT and the apostolic traditions Paul assumes on the part

of his readers; but his OWN apostolic jurisdiction is

UNMISTAKABLE in a number of passages.......


     But the OT was not one of those things which Paul counted

loss for the sake of Christ; indeed, it could be understood ONLY

in the LIGHT of CHRIST.

     There are many explanations for Paul's infrequent use of the

OT in the shorter letters.....The use of an authority other than

the Jewish Scriptures may well have been more suitable for many

questions which arose, especially in a young Gentile assembly.

But it DOES NOT FOLLOW that thereby the OT was set aside or

subordinated, any more than a citation from Isaiah implies a

lower view of Jeremiah........

     For Paul, Jesus was ABOVE ALL the CHRIST; to divorce the

Messiah from the "book-religion" of the OT was hardly a task for

a Jew - even one converted through personal revelation.


The Extent.....Paul's Canon


     ........There are a few quotations in the Pauline epistles

which do not appear on first observation to be derived from the

OT.  The passages most often questioned in this regard are  

1 Cor. 2:9.....Eph. 4:8.....Eph. 5:14.....1 Cor. 15:45b.....1

Tim. 5:18b......... 


     1 Cor. 2:9 has been attributed to:


     1. An apocryphal writing;  2. an apocryphal phraseology of

the OT texts; 3. a Jewish anthology of OT passages;  4. and a

free paraphrase of the OT by Paul.

     Eph. 4:8 is generally taken to be a Pauline use of a common

Jewish interpretation of the OT passage.....

     Eph. 5:14, older commentators have generally assigned it to

an exegetical paraphrase or summary of Isa.60:1, 19ff

(cf.Isa.9:2; 26:19; 52:1).......Recent writers have suggested a

verbum Christi or, more often, an early Christian hymn giving a

messianic paraphrase of several OT passages.......


     The quotations in 1 Cor. 15:45 and 1 Tim. 5:18, both cited

as Scripture, suggest another answer to the whole problem (Cf.

also 2 Tim.2:11-13, 19;  2 Cor.6:2; 1 Tim.3:16). The latter

clause in each of these passages seems logically and

grammatically within the quotation (e.g. the argument in 1 Cor.15

partly rests on that portion of the "quotation"), yet neither is

from the OT.  

     1 Tim. 5:18b is a saying of Jesus (Matt.10:10; Luke 10:17;

cf. Acts 20:35); the former passage (1 Cor. 15:45b) is of

undetermined origin........


     Christ was regarded as the Word of God by Paul, and 2 Peter

3:16 appears to equate the Pauline writings WITH SCRIPTURE;

furthermore, the exercise of the gift of prophecy was no less

from the Holy Spirit than the oracles of the OT prophets (Cf.

Acts 2:17ff;  19:6;  21:4, 9ff;  1 Cor.14. These Spirit-inspired

utterances evidently included hymns as well; cf. 1 Cor.14:15).  

     If these observations are correct, and if Eph.5:14 does not

find its ultimate source in the OT, the most probable alternative

source is a saying either of Jesus or of a Christian

prophet.......


So I end quotations from chapter one.


Chapter two is titled "PAUL AND JUDAISM" and contains a large

amount of instructive wealth for those wanting a full study on

that part of Paul as it pertains to his background in Judaism. 

For our purposes in this article the following few passages will

be enough for the average reader.


Quote:


     .......... Without doubt the apostles understanding of the

OT was completely REVOLUTIONIZED after his conversion;

nevertheless his Jewish heritage remained of fundamental

IMPORTANCE for his understanding and use of the Bible. His

reverence for and study of the Scriptures LONG PRECEDED his

knowledge of Christ.......Having recognized the place of Judaism

in Paul's thought, a note of CAUTION should be added.  From that

day on the Damascus road, the home of Paul's heart and of his

mind NEVER AGAIN lay in Judaism.......The commonly used

fragmentary quotation, with the continuance of given portion

sometimes implied (e.g. 1 Cor.2:9.....), the insertion of

hortatory, ethical sections, and other procedures more

distinctively Jewish, were probably acquired by Paul in his

training as the rabbinate.  It is most natural, and not in the

least derogatory, to find these methods in his epistles.  As Prat

well states, "the interests of truth did not require him to

unlearn all that he had been taught."


.......In Rom.9-11 and Gal.3 Paul employs the ancient MIDRASHIC

form of commentary; but his incisive manner and compact,

integrated treatment is quite at odds with the rabbinic system. 

Often to support an opinion the rabbis quote the Law, Prophets

and Hagiographa in succession and Paul also adopts this custom on

occasion (Cf. Rom.11:8- 10; 15:9-12......The custom is evident in

Christ as well; cf. Luke 24:44; Mark 12:3-8; Luke 16:16,29).  It

is not HABITUAL with the apostle, however, and probably 

represents only an incidental reminiscence. Hillel's principles

of a fortiori and analogy are implicit in MANY Pauline passages

(e.g. Rom.4-5. Paul's exposition in 1 Cor.7 is an example of NT

Halacha; the allegory in Gal.4 is Haggada).......


     .....certain other Pauline practices may be compared with

Jewish usage; his INTRODUCTORY FORMULAS (IF), his COMBINED

QUOTATIONS, and his use of ALLEGORY.........


     Warfield's words are apropos: "There is probably not a

single mode of alluding to or citing Scripture in all the NT

which does not find its exact parallel among the Rabbis. 

The New Testament so far evinces itself a THOROUGHLY JEWISH book" (Warfield, op. cit., pp. 118f)


Combined Quotations


     .........The apostle never introduces his haraz in the

explicit rabbinical manner, i.e. The Law says....., the Prophets

say......, the Writings say.....  However, the rationale

behind the Jewish usage, "not as though the words of the Law need

confirmation, but to show how the Scriptures emphasises the

lesson by iteration," IS EVIDENTLY operative also in Paul's

mind.......

     Examples of the haraz, so frequent in Rom.9-11, 15, are

NUMEROUS in the TALMUD.......In the haraz, then, Paul follows the

PRACTICE of the rabbis, but for the SOURCE of his frequently used

MERGED quotations one must look elsewhere.


Allegory


     .......the method is employed by the apostle in connexion

with a DIVINELY DESIGNED type (e.g. 1 Cor.10:4: "The Rock was

Christ") or with the ILLUSTRATIVE use of an OT passage (Cf.

Gal.4:25: "this Hagar is Mt.Sinai"......)


     .......The whole of Paul's TYPOLOGICAL exegesis has more in

common, as a method, with the Alexandrian school than with the

rabbis.......


     .......In conclusion. Paul's treatment of the OT often finds

much in common with the methods of his day as reflected in Jewish

literature; his IF and haraz are especially to be noted in this

regard.  In other respects Pauline methods find FEW parallels in

contemporary Jewish writings.  The use of MERGED quotations is

LITTLE found in the rabbis.  In contrast to PHILO, Paul's use of

ALLEGORY is VERY MINOR and its character altogether DIFFERENT

from that of Alexandrian writers; and his TYPOLOGICAL view of OT

history is a RARE, if not unknown, element in contemporary

Jewish exegesis.  In all things but allegorical interpretation,

Paul's Jewish methodology reflects a Palestinian milieu, and even

in that the Alexandrian contact does not appear to be close or

direct.  

     The apostle is NOT averse to using methods from his Jewish

training as they suit his purpose; ON THE OTHER HAND, some of his

methods seem to arise from a Christian hermeneutic and from the

practice of the apostolic community and CANNOT be explained by

his Jewish background.......


Messianic Consciousness


     .......In the rabbis it was a standing principle to refer to

the predictions of the prophets as to the "days of the Messiah," 

and this principle is almost always in evidence in Paul's

interpretations.......Almost a century ago Westcott examined the

question and found that of NINETY-FOUR passages quoted

messianically in the NT only FORTY- FOUR were interpreted in the

same manner in Jewish writings; there are FEW revisions

of that estimate to be made today.......the main sources for

Paul's messianic interpretations of the OT are the principles and

emphases received from the apostolic tradition and his own

exegesis of the OT as a Christian,  One would find it hard to

root this element of his thought immediately in Judaism........


The Beggarly Elements


     When Paul warned Timothy and Titus to beware of Jewish

FABLES and commandments of MEN (1 Tim.1:4; Titus 1:14; 3:9), NO

DOUBT HE HAD IN MIND MANY OF THE THINGS exemplified in the

rabbinic literature. Although some of their exegesis is 

praiseworthy.....nevertheless its essential character is indeed

"weak and beggarly."  Prat has well summarised it: "In the slough

of Apocryphal and rabbinical writings a few particles of gold can

sometimes be met with, but with how much dross they are

combined."  To realize the GREAT GULF which separates Paul's use

of the OT from that of the rabbis, one need only observe a FEW

examples from talmudic literature:


     1. "The dust of the first man was gathered from all over the

earth because Ps.139:16 says God saw the unformed substance, and

Zech. $:10 says the eyes of the Lord run to and fro through the

whole earth" (Sanh. 38b; SBT, p.241).


     2. "Why did Obadiah hide fifty prophets in the cave" (1

Kings 18:4)?  "Because the cave would only hold fifty" (Sanh.

39b; SBT, p.253).


     3. "The first man had two faces because Ps.139:5 says, 'Thou

hast formed me behind and before' " (Ber.61a; SBT, p.381).


     4. "The first man reached from earth to heaven because it

says (Deut.4:32), 'since the day God created man upon the earth

and from one end of the heaven' " (Sanh. 38b; SBT, p.243).


     5. "Whoever places his bed north and south will have male

children because Ps. 17:14 says, 'Whose belly thou fillest with

treasure, who have sons in plenty' " Treasure, also means north

(Ber. 5b; SBT, p.22).

     Although there are exceptions, and the above examples are

graphic, they are by no means UNTYPICAL or EXTREME and can be

adduced AD INFINITUM ET AD NAUSEAM from almost any section of the Talmud.  The ruling principle of rabbinic exposition of Scripture

is well expressed in Sanh. 34a (SBT, p.214):  "A verse is capable

of as many interpretations as splinters of rock crushed by a

hammer, for Jer.23:29 says, 'Like a hammer that breaketh a rock

in pieces.....' "

     Their SPLINTERING, purposeless, speculative musings....have

not the REMOTEST kinship with Paul's theology or hermeneutical

principles........


     The rabbis worshipped the LETTER and sought to justify their

TRADITIONS by arbitrary exegesis; Paul's usage, on the other

hand, is NOT arbitrary or AGAINST the LITERAL sense if the

typological usage be granted.  Toy sums up the rabbinic exegesis

in the principle "that EVERY SENTENCE and EVERY WORD of the

Scripture was credited with ANY MEANING that it could possibly be

MADE TO BEAR......"

     Concerning Paul's relation to Jewish thought Kennedy has

given a better evaluation than most: "........His writings reveal

every here and there affinities with his native environment. But

the remarkable FACT REMAINS that these affinities are largely

SUPERFICIAL, that they disclose themselves at the CIRCUMFERENCE

rather than at the CENTER of his thought" (H.A.A.Kennedy,

St.Paul's Conception of the Last Things, London, 1904, pp. 43ff).



Paul's Use of Non-Canonical Literature


General


     The question of Paul's knowledge and use of Jewish Apocrypha

has been debated since.....1795, and it continues to be a matter

of dispute.  His knowledge of Palestinian writings in general

circulation may be presumed; as for the literature of the

diaspora the problem becomes more complex......What writings were

in general circulation?  Which ones would be seen and used by a

student of the rabbinate?  To what extent does the extant

literature represent the really "important" literature of Paul's

day, and for his party?

     Paul's ONLY non-canonical citations are from GREEK

literature........


     Paul's relation to Philo is best explained.......as mutual

dependence upon a common tradition........Philo arrives at a

position regarding the law which approximates to that of St.

Paul.....Each in his own manner has come to realize the

accomplishments of Jeremiah's epoch-making utterances: "I will

put in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts"

(Jer.31:33).

     Philo also resembles Paul in making salvation totally

dependent upon the word of God........serves to strengthen the

hypothesis of a common tradition underlying certain Philonic

concepts which appear in CLEARER LIGHT in the NT, but there is NO

GROUNDS for assuming a DIRECT connection.

     Jowett's essay on "St.Paul and Philo" sums up the relation

of Christianity to Alexandrian Judaism:  "(Alenxandrianism) was

MYSTICAL and dialectical, NOT MORAL and SPIRITUAL......it was a

literature not of LIFE......It spoke of a Holy Ghost; of a Word;

of a divine man; of a first and second Adam; of the faith of

Abraham; of bread which came down from heaven; but knew NOTHING

of the God who had made of one blood all nations of the earth; of

the VICTORY over SIN and DEATH; of the CROSS of Christ.  It was a

picture, a shadow, a surface, a cloud above, catching the rising

light ere He appeared.  It was the reflection of a former world,

not the BIRTH of a NEW ONE. It lifted up the veil of the temple,

to see in a glass only dreams of its own creation" (p.454).


Conclusion


     The importance of Paul's Jewish heritage cannot be ignored

if his writings are to be fully understood........The significant

conclusion, however, is the great CHASM separating the writings

of Paul from the rabbis.  The apostle's OT exegesis was not just

an adoption of current traditions but reveals a VITALITY and

UNDERSTANDING  totally FOREIGN to rabbinical literature.  

     If Paul used Jewish interpretations, he CULLED and MOULDED

them to a Christological understanding of the OT; if he was a

"child of his times," they were for Paul the times of the MESSIAH, 

His CROSS and RESURRECTION, and His REVELATION of the 

TRUE meaning of Scripture. Paul was a disciple of Christ NOT of

Gamaliel......


     The Pauline use of the OT cannot really be understood in

terms of his Jewish contemporaries.  This is ESPECIALLY true

where principles of INTERPRETATION are involved.  The affinities

which occur are in PERIPHERAL areas and never reach the HEART of

his thought.  After his conversion the OT became a NEW book for

Paul; all that went before now stood only as a prelude - a

prelude set QUITE APART from all that was to follow. Although

echoes of the prelude remain, the REAL MEANING which the OT has

for him lies at a DIFFERENT source.  And to find it one MUST GO

to Christ and to the apostles.


     The end of quotes from chapter two.


     Chapter three covers in some depth Paul and the Apostolic

Church. The author spends some interesting time with the NT

parallels between Paul and the teachings of Christ. And in a

second section some parallels of Paul with other NT writers.


     The FOURTH and last chapter of the book is titled "PAUL'S

EXEGESIS."


     The author lists the various topics Paul expounded upon,

which include:


     The fall of mankind into sin and its effects.

     The Universality of sin.

     The Coming of Christ and the Gospel.

     Justification by Faith.

     Forgiveness of sin.

     Faith and Works.

     Divine Election.

     Calling of the Gentiles.

     The Gifts of the Spirit.

     Christian Conduct.

     The Resurrection of Christ and the Saints.

     The Return of Christ.

     The Final Overthrow of Death.


     Covered in this chapter is the very important Pauline

subject of the Jew and the Gentile, and the NT Israel of God, and

how Paul ties it all in with the OT.  Then there is the often

used "Typology" of Paul. And Earle Ellis shows that Paul chiefly

used THREE OT period with his use of typology, they are: the

Creation, the Age of the Patriarchs, and the Exodus.

     This fourth chapter also expounds on Paul's exegesis with

regards the NEW Covenant. 

     Mt. Ellis gives a reasonably lengthy discourse on what may

be some of the answers to the quotations by Paul that vary from

the LXX and the MT texts.

     Towards the close of this chapter the author has some

interesting and very true comments about Paul in how he

understood the "historial" aspects of the OT.


     Quote:


     ......The apostle does not ignore the historical

significance of the text......Paul would probably begin by

saying, "The OT Scripture has a wider meaning than its IMMEDIATE

historical application (Cf. Rom.15>4; 1 Cor.10:11); even OT

history is God-moulded history whose significance does NOT LIE

MERELY in the event but in the MEANING of the event FOR ITS LATER FULFILMENT.......If Paul's presuppositions as to the nature

of the OT and of its history are accepted, little fault can be

found with his handling of the individual texts........


     In conclusion, the significance of the OT for Paul's theology can hardly be OVERESTIMATED......Rather, his knowledge of Christ opened to him a NEW WAY in which he found the true

meaning of the Scriptures.......


End of quote.


     The APPENDIX of the book is very useful as a reference to

the OT as used by Paul. There is a list of quotations as

pertaining to the agreement or not with the LXX and Hebrew. All

the ALLUSIONS and PARALLELS used by Paul as listed. There is a

list of all the COMBINED quotations that Paul used. And there is

a list of Paul's PARALLEL quotations.


     The book "PAUL'S USE OF THE OLD TESTAMENT" by 

Earle Ellis, published by Baker Book House, Grand Rapids,  

is well worth having in your personal library, especially if you 

are an elder or leader in the Church of God.


                 ..........................


Written February 1998 


by Keith Hunt