Saturday, September 12, 2020

TECHNICAL STUDY--- JESUS/PAUL--- PHARISEES #3 ?

Jesus and Paul - Pharisees? #3


Some say they were - my Answer


     by 


    Keith Hunt




THE PHARISEES IN THE GOSPELS



Most "Christian" scholars will agree that John the Baptist and

Jesus Christ were truly "men sent by God" to proclaim the truths

of God to a deceived world of their day.

Now HOW did these two great prophets of the Lord look at these

piously religious leaders and teachers of the law, that were

known as the sect of the Pharisees, did they think this sect of

Judaism comprised "the true Church of God" in their day?

Did Jesus and John believe the Pharisees had full and PERFECT

understanding of the Law of the Lord?


Notice what John the Baptist thought about the two prominent

sects of his day: "But when he saw many of the Pharisees and

Sadducees come to his baptism, he said unto them, O GENERATION 

OF VIPERS, WHO HAS WARNED YOU TO FLEE FROM THE 

WRATH TO COME? Bring forth therefore FRUITS meet for 

REPENTANCE....." (Mat.3:7,8).


This does not sound to me like John thought they were a part of

the true Church of God, or that as touching the law they were

BLAMELESS, nor that they were teaching the PERFECT MANNER 

OF THE LAW of God.


Were the DOCTRINES of the Sadducees and Pharisees pure and

without fault? Jesus gave us the answer as He taught His

disciples to BEWARE of these two Jewish sects. You can read the 

whole account in Mat.16:1-12.

The word "leaven" i s often used in the NT to represent SIN -    

a missing of the mark, defilement, unGodliness -- see 

1 Cor.5:1-8.


Jesus clearly taught us to "take HEED and BEWARE of the LEAVEN 

of the Pharisees and Sadducees." And He meant to say by this,as

verse 12 shows, "the DOCTRINE of the Pharisees and of the

Sadducees."


Anyone who looks to these two Jewish sects thinking they are, or

one of them is, the holders of the pure and perfect DOCTRINE and

RIGHTEOUSNESS which is in the law, is not doing what Jesus said

in taking heed and being beware of the sin of their doctrines!


Concerning this section of scripture WILLIAM BARCLAY in his

"Daily Study Bible" series in part says this: "Leaven has a

second meaning which is metaphorical and not literal and

physical. It was the Jewish metaphorical expression for an evil

influence. To the Jewish mind leaven was always symbolic of evil.

It is fermented dough; the Jew identified fermentation with

putrefaction; leaven stood for all that was rotten and bad.

Leaven has the power to permeate any mass of dough into which 

it is inserted. Therefore leaven stood for an evil influence liable

to spread through life and to corrupt it. Now the disciples

understood. They knew that Jesus was not talking about bread at

all; but he was warning them against the evil influence of the

TEACHING and the BELIEFS of the Pharisees and

Sadducees."(emphasis his and mine).


Again I ask the question: Were the scribes and Pharisees

perfectly understanding and living the law of the Lord? 

Were they as touching the righteousness of the law, BLAMELESS?


Turn to Mark the seventh chapter and read verses one to thirteen

for the answer.


Jesus gives us the truth of the matter. The Pharisees and the

Scribes were REJECTING and LAYING ASIDE the commands 

of God,  and doing about keeping the traditions of men!

We shall in some detail look at what Jesus taught us about the

Scribes and Pharisees as recorded in the Gospel of Matthew

chapter 23.


Jesus takes all of 36 verses to show us the real nature of the

majority o these individuals who made up the groups known as 

the Scribes and the Pharisees.    


For our study I have reproduced the pertinent pages from WILLIAM

BARCLAY'S "THE DAILY STUDY BIBLE' SERIES - the Gospel 

of Matthew, Vol.2 Revised Ed.


QUOTE  IS  TO  THE  END  OF  THIS  SECTION #3


SCRIBES AND PHARISEES


If a man is characteristically and temperamentally an irritable,

ill-tempered and irascible creature, notoriously given to

uncontrolled outbursts of passionate anger, his anger is neither

effective nor impressive. Nobody pays any attention to the

anger of a bad-tempered man. But when a person who is

characteristically meek and lowly, gentle and loving, suddenly

erupts into blazing wrath, even the most thoughtless person is

shocked into taking thought. That is why the anger of Jesus is 

so awe-inspiring a sight. It is seldom in literature that we find so

unsparing and sustained an indictment as we find in this chapter

when the wrath of Jesus is directed against the Scribes and

Pharisees. Before we begin to study the chapter in detail, it

will be well to see briefly what the Scribes and Pharisees stood

for.


The Jews had a deep and lasting sense of the continuity of their

religion; and we can see best what the Pharisees and Scribes

stood for by seeing where they came into the scheme of Jewish

religion. The Jews had a saying, "Moses received the Law and

delivered it to Joshua; and Joshua to the elders; and the elders

to the prophets; and the prophets to the men of the Great

Synagogue." All Jewish religion is based first on the Ten

Commandments and then on the Pentateuch, the Law.

The history of the Jews was designed to make them a people of 

the Law. As every nation has, they had their dream of greatness. 

But the experiences of history had made that dream take a special

direction. They had been conquered by the Assyrians, the

Babylonians, the Persians, and Jerusalem had been left desolate.

It was clear that they could not be preeminent in political

power. But although political power was an obvious impossibility,

they none the less possessed the Law, and to them the Law was the

very word of God, the greatest and most precious possession in

the world.

There came a day in their history when that pre-eminence of the

Law was, as it were, publicly admitted; there came what one can

only call a deliberate act of decision, whereby the people of

Israel became in the most unique sense the people of the Law.

Under Ezra and Nehemiah the people were allowed to come back 

to Jerusalem, and to rebuild their shattered city, and to take up

their national life again. When that happened, there came a day

when Ezra, the Scribe, took the book of the Law, and read it to

them, and there happened something that was nothing less than 

a national dedication of a people to the keeping of the Law

(Nehemiah 8:1-8).


From that day the study of the Law became the greatest of all

professions; and that study of the Law was committed to the men

of the Great Synagogue, the Scribes.


We have already seen how the great principles of the Law were

broken up into thousands upon thousands of little rules and

regulations (see section on Matthew 5:17-20). We have seen, for

instance, how the Law said that a man must not work on the

Sabbath day, and how the Scribes laboured to define work, how

they laid it down how many paces a man might walk on the Sabbath,

how heavy a burden he might carry, the things he might and might

not do. By the time this Scribal interpretation of the Law was

finished, it took more than FIFTY volumes to hold the mass of

regulations which resulted.


The return of the people to Jerusalem and the first dedication of

the Law took place about 450 B.C. But it is not till long after

that that the Pharisees emerge. About 175 B.C. Antiochus

Epiphanes of Syria made a deliberate attempt to stamp out the

Jewish religion and to introduce Greek religion and Greet customs

and practices. It was then that the Pharisees arose as a separate

sect. The name means "The Separated Ones;" and they were the 

men who dedicated their whole life to the careful and meticulous

observance of every rule and regulation which the Scribes had

worked out. In face of the threat directed against it, they

determined to spend their whole lives in one long observance of

Judaism in its most elaborate and ceremonial and legal form. They

were men who accepted the ever-increasing number of religious

rules and regulations extracted from the Law.

There were never very many of them; at most there were not more

than SIX thousand of them; for the plain fact was that, if a man

was going to accept and carry out every little regulation of the

Law, he would have time for nothing else; he had to withdraw

himself, to separate himself, from ordinary life in order to keep

the Law.

The Pharisees then were two things. First, they were dedicated

legalists; religion to them was the observance of every detail of

the Law. But second - and this is never to be forgotten - they

were men in desperate earnest about their religion, for no one

would have accepted the impossibly demanding task of living a

life like that unless he had been in the most deadly earnest.

They could, therefore, develop at one and the same time all the

faults of legalism and all the virtues of complete

self-dedication. A Pharisee might either be a desiccated or

arrogant legalist, or a man of burning devotion to God.

To say this is not to pass a particularly Christian verdict on

the Pharisees, for the Jews themselves passed that very verdict.

The Talmud distinguishes seven different kinds of Pharisee.

(i) There was the Shoulder Pharisee. He was meticulous in his

observance of the Law; but he wore his good deeds upon his

shoulder. He was out for a reputation for purity and goodness.

True, he obeyed the Law, but he did so in order to be seen of

men.

(ii) There was the Wait-a-little Pharisee. He was the Pharisee

who could always produce an entirely valid excuse for putting 

off a good deed. He professed the creed of the strictest Pharisees

but he could always find an excuse for allowing practice to lag

behind. He spoke, but he did not do.

(iii) There was the Bruised or Bleeding Pharisee. The Talmud

speaks of the plague of self-afflicting Pharisees. These

Pharisees received their name for this reason. Women had a very

low status in Palestine. No really strict orthodox teacher would

be seen talking to a woman in public, even if that woman was his

own wife or sister. These Pharisees went even further; they would

not even allow themselves to look at a woman on the street. In

order to avoid doing so they would shut their eyes, and so bump

into walls and buildings and obstructions. They thus bruised and

wounded themselves, and their wounds and bruises gained them a

special reputation for exceeding piety.

(iv) There was the Pharisee who was variously described as the

Pestle and Mortar Pharisee, or the Hump-backed Pharisee, or the

Tumbling Pharisee. Such men walked in such ostentatious humility

that they were bent like a pestle in a mortar or like a

hunch-back. They were so humble that they would not even lift

their feet from the ground and so tripped over every obstruction

they met. Their humility was a self-advertising ostentation.

(v) There was the Ever-reckoning or Compounding Pharisee. This

kind of Pharisee was for ever reckoning up his good deeds; he was

for ever striking a balance sheet between himself and God, and he

believed that every good deed he did put God a little further in

his debt. To him religion was always to be reckoned in terms of a

profit and loss account.

(vi) There was the Timid or Fearing Pharisee. He was always in

dread-of divine punishment. He was, therefore, always cleansing

the outside of the cup and the platter, so that he might seem to

be good - He saw religion in terms of judgment and life in terms

of a terror-stricken evasion of this judgment.

(vii) Finally, there was the God fearing Pharisee; he was the

Pharisee who really and truly loved God and who found his delight

in obedience to the Law of God, however difficult that it might

be.

That was the Jew's own classification of the Pharisees; and it is

to be noted that there were six bad types to one good one. There

would be not a few listening to Jesus's denunciation of the

Pharisees who agreed with every word of it.


MAKING RELIGION A BURDEN


Matthew 23: 1-4

Then Jesus said to the crowds and to his disciples, "The Scribes

and Pharisee sit on Moses's seat. Therefore do and observe

everything they tell you; but do not act as they act; for they

speak, but they do not do. They bind burdens that are heavy 

and hard to bear, and place them on men's shoulders; but they

themselves refuse to lift a finger to remove them."


HERE we see the lineaments of the Pharisees already beginning to

appear. Here we see the Jewish conviction of the continuity of

the faith. God gave the Law to Moses; Moses handed it to

Joshua; Joshua transmitted it to the elders; the elders passed it

down to the prophets; and the prophets gave it to the Scribes and

Pharisees.


It must NOT for a MOMENT be thought that Jesus is COMMENDING 

the Scribes and Pharisees with all their rules and regulations. What

he is saying is this, "In SO FAR AS these Scribes and Pharisees

have taught you the great principles of the Law which Moses

received from God, you must obey them." When we were studying

Matthew 5:17-20 we saw what these principles were. The whole of

the Ten Commandments are based on two great principles. They are

based on reverence, reverence for God, for God's name, for God's

day, for the parents God has given to us. They are based on

respect, respect for a man's life, for his possessions, for his

personality, for his good name, for oneself. These principles are

eternal; and, IN SO FAR as the Scribes and Pharisees teach

reverence for God and respect for men, their teaching is

eternally binding and eternally valid.

But their whole outlook on religion had one fundamental effect.


It made it a thing of thousands upon thousands of rules and

regulations; and therefore it made it an intolerable burden. Here

is the test of any presentation of religion. Does it make it

wings to lift a man up, or a deadweight to drag him down? Does it

make it a joy or a depression? Is a man helped by his religion or

is he haunted by it? Does it carry him, or has he to carry it?

Whenever religion becomes a depressing affair of burdens and

prohibitions, it ceases to be true religion.


Nor would the Pharisees allow the slightest relaxation. Their

whole self-confessed purpose was to "build a fence around the

Law." Not one regulation would they relax or remove. Whenever

religion becomes a burden, it ceases to be true religion.


THE RELIGION OF OSTENTATION


Matthew 23: 5-12

"They perform all their actions to be seen by men. They broaden

their phylacteries; they wear outsize tassels. They love the

highest places at meals, and the front seats in the synagogues,

and greetings in the market-place, and to be called Rabbi by men.

You must not be called Rabbi; for you have only one teacher, and

you are all brothers. Call no once upon earth father, you have

one Father - your Father in Heaven. Nor must you be called

leaders; you have one leader - Chris. He who is greatest among

you will be your servant. Anyone who will exalt himself will be

humbled; and whoever will humble himself w ill be exalted."


THE religion of the Pharisees became almost inevitably a religion

of ostentation. If religion consists in obeying countless rules

and regulations, it becomes easy for a man to see to it that

everyone is aware how well he fulfils the regulations, and how

perfect is his piety. Jesus selects certain actions and customs

in which the Pharisees showed their ostentation.

They made broad their phylacteries. It is said of the

commandments of God in Exodus 13:9: "It shall be to you as a sign

on your hand, and a memorial between your eyes." The same saying

is repeated, "It shall be as a mark on your hand, or frontlets

between your eyes" (Exodus 13:16; cp. Deuteronomy 6:8; 11:18). In

order to fulfil these commandments the Jew wore at prayer, and

still wears, what are called "tephiliin" or phylacteries. They

are worn on every day except the Sabbath and special holy days.

They are like little leather boxes, strapped one on the wrist and

one on the forehead. The one on the wrist is a little leather box

of one compartment, and inside it there is a parchment roll with

the following four passages of scripture written on it Exodus 13:

1-10; 13:11-16; Deuteronomy 6:4-9; 11:13-21. The one worn on the

forehead is the same except that in it there are four little

compartments, and in each compartment there is a little scroll

inscribed with one of these four passages. The Pharisees, in

order to draw attention to himself, not only wore phylacteries,

but wore specially big ones, so that he might demonstrate his

exemplary obedience to the Law and his exemplary piety.


They wear outsize tassels; the tassels are in Greek "kraspeda"

and in Hebrew "zizith." In Numbers 15:37-41 and in Deuteronomy

22:12 we read that God commanded his people to make fringes on

the borders of their garments, so that when they looked on them

they might remember the commandments of God. These fringes were

like tassels worn on the four corners of the outer garment. Later

they were worn on the inner garment, and today they are

perpetuated in the tassels of the "prayershawl" which the devout

Jew wears at prayer. It was easy to make these tassels of

specially large size so that they became an ostentatious display

of piety, worn, not to remind a man of the commandments, but to

draw attention to himself.


Further, the Pharisees liked to be given the principal places at

meals, on the left and on the right of the host. They liked the

front seats in the synagogues. In Palestine the back seats were

occupied by the children and the most unimportant people; the

further forward the seat, the greater the honour. The most

honoured seats of all were the seats of the elders, which faced

the congregation. If a man was seated there, everyone would see

that he was present and he could conduct himself throughout the

service with a pose of piety which the congregation could not

fail to notice. Still further, the Pharisee liked to be addressed

as "Rabbi" and to be treated with the greatest respect. They

claimed, in point of fact, greater respect than that which was

given to parents, for, they said, "a man's parents give him

ordinary, physical life, but a man's teacher gives him eternal

life." They even liked to be called "father" as Elisha called

Elijah (2 Kings 2:12) and as the fathers of the faith were known.


Jesus insists that the Christian should remember that he has one

teacher only - and that teacher is Christ; and only one Father in

the faith - and that Father is God.


The whole design of the Pharisees was to dress and act in such a

way as to draw attention to themselves; the whole design of the

Christian should be to obliterate himself, so that if men see his

good deeds, they may glorify not him, but his Father in Heaven.

Any religion which produces ostentation in action and pride in

the heart is a false religion.


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


TO BE CONTINUED


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