Saturday, September 12, 2020

TECHNICAL STUDY---- JESUS/PAUL---- PHARISEES #4

 Jesus and Paul - Pharisees? #4


Some want to say they were

 by 


Keith Hunt



SHUTTING THE DOOR


Matthew 23: 13


QUOTE continued


"Alas for you, Scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites, for you shut

the door to the Kingdom of Heaven in the face of men! You

yourselves are not going into it; nor do you allow those who are

trying to get into to enter it."


Verses 13-26 of this chapter form the most terrible and the most

sustained denunciation in the New Testament. Here we hear what 

A. T. Robertson called "the rolling thunder of Christ's wrath." As

Plummer has written, these woes are "like thunder in their

unanswerable severity, and like lightning in their unsparing

exposure.... They illuminate while they strike."


Here Jesus directs a series of seven woes against the Scribes and

Pharisees. The Revised Standard Version begins every one of them:

"Woe to you!" The Greek word for woe is "ouai;" it is hard to

translate for it includes not only wrath, but also sorrow. There

is righteous anger here, but it is the anger of the heart of

love, broken by the stubborn blindness of men. There is not only

an air of savage denunciation; there is also an atmosphere of

poignant tragedy.


The word hypocrite occurs here again and again. Originally the

Greek word "hupokrites" meant one who answers; it then came to 

be specially connected with the statement and answer, the dialogue,

of the stage; and it is the regular Greek word for "an actor." It

then came to mean an actor in the WORSE sense of the term, a

PRETENDER, one who acts a part, one who wears a mask to cover 

his true feelings, one who puts on an external show while inwardly

his thoughts and feelings are very different.


To Jesus the Scribes and Pharisees were men who were acting 

a part. What he meant was this. Their whole idea of religion

consisted in outward observances, the wearing of elaborate

phylacteries and tassels, the meticulous observance of the rules

and regulations of the Law. But in their hearts there was

bitterness and envy and pride and arrogance. To Jesus

these Scribes and Pharisees were men who, under a mask of

elaborate godliness, concealed hearts in which the most godless

feelings and emotions held sway. And that accusation holds good

in greater or lesser degree of any man who lives life on the

assumption that religion consists in external observances and

external acts.


There is an unwritten saying of Jesus which says, "The key of the

Kingdom they hid." His condemnation of these Scribes and

Pharisees is that they are not only failing to enter the Kingdom

themselves, they shut the door on the faces of those who seek to

enter. What did he mean by this accusation?


We have already seen (Matthew 6:10) that the best way to think 

of the Kingdom is to think of it as a society on earth where God's

will is as perfectly done as it is in heaven. To be a citizen of

the Kingdom, and to do God's will, are one and the same thing.

The Pharisees believed that to do God's will was to observe their

thousands of petty rules and regulations; and nothing could be

further from that Kingdom whose basic idea is love. When people

tried to find entry into the Kingdom the Pharisees presented them

with these rules and regulations, which was as good as shutting

the door in their faces.


The Pharisees preferred their ideas of religion to God's idea of

religion. They had forgotten the basic truth that, if a man would

teach others, he must himself first listen to God. The gravest

danger which any teacher or preacher encounters is that he should

erect his own prejudices into universal principles and substitute

his own ideas for the truth of God. When he does that he is not a

guide, but a barrier, to the Kingdom, for, misled himself, he

misleads others.


MISSIONARIES OF EVIL


Matthew 23:15


"Alas for you, Scribes and Pharisees, for you range over the sea

and the dry land to make one proselyte, and, when that happens,

you make him twice as much a son of hell as yourselves! "


A STRANGE feature of the ancient world was the repulsion and

attraction which Judaism exercised over men at one and the same

time. There was no more hated people than the Jews. Their

separatism and their isolation and their contempt of other

nations gained them hostility. It was, in fact, believed that a

basic part of their religion was an oath that they would never

under any circumstances give help to a Gentile, even to the

extent of giving him directions if he asked the way. Their

observance of the Sabbath gained them a reputation for laziness;

their refusal of swine's flesh gained them mockery, even to the

extent of the rumour that they worshipped the pig as their god.

Anti-semitism was a real and universal force in the ancient

world.


And yet there was an attraction. The idea of one God came as a

wonderful thing to a world which believed in a multitude of gods.

Jewish ethical purity and standards of morality had a fascination

in a world steeped in immorality, especially for women. The result 

was that many were attracted to Judaism.


Their attraction was on two levels. There were those who were

called the god-fearers. These accepted the conception of one God;

they accepted the Jewish moral law; but they took no part in the

ceremonial law and did not become circumcised. Such people

existed in large numbers, and were to be found listening and

worshipping in every synagogue, and indeed provided Paul with 

his most fruitful field for evangelization. They are, for instance,

the devout Greeks of Thessalonica (Acts 17:4).


It was the aim of the Pharisees to turn these god fearers into

proselytes; the word proselyte is an English transliteration of a

Greek word "proselytes," which means one who has approached 

or drawn near. The proselyte was the full convert who had accepted

the ceremonial law and circumcision and who had become in the

fullest sense a Jew. As so often happens, "the most converted

were the most perverted." A convert often becomes the most

fanatical devotee of his new religion; and many of these proselytes 

were more fanatically devoted to the Jewish Law than even the Jews 

themselves.


Jesus accused these Pharisees of being missionaries of evil. It

was true that very few became proselytes, but those who did went

the whole way. The sin of the Pharisees was that they were not

really seeking to lead men to God, they were seeking to lead them

to Pharisaism. One of the gravest dangers which any missionary

runs is that he should try to convert people to a sect rather

than to a religion, and that he should be more concerned in

bringing people to a Church than to Jesus Christ


Premanand has certain things to say about this sectarianism 

which so often disfigures so-called Christianity: "I speak as a

Christian, God is my Father, the Church is my Mother. Christian

is my name; Catholic is my surname. Catholic, because we belong

to nothing less than the Church Universal. So do we need any

other names? Why go on to add Anglican, Episcopalian, Protestant,

Presbyterian, Methodist, Congregational, Baptist, and so on, and

so on? These terms are divisive, sectarian, narrow. They shrivel

up one's soul."


It was not to God the Pharisees sought to lead men; it was to

their own sect of Pharisaism. That in fact was their sin. And is

that sin even yet gone from the world, when it would still be

insisted in certain quarters that a man must leave one Church and

become a member of another before he can be allowed a place at

the Table of the Lord? The greatest of all heresies is the sinful

conviction that any Church has a monopoly of God or of his truth,

or that any Church is the only gateway to God's Kingdom.


THE SCIENCE OF EVASION


Matthew 23:16-22


"Alas for you, Scribes and Pharisees! Blind guides! You who say,

'If any one swears by the Temple, it is nothing; but whoever

swears by the gold of the Temple is bound by his oath' Foolish

ones and blind! Which is the greater? The gold? Or the Temple

which hallows the gold? You say,'If anyone swears by the altar,

it is nothing; but if anyone swears by the gift that is on it, he

is bound by his oath.' Blind ones! Which is greater? The gift? 

Or the altar which hallows the gift? He who swears by the altar,

swears by it and all that is on it He who swears by the Temple,

swears by it, and by him who inhabits it. And he who swears by

heaven, swears by the throne of God, and by him who sits upon

it."


We have already seen that in matters of oaths the Jewish

legalists were masters of evasion (Matthew 5:33-37). The general

principle of evasion was this. To the Jew an oath was absolutely

binding, so long as it was a binding oath. Broadly speaking, a

binding oath was an oath which definitely and without

equivocation employed the name of God; such an oath must be 

kept, no matter what the cost. Any other oath might be legitimately

broken. The idea was that, if God's name was actually used, then

God was introduced as a partner into the transaction, and to break 

the oath was not only to break faith with men but to insult God.


The science of evasion had been brought to a high degree. 

It is most probable that in this passage Jesus is presenting a

caricature of Jewish legalistic methods. He is saying, "You have

brought evasion to such a fine art that it is possible to regard

an oath by the Temple as not binding, while an oath by the gold

of the Temple is binding; and an oath by the altar as not

binding, while an oath by the gift on the altar is binding." 


This is rather to be regarded as a 'reductio ad absurdum' of

Jewish methods than as a literal description.


The idea behind the passage is just this. The whole idea of

treating oaths in this way, the whole conception of a kind of

technique of evasion, is born of a fundamental deceitfulness. 

The truly religious man will never make a promise with the 

deliberate intention of evading it; he will never, as he makes it, 

provide himself with a series of escape routes, which he may 

use if he finds his promise hard to keep.


We need not with conscious superiority condemn the Pharisaic

science of evasion. The time is not yet ended when a man seeks 

to evade some duty on a technicality or calls in the strict letter

of the law to avoid doing what the spirit of the law clearly

means he ought to do.


For Jesus the binding principle was twofold. God hears every 

word we speak and God sees every intention of our hearts. In view 

of that the fine art of evasion is one to which a Christian should

be foreign. The technique of evasion may suit the sharp practice

of the world; but never the open honesty of the Christian mind.


THE LOST SENSE OF PROPORTION


Matthew 23:23,24


"Alas for you, Scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for you tithe

mint, and dill, and cummin. and let go the weightier matters of

the Law, justice and mercy and fidelity. These you ought to have

done without neglecting the others. Blind guides who strain out 

a gnat and swallow a camel!"


The tithe was an essential part of Jewish religious regulations.

"You shall tithe all the yield of your seed, which comes forth

from the field year by year" (Deuteronomy 14:22). "All the tithe

of the land, whether of the seed of the land, or of the fruit of

the trees is the Lord's; it is holy to the Lord" (Leviticus 27:

30). This tithe was specially for the support of the Levites,

whose task it was to do the material work of the Temple. The

things which had to be tithed were further defined by the Law.

"Everything which is eatable, and is preserved, and has its

nourishment from the soil, is liable to be tithed." It is laid

down: "Of dill one must tithe the seeds, the leaves and the

stalks." So, then, it was laid down that every man must lay 

aside one-tenth of his produce for God.


The point of Jesus's saying is this. It was universally accepted

that tithes of the main crops must be given. But mint and dill

and cummin are herbs of the kitchen garden and would not be 

grown in any quantity; a man would have only a little patch of them.

All three were used in cooking, and dill and cummin had medicinal

uses. To tithe them was to tithe an infinitesimally small crop,

maybe not much more than the produce of one plant. Only those 

who were superlatively meticulous would tithe the single plants of

the kitchen garden. That is precisely what the Pharisees were

like. They were so absolutely meticulous about tithes that they

would tithe even one clump of mint; and yet these same men could

be guilty of injustice; could be hard and arrogant and cruel,

forgetting the claims of mercy; could take oaths and pledges and

promises with the deliberate intention of evading them,

forgetting fidelity. In other words, many of them kept the

trifles of the Law and forgot the things which really matter.


That spirit is not dead; it never will be until Christ rules in

the hearts of men. There is many a man who wears the right

clothes to church, carefully hands in his offering to the Church,

adopts the right attitude at prayer, is never absent from the

celebration of the sacrament, and who is not doing an honest

day's work and is irritable and bad-tempered and mean with his

money. There are women who are full of good works and who 

serve on all kinds of committees, and whose children are lonely 

for them at night. There is nothing easier than to observe all the

outward actions of religion and yet be completely irreligious.

There is nothing more necessary than a sense of proportion to

save us from confusing religious observances with real devotion.


Jesus uses a vivid illustration. In verse 24 a curious thing has

happened in the Authorized Version. It should not be to strain at

a gnat, but to strain OUT a gnat as in the Revised Standard

Version. Originally that mistake was simply a misprint but it has

been perpetuated for centuries. In point of fact the older

versions Tyndale, Coverdale, and the Geneva Bible - all correctly

have to strain OUT a gnat. The picture is this. A gnat was an

insect and therefore unclean; and so was a camel. In order to

avoid the risk of drinking anything unclean, wine was strained

through muslin gauze so that any possible impurity might be

strained out of it. This is a humorous picture which must have

raised a laugh, of a man carefully straining his wine through

gauze to avoid swallowing a microscopic insect and yet cheerfully

swallowing a camel. It is the picture of a man who has completely

lost his sense of proportion.


THE REAL CLEANNESS


Matthew 23:25,26


"Alas for you, Scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites, for you cleanse

the outside of the cup and the plate, but inside they are full of

rapacity and lust. Blind Pharisee! cleanse the inside of the cup

and the plate first, that the outside of it also may be clean."


The idea of uncleanness is continually arising in the Jewish Law.

It must be remembered that this uncleanness was not physical

uncleanness. An unclean vessel was not in our sense of the term a

dirty vessel. For a person to be ceremonially unclean meant that

they could not enter the Temple or the synagogue; he was debarred

from the worship of God. A man was unclean if, for instance, he

touched a dead body, or came into contact with a Gentile. A woman

was unclean if she had a haemorrhage, even if that haemorrhage

was perfectly normal and healthy. If a person who was himself

unclean touched any vessel, that vessel became unclean; and,

thereafter, any other person who touched or handled the vessel

became in turn unclean. It was, therefore, of paramount importance 

to have vessels cleansed; and the law for cleansing them is 

fantastically complicated. We can quote only certain basic examples 

of it.


An earthen vessel which is hollow becomes unclean only on the

inside and not on the outside; and it can be cleansed only by

being broken. The following cannot become unclean at all - a flat

plate without a rim, an open coal-shovel, a grid-iron with holes

in it for parching grains of wheat. On the other hand, a plate

with a rim, or an earthen spice-box, or a writing-case can become

unclean. Of vessels made of leather, bone, wood and glass, flat

ones do not become unclean; deep ones do. If they are broken,

they become clean. Any metal vessel which is at once smooth and

hollow can become unclean; but a door, a bolt, a lock, a hinge, a

knocker cannot become unclean. If a thing is made of wood and

metal, then the wood can become unclean, but the metal cannot.


These regulations seem to us fantastic, and yet these are the

regulations the Pharisees meticulously kept.


The food or drink inside a vessel might have been obtained 

by cheating or extortion or theft; it might be luxurious and

gluttonous; that did not matter, so long as the vessel itself was

ceremonially clean. Here is another example of fussing about

trifles and letting the weightier matters go.


Grotesque as the whole thing may seem, it can happen yet. 

A church can be torn in two about the colour of a carpet, or a

pulpit-fall, or about the shape or metal of the cups to be used

in the Sacrament. The last thing that men and women seem to

learn in matters of religion is a relative sense of values; and the

tragedy is that it is so often magnification of matters of no

importance which wreck the peace.


DISGUISED DECAY


Matthew 23: 27, 28


"Alas for you, Scribes and Pharisees! for you are like

white-washed tombs, which look beautiful on the outside, but

inside are full of the bones of dead men, and of all corruption.

So you, too, outwardly look righteous to men, but inwardly you

art full of hypocrisy and lawlessness."


HERE again is a picture which any Jew would understand. One of

the commonest places for tombs was by the wayside. We have

already seen that anyone who touched a dead body became unclean

(Numbers 19:16). Therefore, anyone who came into contact with a

tomb automatically became unclean. At one time in particular the

roads of Palestine were crowded with pilgrims - at the time of

the Passover Feast. For a man to become unclean on his way to the

Passover Feast would be a disaster, for that meant he would be

debarred from sharing in it. It was then Jewish practice in the

month of Adar to whitewash all wayside tombs, so that no pilgrims

might accidentally come into contact with one of them and be

rendered unclean.


So, as a man journeyed the roads of Palestine on a spring day,

these tombs would glint white, and almost lovely, in the

sunshine; but within they were full of bones and bodies whose

touch would defile. That, said Jesus, was a precise picture of

what the Pharisees were. Their outward actions were the actions

of intensely religious men; their inward hearts were foul and

putrid with sin.


It can still happen. As Shakespeare had it, a man may smile and

smile and be a villain. A man may walk with bowed head and

reverent steps and folded hands in the posture of humility, and

all the time be looking down with cold contempt on those whom he

regards as sinners. His very humility may be the pose of pride;

and, as he walks so humbly, he may be thinking with relish of the

picture of piety which he presents to those who are watching him.

There is nothing harder than for a good man not to know that he

is good; and once he knows he is good, his goodness is gone,

however he may appear to men from the outside.


THE TAINT OF MURDER


Matthew, 23: 29-36


"Alas for you, Scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for you erect

the tombs of the prophets, and adorn the memorials of the

righteous, and say,'If we had lived in the days of our fathers,

we would not have been partners with them in the murder of the

prophets.' Thus you witness against yourselves that you are the

sons of those who slew the prophets. Fill up the measure of your

fathers. Serpents, brood of vipers, how are you to escape being

condemned to hell fire? For this reason, look you, I send you the

prophets and the wise men and the scribes. Some of them you will

kill and crucify; and some of them you will scourge in your

synagogues, and pursue them with persecution from city to city,

that on you there may fall the responsibility for all the righteous 

blood shed upon the earth from the blood of Abel, the righteous, 

to the blood of Zacharias, the son of Barachios, whom you 

murdered between the Temple and the altar. This is the truth

I tell you - the responsibility for all these crimes shall fall

on this generation."


Jesus is charging the Jews that the taint of murder is in their

history and that that taint has not even yet worked itself out.

The Scribes and Pharisees tend the tombs of the martyrs and

beautify their memorials, and claim that, if they had lived in

the old days, they would not have slain the prophets and the 

men of God. But that is precisely what they would have done, 

and precisely what they are going to do.


Jesus's charge is that the history of Israel is the history of the 

murder of the men of God. He says that the righteous men 

from Abel to Zacharias were murdered. Why are these two chosen? 

The murder of Abel by Cain everyone knows; but the murder of

Zacharias is not nearly so well known. The story is told in a

grim little in 2 Chronicles 24:20-22. It happened in the days of

Joash. Zacharias rebuked the nation for their sin, and Joash

stirred up the people to stone him to death in the very Temple

court; and Zacharias died saying, "May the Lord see and avenge!"

(Zacharias is called the son of Barachios, whereas, in fact, he

was the son of Jehoiada, no doubt a slip of the gospel writer in

retelling the story.)


Why should Zacharias be chosen? In the Hebrew Bible Genesis 

is the first book, as it is in ours; but, unlike our order of the

books, 2 Chronicles is the last in the Hebrew Bible. We could say

that the murder of Abel is the first in the Bible story, and the

murder of Zacharias the last. From beginning to end, the history

of Israel is the rejection, and often the slaughter, of the men

of God.


Jesus is quite clear that the murder taint is still there. He knows 

that now he must die, and that in the days to come his messengers 

will be persecuted and ill-treated and rejected and slain.


Here indeed is tragedy; the nation which God chose and loved had

turned their hands against him; and the day of reckoning was to

come.


It makes us think. When history judges us, will its verdict be

that we were the hinderers or the helpers of God? That is a

question which every individual, and every nation, must answer.


END QUOTE


We have seen in no uncertain terms in Matthew 23, what Jesus

thought about the Scribes and Pharisees. There are many other

passages in the NT where Jesus lays it all bare before us about

the Scribes and Pharisees. We have seen that He told us to BEWARE

of their "leaven" - their "doctrines."  While they like all

"religious" groups have some truth, they also have MUCH error

that they teach as doctrines.


Can anyone with a sensible mind after reading all this think and

say and teach, that Jesus was a Pharisee? For me, reading the

words of Jesus from a child, when I first heard that SOME do

teach that Jesus was a Pharisee, I frankly had to laugh literally, 

until I realized they were dead serious about claiming it, and 

were teaching it as if it was a fact.


NO! NO! NO!  Jesus was NEVER EVER a Pharisee!!


In the next study on this subject, I will answer section by

section what William Dankenbring has written.


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


TO BE CONTINUED

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