Chapter
24 -
Is Not This the Carpenter's Son?
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ACROSS the bright days of Christ's ministry in Galilee, one shadow lay. The
people of Nazareth rejected Him. "Is not this the carpenter's son?" they
said.
During His childhood and youth, Jesus had worshiped among His brethren in
the synagogue at Nazareth. Since the opening of His ministry He had been
absent from them, but they had not been ignorant of what had befallen Him.
As He again appeared among them, their interest and expectation were excited
to the highest pitch. Here were the familiar forms and faces of those whom
He had known from infancy. Here were His mother, His brothers and sisters,
and all eyes were turned upon Him as He entered the synagogue upon the
Sabbath day, and took His place among the worshipers.
In the regular service for the day, the elder read from the prophets, and
exhorted the people still to hope for the Coming One, who would bring in a
glorious reign, and banish all oppression. He sought to encourage his
hearers by rehearsing the evidence that the Messiah's coming was near. He
described the glory of His advent, keeping prominent the thought that He
would appear at the head of armies to deliver Israel.
When a rabbi was present at the synagogue, he was expected to deliver the
sermon, and any Israelite might give the reading from the prophets. Upon
this Sabbath Jesus was requested to take part in the service. He "stood up
to read. And there was delivered unto Him a roll of the prophet Isaiah."
Luke 4:16, 17, R. V., margin. The scripture which He read was one that was
understood as referring to the Messiah:
"The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me,
Because He hath anointed Me to preach the gospel to the poor;
He hath sent Me to heal the brokenhearted,
To preach deliverance to the captives,
And recovering of sight to the blind,
To set at liberty them that are bruised,
To preach the acceptable year of the Lord."
"And He closed the roll, and gave it back to the attendant: . . . and the
eyes of all in the synagogue were fastened on Him. . . . And all bare Him
witness, and wondered at the words of grace which proceeded out of His
mouth." Luke 4:20-22, R. V., margin.
Jesus stood before the people as a living expositor of the prophecies
concerning Himself. Explaining the words He had read, He spoke of the
Messiah as a reliever of the oppressed, a liberator of captives, a healer of
the afflicted, restoring sight to the blind, and revealing to the world the
light of truth. His impressive manner and the wonderful import of His words
thrilled the hearers with a power they had never felt before. The tide of
divine influence broke every barrier down; like Moses, they beheld the
Invisible. As their hearts were moved upon by the Holy Spirit, they
responded with fervent amens and praises to the Lord.
But when Jesus announced, "This day is this scripture fulfilled in your
ears," they were suddenly recalled to think of themselves, and of the claims
of Him who had been addressing them. They, Israelites, children of Abraham,
had been represented as in bondage. They had been addressed as prisoners to
be delivered from the power of evil; as in darkness, and needing the light
of truth. Their pride was offended, and their fears were roused. The words
of Jesus indicated that His work for them was to be altogether different
from what they desired. Their deeds might be investigated too closely.
Notwithstanding their exactness in outward ceremonies, they shrank from
inspection by those clear, searching eyes.
Who is this Jesus? they questioned. He who had claimed for Himself the glory
of the Messiah was the son of a carpenter, and had worked at His trade with
His father Joseph. They had seen Him toiling up and down the hills, they
were acquainted with His brothers and sisters, and knew His life and labors.
They had seen Him develop from childhood to youth, and from youth to
manhood. Although His life had been spotless, they would not believe that He
was the Promised One.
What a contrast between His teaching in regard to the new kingdom and that
which they had heard from their elder! Jesus had said nothing of delivering
them from the Romans. They had heard of His miracles, and had hoped that His
power would be exercised for their advantage, but they had seen no
indication of such purpose.
As they opened the door to doubt, their hearts became so much the harder for
having been momentarily softened. Satan was determined that blind eyes
should not that day be opened, nor souls bound in slavery be set at liberty.
With intense energy he worked to fasten them in unbelief. They made no
account of the sign already given, when they had been stirred by the
conviction that it was their Redeemer who addressed them.
But Jesus now gave them an evidence of His divinity by revealing their
secret thoughts. "He said unto them, Doubtless ye will say unto Me this
parable, Physician, heal thyself: whatsoever we have heard done at
Capernaum, do also here in Thine own country. And He said, Verily I say unto
you, No prophet is acceptable in his own country. But of a truth I say unto
you, There were many widows in Israel in the days of Elijah, when the heaven
was shut up three years and six months, when there came a great famine over
all the land; and unto none of them was Elijah sent, but only to Zarephath,
in the land of Sidon, unto a woman that was a widow. And there were many
lepers in Israel in the time of Elisha the prophet; and none of them was
cleansed, but only Naaman, the Syrian." Luke 4:23-27, R. V.
By this relation of events in the lives of the prophets, Jesus met the
questionings of His hearers. The servants whom God had chosen for a special
work were not allowed to labor for a hardhearted and unbelieving people. But
those who had hearts to feel and faith to believe were especially favored
with evidences of His power through the prophets. In the days of Elijah,
Israel had departed from God. They clung to their sins, and rejected the
warnings of the Spirit through the Lord's messengers. Thus they cut
themselves off from the channel by which God's blessing could come to them.
The Lord passed by the homes of Israel, and found a refuge for His servant
in a heathen land, with a woman who did not belong to the chosen people. But
this woman was favored because she had followed the light she had received,
and her heart was open to the greater light that God sent her through His
prophet.
It was for the same reason that in Elisha's time the lepers of Israel were
passed by. But Naaman, a heathen nobleman, had been faithful to his
convictions of right, and had felt his great need of help. He was in a
condition to receive the gifts of God's grace. He was not only cleansed from
his leprosy, but blessed with a knowledge of the true God.
Our standing before God depends, not upon the amount of light we have
received, but upon the use we make of what we have. Thus even the heathen
who choose the right as far as they can distinguish it are in a more
favorable condition than are those who have had great light, and profess to
serve God, but who disregard the light, and by their daily life contradict
their profession.
The words of Jesus to His hearers in the synagogue struck at the root of
their self-righteousness, pressing home upon them the bitter truth that they
had departed from God and forfeited their claim to be His people. Every word
cut like a knife as their real condition was set before them. They now
scorned the faith with which Jesus had at first inspired them. They would
not admit that He who had sprung from poverty and lowliness was other than a
common man.
Their unbelief bred malice. Satan controlled them, and in wrath they cried
out against the Saviour. They had turned from Him whose mission it was to
heal and restore; now they manifested the attributes of the destroyer.
When Jesus referred to the blessings given to the Gentiles, the fierce
national pride of His hearers was aroused, and His words were drowned in a
tumult of voices. These people had prided themselves on keeping the law; but
now that their prejudices were offended, they were ready to commit murder.
The assembly broke up, and laying hands upon Jesus, they thrust Him from the
synagogue, and out of the city. All seemed eager for His destruction. They
hurried Him to the brow of a precipice, intending to cast Him down headlong.
Shouts and maledictions filled the air. Some were casting stones at Him,
when suddenly He disappeared from among them. The heavenly messengers who
had been by His side in the synagogue were with Him in the midst of that
maddened throng. They shut Him in from His enemies, and conducted Him to a
place of safety.
So angels protected Lot, and led him out safely from the midst of Sodom. So
they protected Elisha in the little mountain city. When the encircling hills
were filled with the horses and chariots of the king of Syria, and the great
host of his armed men, Elisha beheld the nearer hill slopes covered with the
armies of God,--horses and chariots of fire round about the servant of the
Lord.
So, in all ages, angels have been near to Christ's faithful followers. The
vast confederacy of evil is arrayed against all who would overcome; but
Christ would have us look to the things which are not seen, to the armies of
heaven encamped about all who love God, to deliver them. From what dangers,
seen and unseen, we have been preserved through the interposition of the
angels, we shall never know, until in the light of eternity we see the
providences of God. Then we shall know that the whole family of heaven was
interested in the family here below, and that messengers from the throne of
God attended our steps from day to day.
When Jesus in the synagogue read from the prophecy, He stopped short of the
final specification concerning the Messiah's work. Having read the words,
"To proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord," He omitted the phrase, "and
the day of vengeance of our God." Isa. 61:2. This was just as much truth as
was the first of the prophecy, and by His silence Jesus did not deny the
truth. But this last expression was that upon which His hearers delighted to
dwell, and which they were desirous of fulfilling. They denounced judgments
against the heathen, not discerning that their own guilt was even greater
than that of others. They themselves were in deepest need of the mercy they
were so ready to deny to the heathen. That day in the synagogue, when Jesus
stood among them, was their opportunity to accept the call of Heaven. He who
"delighteth in mercy" (Micah 7:18) would fain have saved them from the ruin
which their sins were inviting.
Not without one more call to repentance could He give them up. Toward the
close of His ministry in Galilee, He again visited the home of His
childhood. Since His rejection there, the fame of His preaching and His
miracles had filled the land. None now could deny that He possessed more
than human power. The people of Nazareth knew that He went about doing good,
and healing all that were oppressed by Satan. About them were whole villages
where there was not a moan of sickness in any house; for He had passed
through them, and healed all their sick. The mercy revealed in every act of
His life testified to His divine anointing.
Again as they listened to His words the Nazarenes were moved by the Divine
Spirit. But even now they would not admit that this Man, who had been
brought up among them, was other or greater than themselves. Still there
rankled the bitter memory that while He had claimed for Himself to be the
Promised One, He had really denied them a place with Israel; for He had
shown them to be less worthy of God's favor than a heathen man and woman.
Hence though they questioned, "Whence hath this Man this wisdom, and these
mighty works?" they would not receive Him as the Christ of God. Because of
their unbelief, the Saviour could not work many miracles among them. Only a
few hearts were open to His blessing, and reluctantly He departed, never to
return.
Unbelief, having once been cherished, continued to control the men of
Nazareth. So it controlled the Sanhedrin and the nation. With priests and
people, the first rejection of the demonstration of the Holy Spirit's power
was the beginning of the end. In order to prove that their first resistance
was right, they continued ever after to cavil at the words of Christ. Their
rejection of the Spirit culminated in the cross of Calvary, in the
destruction of their city, in the scattering of the nation to the winds of
heaven.
Oh, how Christ longed to open to Israel the precious treasures of the truth!
But such was their spiritual blindness that it was impossible to reveal to
them the truths relating to His kingdom. They clung to their creed and their
useless ceremonies when the truth of Heaven awaited their acceptance. They
spent their money for chaff and husks, when the bread of life was within
their reach. Why did they not go to the word of God, and search diligently
to know whether they were in error? The Old Testament Scriptures stated
plainly every detail of Christ's ministry, and again and again He quoted
from the prophets, and declared, "This day is this scripture fulfilled in
your ears." If they had honestly searched the Scriptures, bringing their
theories to the test of God's word, Jesus need not have wept over their
impenitence. He need not have declared, "Behold, your house is left unto you
desolate." Luke 13:35. They might have been acquainted with the evidence of
His Messiahship, and the calamity that laid their proud city in ruins might
have been averted. But the minds of the Jews had become narrowed by their
unreasoning bigotry. The lessons of Christ revealed their deficiencies of
character, and demanded repentance. If they accepted His teachings, their
practices must be changed, and their cherished hopes relinquished. In order
to be honored by Heaven, they must sacrifice the honor of men. If they
obeyed the words of this new rabbi, they must go contrary to the opinions of
the great thinkers and teachers of the time.
Truth was unpopular in Christ's day. It is unpopular in our day. It has been
unpopular ever since Satan first gave man a disrelish for it by presenting
fables that lead to self-exaltation. Do we not today meet theories and
doctrines that have no foundation in the word of God? Men cling as
tenaciously to them as did the Jews to their traditions.
The Jewish leaders were filled with spiritual pride. Their desire for the
glorification of self manifested itself even in the service of the
sanctuary. They loved the highest seats in the synagogue. They loved
greetings in the market places, and were gratified with the sound of their
titles on the lips of men. As real piety declined, they became more jealous
for their traditions and ceremonies.
Because their understanding was darkened by selfish prejudice, they could
not harmonize the power of Christ's convicting words with the humility of
His life. They did not appreciate the fact that real greatness can dispense
with outward show. This Man's poverty seemed wholly inconsistent with His
claim to be the Messiah. They questioned, If He was what He claimed to be,
why was He so unpretending? If He was satisfied to be without the force of
arms, what would become of their nation? How could the power and glory so
long anticipated bring the nations as subjects to the city of the Jews? Had
not the priests taught that Israel was to bear rule over all the earth? and
could it be possible that the great religious teachers were in error?
But it was not simply the absence of outward glory in His life that led the
Jews to reject Jesus. He was the embodiment of purity, and they were impure.
He dwelt among men an example of spotless integrity. His blameless life
flashed light upon their hearts. His sincerity revealed their insincerity.
It made manifest the hollowness of their pretentious piety, and discovered
iniquity to them in its odious character. Such a light was unwelcome.
If Christ had called attention to the Pharisees, and had extolled their
learning and piety, they would have hailed Him with joy. But when He spoke
of the kingdom of heaven as a dispensation of mercy for all mankind, He was
presenting a phase of religion they would not tolerate. Their own example
and teaching had never been such as to make the service of God seem
desirable. When they saw Jesus giving attention to the very ones they hated
and repulsed, it stirred up the worst passions of their proud hearts.
Notwithstanding their boast that under the "Lion of the tribe of Judah"
(Rev. 5:5), Israel should be exalted to pre-eminence over all nations, they
could have borne the disappointment of their ambitious hopes better than
they could bear Christ's reproof of their sins, and the reproach they felt
even from the presence of His purity.
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