Chapter
41 -
The Crisis in Galilee
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WHEN Christ forbade the people to declare Him king, He knew that a turning
point in His history was reached. Multitudes who desired to exalt Him to the
throne today would turn from Him tomorrow. The disappointment of their
selfish ambition would turn their love to hatred, and their praise to
curses. Yet knowing this, He took no measures to avert the crisis. From the
first He had held out to His followers no hope of earthly rewards. To one
who came desiring to become His disciple He had said, "The foxes have holes,
and the birds of the air have nests; but the Son of man hath not where to
lay His head." Matt. 8:20. If men could have had the world with Christ,
multitudes would have proffered Him their allegiance; but such service He
could not accept. Of those now connected with Him there were many who had
been attracted by the hope of a worldly kingdom. These must be undeceived.
The deep spiritual teaching in the miracle of the loaves had not been
comprehended. This was to be made plain. And this new revelation would bring
with it a closer test.
The miracle of the loaves was reported far and near, and very early next
morning the people flocked to Bethsaida to see Jesus. They came in great
numbers, by land and sea. Those who had left Him the preceding night
returned, expecting to find Him still there; for there had been no boat by
which He could pass to the other side. But their search was fruitless, and
many repaired to Capernaum, still seeking Him.
Meanwhile He had arrived at Gennesaret, after an absence of but one day. As
soon as it was known that He had landed, the people "ran through that whole
region round about, and began to carry about in beds those that were sick,
where they heard He was." Mark 6:55.
After a time He went to the synagogue, and there those who had come from
Bethsaida found Him. They learned from His disciples how He had crossed the
sea. The fury of the storm, and the many hours of fruitless rowing against
adverse winds, the appearance of Christ walking upon the water, the fears
thus aroused, His reassuring words, the adventure of Peter and its result,
with the sudden stilling of the tempest and landing of the boat, were all
faithfully recounted to the wondering crowd. Not content with this, however,
many gathered about Jesus, questioning, "Rabbi, when camest Thou hither?"
They hoped to receive from His own lips a further account of the miracle.
Jesus did not gratify their curiosity. He sadly said, "Ye seek Me, not
because ye saw the miracles, but because ye did eat of the loaves, and were
filled." They did not seek Him from any worthy motive; but as they had been
fed with the loaves, they hoped still to receive temporal benefit by
attaching themselves to Him. The Saviour bade them, "Labor not for the meat
which perisheth, but for that meat which endureth unto everlasting life."
Seek not merely for material benefit. Let it not be the chief effort to
provide for the life that now is, but seek for spiritual food, even that
wisdom which will endure unto everlasting life. This the Son of God alone
can give; "for Him hath God the Father sealed."
For the moment the interest of the hearers was awakened. They exclaimed,
"What shall we do, that we might work the works of God?" They had been
performing many and burdensome works in order to recommend themselves to
God; and they were ready to hear of any new observance by which they could
secure greater merit. Their question meant, What shall we do that we may
deserve heaven? What is the price we are required to pay in order to obtain
the life to come?
"Jesus answered and said unto them, This is the work of God, that ye believe
on Him whom He hath sent." The price of heaven is Jesus. The way to heaven
is through faith in "the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the
world." John 1:29.
But the people did not choose to receive this statement of divine truth.
Jesus had done the very work which prophecy had foretold that the Messiah
would do; but they had not witnessed what their selfish hopes had pictured
as His work. Christ had indeed once fed the multitude with barley loaves;
but in the days of Moses Israel had been fed with manna forty years, and far
greater blessings were expected from the Messiah. Their dissatisfied hearts
queried why, if Jesus could perform so many wondrous works as they had
witnessed, could He not give health, strength, and riches to all His people,
free them from their oppressors, and exalt them to power and honor? The fact
that He claimed to be the Sent of God, and yet refused to be Israel's king,
was a mystery which they could not fathom. His refusal was misinterpreted.
Many concluded that He dared not assert His claims because He Himself
doubted as to the divine character of His mission. Thus they opened their
hearts to unbelief, and the seed which Satan had sown bore fruit of its
kind, in misunderstanding and defection.
Now, half mockingly, a rabbi questioned, "What sign showest Thou then, that
we may see, and believe Thee? what dost Thou work? Our fathers did eat manna
in the desert; as it is written, He gave them bread from heaven to eat."
The Jews honored Moses as the giver of the manna, ascribing praise to the
instrument, and losing sight of Him by whom the work had been accomplished.
Their fathers had murmured against Moses, and had doubted and denied his
divine mission. Now in the same spirit the children rejected the One who
bore the message of God to themselves. "Then said Jesus unto them, Verily,
verily, I say unto you, Moses gave you not that bread from heaven." The
giver of the manna was standing among them. It was Christ Himself who had
led the Hebrews through the wilderness, and had daily fed them with the
bread from heaven. That food was a type of the real bread from heaven. The
life-giving Spirit, flowing from the infinite fullness of God, is the true
manna. Jesus said, "The bread of God is that which cometh down out of
heaven, and giveth life unto the world." John 6:33, R. V.
Still thinking that it was temporal food to which Jesus referred, some of
His hearers exclaimed, "Lord, evermore give us this bread." Jesus then spoke
plainly: "I am the bread of life."
The figure which Christ used was a familiar one to the Jews. Moses, by the
inspiration of the Holy Spirit, had said, "Man doth not live by bread only,
but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lord." And the
prophet Jeremiah had written, "Thy words were found, and I did eat them; and
Thy word was unto me the joy and rejoicing of mine heart." Deut. 8:3; Jer.
15:16. The rabbis themselves had a saying, that the eating of bread, in its
spiritual significance, was the study of the law and the practice of good
works; and it was often said that at the Messiah's coming all Israel would
be fed. The teaching of the prophets made plain the deep spiritual lesson in
the miracle of the loaves. This lesson Christ was seeking to open to His
hearers in the synagogue. Had they understood the Scriptures, they would
have understood His words when He said, "I am the bread of life." Only the
day before, the great multitude, when faint and weary, had been fed by the
bread which He had given. As from that bread they had received physical
strength and refreshment, so from Christ they might receive spiritual
strength unto eternal life. "He that cometh to Me," He said, "shall never
hunger; and he that believeth on Me shall never thirst." But He added, "Ye
also have seen Me, and believe not."
They had seen Christ by the witness of the Holy Spirit, by the revelation of
God to their souls. The living evidences of His power had been before them
day after day, yet they asked for still another sign. Had this been given,
they would have remained as unbelieving as before. If they were not
convinced by what they had seen and heard, it was useless to show them more
marvelous works. Unbelief will ever find excuse for doubt, and will reason
away the most positive proof.
Again Christ appealed to those stubborn hearts. "Him that cometh to Me I
will in nowise cast out." All who received Him in faith, He said, should
have eternal life. Not one could be lost. No need for Pharisees and
Sadducees to dispute concerning the future life. No longer need men mourn in
hopeless grief over their dead. "This is the will of Him that sent Me, that
everyone which seeth the Son, and believeth on Him, may have everlasting
life: and I will raise him up at the last day."
But the leaders of the people were offended, "and they said, Is not this
Jesus, the son of Joseph, whose father and mother we know? how is it then
that He saith, I came down from heaven?" They tried to arouse prejudice by
referring scornfully to the lowly origin of Jesus. They contemptuously
alluded to His life as a Galilean laborer, and to His family as being poor
and lowly. The claims of this uneducated carpenter, they said, were unworthy
of their attention. And on account of His mysterious birth they insinuated
that He was of doubtful parentage, thus representing the human circumstances
of His birth as a blot upon His history.
Jesus did not attempt to explain the mystery of His birth. He made no answer
to the questionings in regard to His having come down from heaven, as He had
made none to the questions concerning His crossing the sea. He did not call
attention to the miracles that marked His life. Voluntarily He had made
Himself of no reputation, and taken upon Him the form of a servant. But His
words and works revealed His character. All whose hearts were open to divine
illumination would recognize in Him "the Only-begotten of the Father, full
of grace and truth." John 1:14.
The prejudice of the Pharisees lay deeper than their questions would
indicate; it had its root in the perversity of their hearts. Every word and
act of Jesus aroused antagonism in them; for the spirit which they cherished
could find in Him no answering chord.
"No man can come to Me, except the Father which hath sent Me draw him: and I
will raise him up at the last day. It is written in the prophets, And they
shall be all taught of God. Every man therefore that hath heard, and hath
learned of the Father, cometh unto Me." None will ever come to Christ, save
those who respond to the drawing of the Father's love. But God is drawing
all hearts unto Him, and only those who resist His drawing will refuse to
come to Christ.
In the words, "They shall be all taught of God," Jesus referred to the
prophecy of Isaiah: "All thy children shall be taught of the Lord; and great
shall be the peace of thy children." Isa. 54:13. This scripture the Jews
appropriated to themselves. It was their boast that God was their teacher.
But Jesus showed how vain is this claim; for He said, "Every man therefore
that hath heard, and hath learned of the Father, cometh unto Me." Only
through Christ could they receive a knowledge of the Father. Humanity could
not endure the vision of His glory. Those who had learned of God had been
listening to the voice of His Son, and in Jesus of Nazareth they would
recognize Him who through nature and revelation has declared the Father.
"Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that believeth on Me hath everlasting
life." Through the beloved John, who listened to these words, the Holy
Spirit declared to the churches, "This is the record, that God hath given to
us eternal life, and this life is in His Son. He that hath the Son hath
life." 1 John 5:11, 12. And Jesus said, "I will raise him up at the last
day." Christ became one flesh with us, in order that we might become one
spirit with Him. It is by virtue of this union that we are to come forth
from the grave,--not merely as a manifestation of the power of Christ, but
because, through faith, His life has become ours. Those who see Christ in
His true character, and receive Him into the heart, have everlasting life.
It is through the Spirit that Christ dwells in us; and the Spirit of God,
received into the heart by faith, is the beginning of the life eternal.
The people had referred Christ to the manna which their fathers ate in the
wilderness, as if the furnishing of that food was a greater miracle than
Jesus had performed; but He shows how meager was that gift when compared
with the blessings He had come to bestow. The manna could sustain only this
earthly existence; it did not prevent the approach of death, nor insure
immortality; but the bread of heaven would nourish the soul unto everlasting
life. The Saviour said, "I am that bread of life. Your fathers did eat manna
in the wilderness, and are dead. This is the bread which cometh down from
heaven, that a man may eat thereof, and not die. I am the living bread which
came down from heaven: if any man eat of this bread, he shall live forever."
To this figure Christ now adds another. Only through dying could He impart
life to men, and in the words that follow He points to His death as the
means of salvation. He says, "The bread that I will give is My flesh, which
I will give for the life of the world."
The Jews were about to celebrate the Passover at Jerusalem, in commemoration
of the night of Israel's deliverance, when the destroying angel smote the
homes of Egypt. In the paschal lamb God desired them to behold the Lamb of
God, and through the symbol receive Him who gave Himself for the life of the
world. But the Jews had come to make the symbol all-important, while its
significance was unnoticed. They discerned not the Lord's body. The same
truth that was symbolized in the paschal service was taught in the words of
Christ. But it was still undiscerned.
Now the rabbis exclaimed angrily, "How can this Man give us His flesh to
eat?" They affected to understand His words in the same literal sense as did
Nicodemus when he asked, "How can a man be born when he is old?" John 3:4.
To some extent they comprehended the meaning of Jesus, but they were not
willing to acknowledge it. By misconstruing His words, they hoped to
prejudice the people against Him.
Christ did not soften down His symbolical representation. He reiterated the
truth in yet stronger language: "Verily, verily, I say unto you, Except ye
eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink His blood, ye have no life in
you. Whoso eateth My flesh, and drinketh My blood, hath eternal life; and I
will raise him up at the last day. For My flesh is meat indeed, and My blood
is drink indeed. He that eateth My flesh, and drinketh My blood, dwelleth in
Me, and I in him."
To eat the flesh and drink the blood of Christ is to receive Him as a
personal Saviour, believing that He forgives our sins, and that we are
complete in Him. It is by beholding His love, by dwelling upon it, by
drinking it in, that we are to become partakers of His nature. What food is
to the body, Christ must be to the soul. Food cannot benefit us unless we
eat it, unless it becomes a part of our being. So Christ is of no value to
us if we do not know Him as a personal Saviour. A theoretical knowledge will
do us no good. We must feed upon Him, receive Him into the heart, so that
His life becomes our life. His love, His grace, must be assimilated.
But even these figures fail to present the privilege of the believer's
relation to Christ. Jesus said, "As the living Father hath sent Me, and I
live by the Father: so he that eateth Me, even he shall live by Me." As the
Son of God lived by faith in the Father, so are we to live by faith in
Christ. So fully was Jesus surrendered to the will of God that the Father
alone appeared in His life. Although tempted in all points like as we are,
He stood before the world untainted by the evil that surrounded Him. Thus we
also are to overcome as Christ overcame.
Are you a follower of Christ? Then all that is written concerning the
spiritual life is written for you, and may be attained through uniting
yourself to Jesus. Is your zeal languishing? has your first love grown cold?
Accept again of the proffered love of Christ. Eat of His flesh, drink of His
blood, and you will become one with the Father and with the Son.
The unbelieving Jews refused to see any except the most literal meaning in
the Saviour's words. By the ritual law they were forbidden to taste blood,
and they now construed Christ's language into a sacrilegious speech, and
disputed over it among themselves. Many even of the disciples said, "This is
an hard saying; who can hear it?"
The Saviour answered them: "Doth this offend you? What and if ye shall see
the Son of man ascend up where He was before? It is the spirit that
quickeneth; the flesh profiteth nothing: the words that I speak unto you,
they are spirit, and they are life."
The life of Christ that gives life to the world is in His word. It was by
His word that Jesus healed disease and cast out demons; by His word He
stilled the sea, and raised the dead; and the people bore witness that His
word was with power. He spoke the word of God, as He had spoken through all
the prophets and teachers of the Old Testament. The whole Bible is a
manifestation of Christ, and the Saviour desired to fix the faith of His
followers on the word. When His visible presence should be withdrawn, the
word must be their source of power. Like their Master, they were to live "by
every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God." Matt. 4:4.
As our physical life is sustained by food, so our spiritual life is
sustained by the word of God. And every soul is to receive life from God's
word for himself. As we must eat for ourselves in order to receive
nourishment, so we must receive the word for ourselves. We are not to obtain
it merely through the medium of another's mind. We should carefully study
the Bible, asking God for the aid of the Holy Spirit, that we may understand
His word. We should take one verse, and concentrate the mind on the task of
ascertaining the thought which God has put in that verse for us. We should
dwell upon the thought until it becomes our own, and we know "what saith the
Lord."
In His promises and warnings, Jesus means me. God so loved the world, that
He gave His only-begotten Son, that I by believing in Him, might not perish,
but have everlasting life. The experiences related in God's word are to be
my experiences. Prayer and promise, precept and warning, are mine. "I am
crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in
me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the
Son of God, who loved me, and gave Himself for me." Gal. 2:20. As faith thus
receives and assimilates the principles of truth, they become a part of the
being and the motive power of the life. The word of God, received into the
soul, molds the thoughts, and enters into the development of character.
By looking constantly to Jesus with the eye of faith, we shall be
strengthened. God will make the most precious revelations to His hungering,
thirsting people. They will find that Christ is a personal Saviour. As they
feed upon His word, they find that it is spirit and life. The word destroys
the natural, earthly nature, and imparts a new life in Christ Jesus. The
Holy Spirit comes to the soul as a Comforter. By the transforming agency of
His grace, the image of God is reproduced in the disciple; he becomes a new
creature. Love takes the place of hatred, and the heart receives the divine
similitude. This is what it means to live "by every word that proceedeth out
of the mouth of God." This is eating the Bread that comes down from heaven.
Christ had spoken a sacred, eternal truth regarding the relation between
Himself and His followers. He knew the character of those who claimed to be
His disciples, and His words tested their faith. He declared that they were
to believe and act upon His teaching. All who received Him would partake of
His nature, and be conformed to His character. This involved the
relinquishment of their cherished ambitions. It required the complete
surrender of themselves to Jesus. They were called to become
self-sacrificing, meek and lowly in heart. They must walk in the narrow path
traveled by the Man of Calvary, if they would share in the gift of life and
the glory of heaven.
The test was too great. The enthusiasm of those who had sought to take Him
by force and make Him king grew cold. This discourse in the synagogue, they
declared, had opened their eyes. Now they were undeceived. In their minds
His words were a direct confession that He was not the Messiah, and that no
earthly rewards were to be realized from connection with Him. They had
welcomed His miracle-working power; they were eager to be freed from disease
and suffering; but they would not come into sympathy with His
self-sacrificing life. They cared not for the mysterious spiritual kingdom
of which He spoke. The insincere, the selfish, who had sought Him, no longer
desired Him. If He would not devote His power and influence to obtaining
their freedom from the Romans, they would have nothing to do with Him.
Jesus told them plainly, "There are some of you that believe not;" adding,
"Therefore said I unto you, that no man can come unto Me, except it were
given unto him of My Father." He wished them to understand that if they were
not drawn to Him it was because their hearts were not open to the Holy
Spirit. "The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for
they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they are
spiritually discerned." 1 Cor. 2:14. It is by faith that the soul beholds
the glory of Jesus. This glory is hidden, until, through the Holy Spirit,
faith is kindled in the soul.
By the public rebuke of their unbelief these disciples were still further
alienated from Jesus. They were greatly displeased, and wishing to wound the
Saviour and gratify the malice of the Pharisees, they turned their backs
upon Him, and left Him with disdain. They had made their choice,--had taken
the form without the spirit, the husk without the kernel. Their decision was
never afterward reversed; for they walked no more with Jesus.
"Whose fan is in His hand, and He will throughly purge His floor, and gather
His wheat into the garner." Matt. 3:12. This was one of the times of
purging. By the words of truth, the chaff was being separated from the
wheat. Because they were too vain and self-righteous to receive reproof, too
world-loving to accept a life of humility, many turned away from Jesus. Many
are still doing the same thing. Souls are tested today as were those
disciples in the synagogue at Capernaum. When truth is brought home to the
heart, they see that their lives are not in accordance with the will of God.
They see the need of an entire change in themselves; but they are not
willing to take up the self-denying work. Therefore they are angry when
their sins are discovered. They go away offended, even as the disciples left
Jesus, murmuring, "This is an hard saying; who can hear it?"
Praise and flattery would be pleasing to their ears; but the truth is
unwelcome; they cannot hear it. When the crowds follow, and the multitudes
are fed, and the shouts of triumph are heard, their voices are loud in
praise; but when the searching of God's Spirit reveals their sin, and bids
them leave it, they turn their backs upon the truth, and walk no more with
Jesus.
As those disaffected disciples turned away from Christ, a different spirit
took control of them. They could see nothing attractive in Him whom they had
once found so interesting. They sought out His enemies, for they were in
harmony with their spirit and work. They misinterpreted His words, falsified
His statements, and impugned His motives. They sustained their course by
gathering up every item that could be turned against Him; and such
indignation was stirred up by these false reports that His life was in
danger.
The news spread swiftly that by His own confession Jesus of Nazareth was not
the Messiah. And thus in Galilee the current of popular feeling was turned
against Him, as, the year before, it had been in Judea. Alas for Israel!
They rejected their Saviour, because they longed for a conqueror who would
give them temporal power. They wanted the meat which perishes, and not that
which endures unto everlasting life.
With a yearning heart, Jesus saw those who had been His disciples departing
from Him, the Life and the Light of men. The consciousness that His
compassion was unappreciated, His love unrequited, His mercy slighted, His
salvation rejected, filled Him with sorrow that was inexpressible. It was
such developments as these that made Him a man of sorrows, and acquainted
with grief.
Without attempting to hinder those who were leaving Him, Jesus turned to the
twelve and said, "Will ye also go away?"
Peter replied by asking, "Lord, to whom shall we go?" "Thou hast the words
of eternal life," he added. "And we believe and are sure that Thou art that
Christ, the Son of the living God."
"To whom shall we go?" The teachers of Israel were slaves to formalism. The
Pharisees and Sadducees were in constant contention. To leave Jesus was to
fall among sticklers for rites and ceremonies, and ambitious men who sought
their own glory. The disciples had found more peace and joy since they had
accepted Christ than in all their previous lives. How could they go back to
those who had scorned and persecuted the Friend of sinners? They had long
been looking for the Messiah; now He had come, and they could not turn from
His presence to those who were hunting His life, and had persecuted them for
becoming His followers.
"To whom shall we go?" Not from the teaching of Christ, His lessons of love
and mercy, to the darkness of unbelief, the wickedness of the world. While
the Saviour was forsaken by many who had witnessed His wonderful works,
Peter expressed the faith of the disciples,--"Thou art that Christ." The
very thought of losing this anchor of their souls filled them with fear and
pain. To be destitute of a Saviour was to be adrift on a dark and stormy
sea.
Many of the words and acts of Jesus appear mysterious to finite minds, but
every word and act had its definite purpose in the work for our redemption;
each was calculated to produce its own result. If we were capable of
understanding His purposes, all would appear important, complete, and in
harmony with His mission.
While we cannot now comprehend the works and ways of God, we can discern His
great love, which underlies all His dealings with men. He who lives near to
Jesus will understand much of the mystery of godliness. He will recognize
the mercy that administers reproof, that tests the character, and brings to
light the purpose of the heart.
When Jesus presented the testing truth that caused so many of His disciples
to turn back, He knew what would be the result of His words; but He had a
purpose of mercy to fulfill. He foresaw that in the hour of temptation every
one of His beloved disciples would be severely tested. His agony in
Gethsemane, His betrayal and crucifixion, would be to them a most trying
ordeal. Had no previous test been given, many who were actuated by merely
selfish motives would have been connected with them. When their Lord was
condemned in the judgment hall; when the multitude who had hailed Him as
their king hissed at Him and reviled Him; when the jeering crowd cried,
"Crucify Him!"--when their worldly ambitions were disappointed, these
self-seeking ones would, by renouncing their allegiance to Jesus, have
brought upon the disciples a bitter, heart-burdening sorrow, in addition to
their grief and disappointment in the ruin of their fondest hopes. In that
hour of darkness, the example of those who turned from Him might have
carried others with them. But Jesus brought about this crisis while by His
personal presence He could still strengthen the faith of His true followers.
Compassionate Redeemer, who in the full knowledge of the doom that awaited
Him, tenderly smoothed the way for the disciples, prepared them for their
crowning trial, and strengthened them for the final test!
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