Chapter
50 -
Among Snares
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ALL the while Jesus was at Jerusalem during the feast He was shadowed by
spies. Day after day new schemes to silence Him were tried. The priests and
rulers were watching to entrap Him. They were planning to stop Him by
violence. But this was not all. They wanted to humble this Galilean rabbi
before the people.
On the first day of His presence at the feast, the rulers had come to Him,
demanding by what authority He taught. They wished to divert attention from
Him to the question of His right to teach, and thus to their own importance
and authority.
"My teaching is not Mine," said Jesus, "but His that sent Me. If any man
willeth to do His will, he shall know of the teaching, whether it be of God,
or whether I speak from Myself." John 7:16, 17, R. V. The question of these
cavilers Jesus met, not by answering the cavil, but by opening up truth
vital to the salvation of the soul. The perception and appreciation of
truth, He said, depends less upon the mind than upon the heart. Truth must
be received into the soul; it claims the homage of the will. If truth could
be submitted to the reason alone, pride would be no hindrance in the way of
its reception. But it is to be received through the work of grace in the
heart; and its reception depends upon the renunciation of every sin that the
Spirit of God reveals. Man's advantages for obtaining a knowledge of the
truth, however great these may be, will prove of no benefit to him unless
the heart is open to receive
the truth, and there is a conscientious surrender of every habit and
practice that is opposed to its principles. To those who thus yield
themselves to God, having an honest desire to know and to do His will, the
truth is revealed as the power of God for their salvation. These will be
able to distinguish between him who speaks for God, and him who speaks
merely from himself. The Pharisees had not put their will on the side of
God's will. They were not seeking to know the truth, but to find some excuse
for evading it; Christ showed that this was why they did not understand His
teaching.
He now gave a test by which the true teacher might be distinguished from the
deceiver: "He that speaketh from himself seeketh his own glory: but he that
seeketh the glory of Him that sent him, the same is true, and no
unrighteousness is in him." John 7:18, R. V. He that seeketh his own glory
is speaking only from himself. The spirit of self-seeking betrays its
origin. But Christ was seeking the glory of God. He spoke the words of God.
This was the evidence of His authority as a teacher of the truth.
Jesus gave the rabbis an evidence of His divinity by showing that He read
their hearts. Ever since the healing at Bethesda they had been plotting His
death. Thus they were themselves breaking the law which they professed to be
defending. "Did not Moses give you the law," He said, "and yet none of you
keepeth the law? Why go ye about to kill Me?"
Like a swift flash of light these words revealed to the rabbis the pit of
ruin into which they were about to plunge. For an instant they were filled
with terror. They saw that they were in conflict with Infinite Power. But
they would not be warned. In order to maintain their influence with the
people, their murderous designs must be concealed. Evading the question of
Jesus, they exclaimed, "Thou hast a devil: who goeth about to kill Thee?"
They insinuated that the wonderful works of Jesus were instigated by an evil
spirit.
To this insinuation Christ gave no heed. He went on to show that His work of
healing at Bethesda was in harmony with the Sabbath law, and that it was
justified by the interpretation which the Jews themselves put upon the law.
He said, "Moses therefore gave unto you circumcision; . . . and ye on the
Sabbath day circumcise a man." According to the law, every child must be
circumcised on the eighth day. Should the appointed time fall upon the
Sabbath, the rite must then be performed. How much more must it be in
harmony with the
spirit of the law to make a man "every whit whole on the Sabbath day." And
He warned them to "judge not according to the appearance, but judge
righteous judgment."
The rulers were silenced; and many of the people exclaimed, "Is not this He,
whom they seek to kill? But, lo, He speaketh boldly, and they say nothing
unto Him. Do the rulers know indeed that this is the very Christ?"
Many among Christ's hearers who were dwellers at Jerusalem, and who were not
ignorant of the plots of the rulers against Him, felt themselves drawn to
Him by an irresistible power. The conviction pressed upon them that He was
the Son of God. But Satan was ready to suggest doubt; and for this the way
was prepared by their own erroneous ideas of the Messiah and His coming. It
was generally believed that Christ would be born at Bethlehem, but that
after a time He would disappear, and at His second appearance none would
know whence He came. There were not a few who held that the Messiah would
have no natural relationship to humanity. And because the popular conception
of the glory of the Messiah was not met by Jesus of Nazareth, many gave heed
to the suggestion, "Howbeit we know this Man whence He is: but when Christ
cometh, no man knoweth whence He is."
While they were thus wavering between doubt and faith, Jesus took up their
thoughts and answered them: "Ye both know Me, and ye know whence I am: and I
am not come of Myself, but He that sent Me is true, whom ye know not." They
claimed a knowledge of what the origin of Christ should be, but they were in
utter ignorance of it. If they had lived in accordance with the will of God,
they would have known His Son when He was manifested to them.
The hearers could not but understand Christ's words. Clearly they were a
repetition of the claim He had made in the presence of the Sanhedrin many
months before, when He declared Himself the Son of God. As the rulers then
tried to compass His death, so now they sought to take Him; but they were
prevented by an unseen power, which put a limit to their rage, saying to
them, Thus far shalt thou go, and no farther.
Among the people many believed on Him, and they said, "When Christ cometh,
will He do more miracles than these which this Man hath done?" The leaders
of the Pharisees, who were anxiously watching the course of events, caught
the expressions of sympathy among the throng. Hurrying away to the chief
priests, they laid their plans to arrest Him.
They arranged, however, to take Him when He was alone; for they dared not
seize Him in the presence of the people. Again Jesus made it manifest that
He read their purpose. "Yet a little while am I with you," He said, "and
then I go unto Him that sent Me. Ye shall seek Me, and shall not find Me:
and where I am, thither ye cannot come." Soon He would find a refuge beyond
the reach of their scorn and hate. He would ascend to the Father, to be
again the Adored of the angels; and thither His murderers could never come.
Sneeringly the rabbis said, "Whither will He go, that we shall not find Him?
will He go unto the dispersed among the Gentiles, and teach the Gentiles?"
Little did these cavilers dream that in their mocking words they were
picturing the mission of the Christ! All day long He had stretched forth His
hands unto a disobedient and gainsaying people; yet He would be found of
them that sought Him not; among a people that had not called upon His name
He would be manifest. Rom. 10:20, 21.
Many who were convinced that Jesus was the Son of God were misled by the
false reasoning of the priests and rabbis. These teachers had repeated with
great effect the prophecies concerning the Messiah, that He would "reign in
Mount Zion, and in Jerusalem, and before His ancients gloriously;" that He
would "have dominion also from sea to sea, and from the river unto the ends
of the earth." Isa. 24:23; Ps. 72:8. Then they made contemptuous comparisons
between the glory here pictured and the humble appearance of Jesus. The very
words of prophecy were so perverted as to sanction error. Had the people in
sincerity studied the word for themselves, they would not have been misled.
The sixty-first chapter of Isaiah testifies that Christ was to do the very
work He did. Chapter fifty-three sets forth His rejection and sufferings in
the world, and chapter fifty-nine describes the character of the priests and
rabbis.
God does not compel men to give up their unbelief. Before them are light and
darkness, truth and error. It is for them to decide which they will accept.
The human mind is endowed with power to discriminate between right and
wrong. God designs that men shall not decide from impulse, but from weight
of evidence, carefully comparing scripture with scripture. Had the Jews laid
by their prejudice and compared written prophecy with the facts
characterizing the life of Jesus, they would have perceived a beautiful
harmony between the prophecies and their fulfillment in the life and
ministry of the lowly Galilean.
Many are deceived today in the same way as were the Jews. Religious teachers
read the Bible in the light of their own understanding and traditions; and
the people do not search the Scriptures for themselves, and judge for
themselves as to what is truth; but they yield up their judgment, and commit
their souls to their leaders. The preaching and teaching of His word is one
of the means that God has ordained for diffusing light; but we must bring
every man's teaching to the test of Scripture. Whoever will prayerfully
study the Bible, desiring to know the truth, that he may obey it, will
receive divine enlightenment. He will understand the Scriptures. "If any man
willeth to do His will, he shall know of the teaching." John 7:17, R. V.
On the last day of the feast, the officers sent out by the priests and
rulers to arrest Jesus, returned without Him. They were angrily questioned,
"Why have ye not brought Him?" With solemn countenance they answered, "Never
man spake like this Man."
Hardened as were their hearts, they were melted by His words. While He was
speaking in the temple court, they had lingered near, to catch something
that might be turned against Him. But as they listened, the purpose for
which they had been sent was forgotten. They stood as men entranced. Christ
revealed Himself to their souls. They saw that which priests and rulers
would not see,--humanity flooded with the glory of divinity. They returned,
so filled with this thought, so impressed by His words, that to the inquiry,
"Why have ye not brought Him?" they could only reply, "Never man spake like
this Man."
The priests and rulers, on first coming into the presence of Christ, had
felt the same conviction. Their hearts were deeply moved, and the thought
was forced upon them, "Never man spake like this Man." But they had stifled
the conviction of the Holy Spirit. Now, enraged that even the instruments of
the law should be influenced by the hated Galilean, they cried, "Are ye also
deceived? Have any of the rulers or of the Pharisees believed on Him? But
this people who knoweth not the law are cursed."
Those to whom the message of truth is spoken seldom ask, "Is it true?" but,
"By whom is it advocated?" Multitudes estimate it by the numbers who accept
it; and the question is still asked, "Have any of the learned men or
religious leaders believed?" Men are no more favorable to real godliness now
than in the days of Christ. They are just as intently seeking earthly good,
to the neglect of eternal riches; and it is not an argument against the
truth, that large numbers are not ready to accept it, or that it is not
received by the world's great men, or even by the religious leaders.
Again the priests and rulers proceeded to lay plans for arresting Jesus. It
was urged that if He were longer left at liberty, He would draw the people
away from the established leaders, and the only safe course was to silence
Him without delay. In the full tide of their discussion, they were suddenly
checked. Nicodemus questioned, "Doth our law judge any man, before it hear
him, and know what he doeth?" Silence fell on the assembly. The words of
Nicodemus came home to their consciences. They could not condemn a man
unheard. But it was not for this reason alone that the haughty rulers
remained silent, gazing at him who had dared to speak in favor of justice.
They were startled and chagrined that one of their own number had been so
far impressed by the character of Jesus as to speak a word in His defense.
Recovering from their astonishment, they addressed Nicodemus with cutting
sarcasm, "Art thou also of Galilee? Search and look: for out of Galilee
ariseth no prophet."
Yet the protest resulted in staying the proceedings of the council. The
rulers were unable to carry out their purpose and condemn Jesus without a
hearing. Defeated for the time, "every man went unto his own house. Jesus
went unto the Mount of Olives."
From the excitement and confusion of the city, from the eager crowds and the
treacherous rabbis, Jesus turned away to the quiet of the olive groves,
where He could be alone with God. But in the early morning He returned to
the temple, and as the people gathered about Him, He sat down and taught
them.
He was soon interrupted. A group of Pharisees and scribes approached Him,
dragging with them a terror-stricken woman, whom with hard, eager voices
they accused of having violated the seventh commandment. Having pushed her
into the presence of Jesus, they said to Him, with a hypocritical show of
respect, "Moses in the law commanded us, that such should be stoned: but
what sayest Thou?"
Their pretended reverence veiled a deep-laid plot for His ruin. They had
seized upon this opportunity to secure His condemnation, thinking that
whatever decision He might make, they would find occasion to accuse Him.
Should He acquit the woman, He might be charged with despising the law of
Moses. Should He declare her worthy of death, He could be accused to the
Romans as one who was assuming authority that belonged only to them.
Jesus looked for a moment upon the scene,--the trembling victim in her
shame, the hard-faced dignitaries, devoid of even human pity. His spirit of
stainless purity shrank from the spectacle. Well He knew for what purpose
this case had been brought to Him. He read the heart, and knew the character
and life history of everyone in His presence. These would-be guardians of
justice had themselves led their victim into sin, that they might lay a
snare for Jesus. Giving no sign that He had heard their question, He
stooped, and fixing His eyes upon the ground, began to write in the dust.
Impatient at His delay and apparent indifference, the accusers drew nearer,
urging the matter upon His attention. But as their eyes, following those of
Jesus, fell upon the pavement at His feet, their countenances changed.
There, traced before them, were the guilty secrets of their own lives. The
people, looking on, saw the sudden change of expression, and pressed forward
to discover what it was that they were regarding with such astonishment and
shame.
With all their professions of reverence for the law, these rabbis, in
bringing the charge against the woman, were disregarding its provisions. It
was the husband's duty to take action against her, and the guilty parties
were to be punished equally. The action of the accusers was wholly
unauthorized. Jesus, however, met them on their own ground. The law
specified that in punishment by stoning, the witnesses in the case should be
the first to cast a stone. Now rising, and fixing His eyes upon the plotting
elders, Jesus said, "He that is without sin among you, let him first cast a
stone at her." And stooping down, He continued writing on the ground.
He had not set aside the law given through Moses, nor infringed upon the
authority of Rome. The accusers had been defeated. Now, their robe of
pretended holiness torn from them, they stood, guilty and condemned, in the
presence of Infinite Purity. They trembled lest the hidden iniquity of their
lives should be laid open to the multitude; and one by one, with bowed heads
and downcast eyes, they stole away, leaving their victim with the pitying
Saviour.
Jesus arose, and looking at the woman said, "Woman, where are those thine
accusers? hath no man condemned thee? She said, No man, Lord. And Jesus said
unto her, Neither do I condemn thee: go, and sin no more."
The woman had stood before Jesus, cowering with fear. His words, "He that is
without sin among you, let him first cast a stone," had come to her as a
death sentence. She dared not lift her eyes to the Saviour's face, but
silently awaited her doom. In astonishment she saw her accusers depart
speechless and confounded; then those words of hope fell upon her ear,
"Neither do I condemn thee: go, and sin no more." Her heart was melted, and
she cast herself at the feet of Jesus, sobbing out her grateful love, and
with bitter tears confessing her sins.
This was to her the beginning of a new life, a life of purity and peace,
devoted to the service of God. In the uplifting of this fallen soul, Jesus
performed a greater miracle than in healing the most grievous physical
disease; He cured the spiritual malady which is unto death everlasting. This
penitent woman became one of His most steadfast followers. With
self-sacrificing love and devotion she repaid His forgiving mercy.
In His act of pardoning this woman and encouraging her to live a better
life, the character of Jesus shines forth in the beauty of perfect
righteousness. While He does not palliate sin, nor lessen the sense of
guilt, He seeks not to condemn, but to save. The world had for this erring
woman only contempt and scorn; but Jesus speaks words of comfort and hope.
The Sinless One pities the weakness of the sinner, and reaches to her a
helping hand. While the hypocritical Pharisees denounce, Jesus bids her,
"Go, and sin no more."
It is not Christ's follower that, with averted eyes, turns from the erring,
leaving them unhindered to pursue their downward course. Those who are
forward in accusing others, and zealous in bringing them to justice, are
often in their own lives more guilty than they. Men hate the sinner, while
they love the sin. Christ hates the sin, but loves the sinner. This will be
the spirit of all who follow Him. Christian love is slow to censure, quick
to discern penitence, ready to forgive, to encourage, to set the wanderer in
the path of holiness, and to stay his feet therein.
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