Chapter
66 -
Controversy
Listen to Audio
THE priests and rulers had listened in silence to Christ's pointed rebukes.
They could not refute His charges. But they were only the more determined to
entrap Him, and with this object they sent to Him spies, "which should feign
themselves just men, that they might take hold of His words, that so they
might deliver Him unto the power and authority of the governor." They did
not send the old Pharisees whom Jesus had often met, but young men, who were
ardent and zealous, and whom, they thought, Christ did not know. These were
accompanied by certain of the Herodians, who were to hear Christ's words,
that they might testify against Him at His trial. The Pharisees and
Herodians had been bitter enemies, but they were now one in enmity to
Christ.
The Pharisees had ever chafed under the exaction of tribute by the Romans.
The payment of tribute they held to be contrary to the law of God. Now they
saw opportunity to lay a snare for Jesus. The spies came to Him, and with
apparent sincerity, as though desiring to know their duty, said, "Master, we
know that Thou sayest and teachest rightly, neither acceptest Thou the
person of any, but teachest the way of God truly: is it lawful for us to
give tribute unto Caesar, or no?"
The words, "We know that Thou sayest and teachest rightly," had they been
sincere, would have been a wonderful admission. But they were spoken to
deceive; nevertheless their testimony was true. The Pharisees did know that
Christ said and taught rightly, and by their own testimony will they be
judged.
Those who put the question to Jesus thought that they had sufficiently
disguised their purpose; but Jesus read their hearts as an open book, and
sounded their hypocrisy. "Why tempt ye Me?" He said; thus giving them a sign
they had not asked, by showing that He read their hidden purpose. They were
still more confused when He added, "Show Me a penny." They brought it, and
He asked them, "Whose image and superscription hath it? They answered and
said, Caesar's." Pointing to the inscription on the coin, Jesus said,
"Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's; and unto God
the things that are God's."
The spies had expected Jesus to answer their question directly, in one way
or the other. If He should say, It is unlawful to give tribute to Caesar, He
would be reported to the Roman authorities and arrested for inciting
rebellion. But in case He should pronounce it lawful to pay the tribute,
they designed to accuse Him to the people as opposing the law of God. Now
they felt themselves baffled and defeated. Their plans were disarranged. The
summary manner in which their question had been settled left them nothing
further to say.
Christ's reply was no evasion, but a candid answer to the question. Holding
in His hand the Roman coin, upon which were stamped the name and image of
Caesar, He declared that since they were living under the protection of the
Roman power, they should render to that power the support it claimed, so
long as this did not conflict with a higher duty. But while peaceably
subject to the laws of the land, they should at all times give their first
allegiance to God.
The Saviour's words, "Render . . . unto God the things that are God's," were
a severe rebuke to the intriguing Jews. Had they faithfully fulfilled their
obligations to God, they would not have become a broken nation, subject to a
foreign power. No Roman ensign would have waved over Jerusalem, no Roman
sentinel would have stood at her gates, no Roman governor would have ruled
within her walls. The Jewish nation was then paying the penalty of its
apostasy from God.
When the Pharisees heard Christ's answer, "they marveled, and left Him, and
went their way." He had rebuked their hypocrisy and presumption, and in
doing this He had stated a great principle, a principle that clearly defines
the limits of man's duty to the civil government and his duty to God. In
many minds a vexed question had been settled. Ever after they held to the
right principle. And although many went away dissatisfied, they saw that the
principle underlying the question had been clearly set forth, and they
marveled at Christ's far-seeing discernment.
No sooner were the Pharisees silenced than the Sadducees came forward with
their artful questions. The two parties stood in bitter opposition to each
other. The Pharisees were rigid adherents to tradition. They were exact in
outward ceremonies, diligent in washings, fastings, and long prayers, and
ostentatious in almsgiving. But Christ declared that they made void the law
of God by teaching for doctrines the commandments of men. As a class they
were bigoted and hypocritical; yet among them were persons of genuine piety,
who accepted Christ's teachings and became His disciples. The Sadducees
rejected the traditions of the Pharisees. They professed to believe the
greater portion of the Scriptures, and to regard them as the rule of action;
but practically they were skeptics and materialists.
The Sadducees denied the existence of angels, the resurrection of the dead,
and the doctrine of a future life, with its rewards and punishments. On all
these points they differed with the Pharisees. Between the two parties the
resurrection was especially a subject of controversy. The Pharisees had been
firm believers in the resurrection, but in these discussions their views in
regard to the future state became confused. Death became to them an
inexplicable mystery. Their inability to meet the arguments of the Sadducees
gave rise to continual irritation. The discussions between the two parties
usually resulted in angry disputes, leaving them farther apart than before.
In numbers the Sadducees fell far below their opponents, and they had not so
strong a hold upon the common people; but many of them were wealthy, and
they had the influence which wealth imparts. In their ranks were included
most of the priests, and from among them the high priest was usually chosen.
This was, however, with the express stipulation that their skeptical
opinions should not be made prominent. On account of the numbers and
popularity of the Pharisees, it was necessary for the Sadducees to concede
outwardly to their doctrines when holding any priestly office; but the very
fact that they were eligible to such office gave influence to their errors.
The Sadducees rejected the teaching of Jesus; He was animated by a spirit
which they would not acknowledge as manifesting itself thus; and His
teaching in regard to God and the future life contradicted their theories.
They believed in God as the only being superior to man; but they argued that
an overruling providence and a divine foresight would deprive man of free
moral agency, and degrade him to the position of a slave. It was their
belief, that, having created man, God had left him to himself, independent
of a higher influence. They held that man was free to control his own life
and to shape the events of the world; that his destiny was in his own hands.
They denied that the Spirit of God works through human efforts or natural
means. Yet they still held that, through the proper employment of his
natural powers, man could become elevated and enlightened; that by rigorous
and austere exactions his life could be purified.
Their ideas of God molded their own character. As in their view He had no
interest in man, so they had little regard for one another; there was little
union among them. Refusing to acknowledge the influence of the Holy Spirit
upon human action, they lacked His power in their lives. Like the rest of
the Jews, they boasted much of their birthright as children of Abraham, and
of their strict adherence to the requirements of the law; but of the true
spirit of the law and the faith and benevolence of Abraham, they were
destitute. Their natural sympathies were brought within a narrow compass.
They believed it possible for all men to secure the comforts and blessings
of life; and their hearts were not touched by the wants and sufferings of
others. They lived for themselves.
By His words and His works, Christ testified to a divine power that produces
supernatural results, to a future life beyond the present, to God as a
Father of the children of men, ever watchful of their true interests. He
revealed the working of divine power in benevolence and compassion that
rebuked the selfish exclusiveness of the Sadducees. He taught that both for
man's temporal and for his eternal good, God moves upon the heart by the
Holy Spirit. He showed the error of trusting to human power for that
transformation of character which can be wrought only by the Spirit of God.
This teaching the Sadducees were determined to discredit. In seeking a
controversy with Jesus, they felt confident of bringing Him into disrepute,
even if they could not secure His condemnation. The resurrection was the
subject on which they chose to question Him. Should He agree with them, He
would give still further offense to the Pharisees. Should He differ with
them, they designed to hold His teaching up to ridicule.
The Sadducees reasoned that if the body is to be composed of the same
particles of matter in its immortal as in its mortal state, then when raised
from the dead it must have flesh and blood, and must resume in the eternal
world the life interrupted on earth. In that case they concluded that
earthly relationships would be resumed, husband and wife would be reunited,
marriages consummated, and all things go on the same as before death, the
frailties and passions of this life being perpetuated in the life beyond.
In answer to their questions, Jesus lifted the veil from the future life.
"In the resurrection," He said, "they neither marry, nor are given in
marriage, but are as the angels of God in heaven." He showed that the
Sadducees were wrong in their belief. Their premises were false. "Ye do
err," He added, "not knowing the Scriptures, nor the power of God." He did
not charge them, as He had charged the Pharisees, with hypocrisy, but with
error of belief.
The Sadducees had flattered themselves that they of all men adhered most
strictly to the Scriptures. But Jesus showed that they had not known their
true meaning. That knowledge must be brought home to the heart by the
enlightenment of the Holy Spirit. Their ignorance of the Scriptures and the
power of God He declared to be the cause of their confusion of faith and
darkness of mind. They were seeking to bring the mysteries of God within the
compass of their finite reasoning. Christ called upon them to open their
minds to those sacred truths that would broaden and strengthen the
understanding. Thousands become infidels because their finite minds cannot
comprehend the mysteries of God. They cannot explain the wonderful
exhibition of divine power in His providences, therefore they reject the
evidences of such power, attributing them to natural agencies which they can
comprehend still less. The only key to the mysteries that surround us is to
acknowledge in them all the presence and power of God. Men need to recognize
God as the Creator of the universe, One who commands and executes all
things. They need a broader view of His character, and of the mystery of His
agencies.
Christ declared to His hearers that if there were no resurrection of the
dead, the Scriptures which they professed to believe would be of no avail.
He said, "But as touching the resurrection of the dead, have ye not read
that which was spoken unto you by God, saying, I am the God of Abraham, and
the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob? God is not the God of the dead, but
of the living." God counts the things that are not as though they were. He
sees the end from the beginning, and beholds the result of His work as
though it were now accomplished. The precious dead, from Adam down to the
last saint who dies, will hear the voice of the Son of God, and will come
forth from the grave to immortal life. God will be their God, and they shall
be His people. There will be a close and tender relationship between God and
the risen saints. This condition, which is anticipated in His purpose, He
beholds as if it were already existing. The dead live unto Him.
By the words of Christ the Sadducees were put to silence. They could not
answer Him. Not a word had been spoken of which the least advantage could be
taken for His condemnation. His adversaries had gained nothing but the
contempt of the people.
The Pharisees, however, did not yet despair of driving Him to speak that
which they could use against Him. They prevailed upon a certain learned
scribe to question Jesus as to which of the ten precepts of the law was of
the greatest importance.
The Pharisees had exalted the first four commandments, which point out the
duty of man to his Maker, as of far greater consequence than the other six,
which define man's duty to his fellow man. As the result, they greatly
failed of practical godliness. Jesus had shown the people their great
deficiency, and had taught the necessity of good works, declaring that the
tree is known by its fruits. For this reason He had been charged with
exalting the last six commandments above the first four.
The lawyer approached Jesus with a direct question, "Which is the first
commandment of all?" The answer of Christ is direct and forcible: "The first
of all the commandments is, Hear, O Israel; The Lord our God is one Lord:
and thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy
soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength: this is the first
commandment." The second is like the first, said Christ; for it flows out of
it, "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. There is none other
commandment greater than these." "On these two commandments hang all the law
and the prophets."
The first four of the Ten Commandments are summed up in the one great
precept, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart." The last six
are included in the other, "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." Both
these commandments are an expression of the principle of love. The first
cannot be kept and the second broken, nor can the second be kept while the
first is broken. When God has His rightful place on the throne of the heart,
the right place will be given to our neighbor. We shall love him as
ourselves. And only as we love God supremely is it possible to love our
neighbor impartially.
And since all the commandments are summed up in love to God and man, it
follows that not one precept can be broken without violating this principle.
Thus Christ taught His hearers that the law of God is not so many separate
precepts, some of which are of great importance, while others are of small
importance and may with impunity be ignored. Our Lord presents the first
four and the last six commandments as a divine whole, and teaches that love
to God will be shown by obedience to all His commandments.
The scribe who had questioned Jesus was well read in the law, and he was
astonished at His words. He did not expect Him to manifest so deep and
thorough a knowledge of the Scriptures. He had gained a broader view of the
principles underlying the sacred precepts. Before the assembled priests and
rulers he honestly acknowledged that Christ had given the right
interpretation to the law, saying:
"Well, Master, Thou hast said the truth: for there is one God; and there is
none other but He: and to love Him with all the heart, and with all the
understanding, and with all the soul, and with all the strength, and to love
his neighbor as himself, is more than all whole burnt offerings and
sacrifices."
The wisdom of Christ's answer had convicted the scribe. He knew that the
Jewish religion consisted in outward ceremonies rather than inward piety. He
had some sense of the worthlessness of mere ceremonial offerings, and the
faithless shedding of blood for expiation of sin. Love and obedience to God,
and unselfish regard for man, appeared to him of more value than all these
rites. The readiness of this man to acknowledge the correctness of Christ's
reasoning, and his decided and prompt response before the people, manifested
a spirit entirely different from that of the priests and rulers. The heart
of Jesus went out in pity to the honest scribe who had dared to face the
frowns of the priests and the threats of the rulers to speak the convictions
of his heart. "And when Jesus saw that he answered discreetly, He said unto
him, Thou art not far from the kingdom of God."
The scribe was near to the kingdom of God, in that he recognized deeds of
righteousness as more acceptable to God than burnt offerings and sacrifices.
But he needed to recognize the divine character of Christ, and through faith
in Him receive power to do the works of righteousness. The ritual service
was of no value, unless connected with Christ by living faith. Even the
moral law fails of its purpose, unless it is understood in its relation to
the Saviour. Christ had repeatedly shown that His Father's law contained
something deeper than mere authoritative commands. In the law is embodied
the same principle that is revealed in the gospel. The law points out man's
duty and shows him his guilt. To Christ he must look for pardon and for
power to do what the law enjoins.
The Pharisees had gathered close about Jesus as He answered the question of
the scribe. Now turning He put a question to them: "What think ye of Christ?
whose son is He?" This question was designed to test their belief concerning
the Messiah,--to show whether they regarded Him simply as a man or as the
Son of God. A chorus of voices answered, "The Son of David." This was the
title which prophecy had given to the Messiah. When Jesus revealed His
divinity by His mighty miracles, when He healed the sick and raised the
dead, the people had inquired among themselves, "Is not this the Son of
David?" The Syrophoenician woman, blind Bartimaeus, and many others had
cried to Him for help, "Have mercy on me, O Lord, Thou Son of David." Matt.
15:22. While riding into Jerusalem He had been hailed with the joyful shout,
"Hosanna to the Son of David: Blessed is He that cometh in the name of the
Lord." Matt. 21:9. And the little children in the temple had that day echoed
the glad ascription. But many who called Jesus the Son of David did not
recognize His divinity. They did not understand that the Son of David was
also the Son of God.
In reply to the statement that Christ was the Son of David, Jesus said, "How
then doth David in Spirit [the Spirit of Inspiration from God] call Him
Lord, saying, The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit Thou on My right hand, till I
make Thine enemies Thy footstool? If David then call Him Lord, how is He his
son? And no man was able to answer Him a word, neither durst any man from
that day forth ask Him any more questions."
|