Knowing the Passover was near they reasoned among themselves
that Christ would probably be coming to it.
After all, Jesus had attended prior feasts. He taught in the temple on Sabbath when He
was there. He healed on it too, but that
was the source of all this righteous anger in the first place, if you asked
them. Jesus in fact, had done nothing to
deny the validity of the Jewish faith, or destroy its system of worship, or
deny its law. But how Jesus amplified
the law, and focused on the motives of the heart rather than the actions of
public display, was a stark contrast between the intent of the law, and the
perversion of it. The Pharisees sought
to use the law and the scriptures to hold power over the people. Christ sought to use the law to free the
people from the chains and bondage of evil and serving self. Christ sought to teach the people that
harmony with the law begins and ends with loving others, and can only be
achieved through a transformation of character – a resurrection from the death
of evil, to the life of loving others through Himself and His transformative
power. Christ was not interested in a
hierarchical system that preserved power for the few. Instead He was keenly interested in a one on
one relationship with every hurting soul, to make them free from the pain they
embraced. While the Pharisees were
obsessed with Politics and Power, Christ was passionate about redemption and
reformation within us, not around us.
Christ was a true revelation of what the Jewish faith was supposed to be
about, not what it had become. And so
those whose highest ambition was to rule, had reached the inescapable
conclusion, they must kill the one who cared nothing for ruling, but would
completely destroy their power.
In chapter twelve, John begins by marking the time – six
days before the Passover, which would be the last Passover for Christ in this
world. Then John gives us the precious
location of Christ, He had traveled back to Bethany to be with His newly risen
friend and his sisters who were so loved by Christ. And in verse 2, a special meal is prepared
for Jesus and his disciples. It was not
His famed “last” supper, but it was probably the last supper He would have
occasion to enjoy before the intensity of the burden He must bear for us would
occupy His every thought. This was a
special dinner with friends and adopted family.
John notes, that Martha would serve at this meal, and Lazarus would sit
at the table with them all. Perhaps
Martha understood best of all who were there that night that serving is the
highest honor one can enjoy. Perhaps the
faith of Martha who was the only one of them to open the door to an immediate
resurrection of her brother before it happened, and the only one to declare
openly and assuredly that Christ was the Messiah before He raised her brother –
understood it the best. A life with
Christ who transforms us, is a life of service to all. Lazarus would enjoy His company. Mary would make her finest gesture of love to
Him. But Martha would quietly serve and
in so doing would understand better than everyone else there, what life was to
be about, and where joy comes from.
Then in verse 3, John describes the act of Mary on her Lord,
the best and only offering she could think to make. Verse 3 states … “Then took Mary a pound of
ointment of spikenard, very costly, and anointed the feet of Jesus, and wiped
his feet with her hair: and the house was filled with the odour of the
ointment.” She could have used a towel
to wipe her Lord, Lazarus was wealthy and there would be no shortage of proper
towels for that purpose. She could have
been less extravagant in selecting the ointment to use on His feet. It would have been less noticeable and less
costly. But that would not due. A life savings of money would hardly be
enough to express her love to Christ. He
wore no finery, or gems, so she could not buy him some object to keep. And though this gesture would only last a
short while, it was something she believed He would accept. The source of her funding for this gift was
likely not the best. It is possible
being caught in the act of adultery some time ago was a pattern by which she
was paid for her services. It is one
possible explanation for how a woman would gain access to a year’s worth of
earnings at a single point in time. It
is also possible this was her share of the family inheritance, or perhaps what
remained from the process of burying her now risen brother. We are not told, how she came across this
gift, only that she did. Mary was
overcome by grief to think that love would allow her brother to die. But now she knew why, and she now knew, that
nothing could interrupt the love Christ had for her, or her brother, not even
death. She had hope now, no matter what
would come to be. And so her gesture
must be comprised of the best of all she would ever have. And even then it
could not equal what He had done for her.
But to one who cares less for love, than for self, this act
must be due criticism. Enter Judas. John rarely records the interactions of the
other disciples with Christ throughout his Gospel. He usually only records what they say when it
is critical to the story. In this
instance, Judas asks the question why this ointment was not sold and given to
the poor? This does appear to be the
model for the early Christian church.
New converts would sell everything they owned and give the money to the
church for distribution as there was need.
So while this question may appear as though it was motived by a better
ideal, John is quick to point out that was not why Judas asked. John lets us know, that Judas was also a
thief, and he stole from the bag for the poor that he kept on him at all
times. An interesting question might be,
what did he spend the money on? Whatever
it was, appeared not to quench his greed.
This is the fundamental problem with serving self – self never reaches
contentment, it always wants more. No
matter how much money we feed our greed, our greed can envision more. Self is a perpetual unhappy customer, because
all the joy in serving it, is temporary at best, empty at worst. Whereas the joy of serving others can be
never-ending, to make another happy is perhaps our highest honor and
opportunity. Mary would pour out her
love to Christ with everything she had, holding nothing back for herself. Judas would endlessly take from the bag for
the poor, and never find enough in there to make him contented with what he had
already taken. The contrast again was
stark.
But Jesus knew both the heart of Mary, as well as the one in
Judas. So Jesus defends Mary and her act
of complete selflessness and charity. In
verse 7 He says … “Then said Jesus, Let her alone: against the day of my
burying hath she kept this. [verse 8] For the poor always ye have with you; but
me ye have not always.” Here Jesus
appears to reveal that Mary perhaps understood better the true mission of
Messiah was one of sacrificing His own life for ours. He accepts Mary’s gift not from a sense of
greed, but from an understanding that she is offering the best of anything she will
ever have. Then He offers a solemn
reminder to His disciples, His time with them is growing short and He will not
always be with them. To Judas, His
phrase … “the poor always ye have with you” … was to subtly remind him that he
would always have an opportunity to give to others, particularly those in
need. The giving was not about changing
the lives of the recipients, it was about changing the heart of the giver. This was the lesson underway with Mary, and
unfortunately a lesson Judas would seem to never learn. It may have been that in this subtle rebuke, the
heart of Judas was offended, and he realized that this humble Man would never
take the power everyone wanted Him to have.
He may have seen that His death was more inevitable, than any power
Judas may gain if He ascended to the throne of Israel. Who knows; all that is sure, is that John’s
commentary was hindsight for all of them.
Had John or any other of the disciples known that Judas was stealing
from the poor, the crime would not have gone unmentioned. Only his suicide would come to reveal these
facts.
Meanwhile, verse 9 reveals that many people had gotten the
news that Jesus was with Lazarus in Bethany.
This gave an occasion for them to travel there, because they would not
only see Jesus, but they would be able to speak with Lazarus and meet the only man
who had ever come back from the sleep of death.
This irrefutable proof of His divinity had to be addressed from the Pharisees
point of view. Nothing they could say
about it could crush it. It required
action. The best plot they could come up
with was to kill Lazarus once again. If
Lazarus was back in his grave, perhaps people would believe he had never left
it. Dead is dead after all. It is perhaps this revelation of John
regarding the fate the Pharisees intended for Lazarus, the prompted Jesus to
keep secret some of his earlier miracles recorded in the other gospel accounts
of His ministry. Jesus had brought a young
girl back from death as well, but told her and her parents to keep it
secret. Perhaps Jesus knew, that the
Pharisees would not have thought twice about re-killing her as well. Living, walking proof had to be dealt
with. The logic of course is ridiculous. If Christ raised Lazarus once, what was to
prevent Him from doing it again. But
then evil rarely makes sense in its plots against love. There is a reason why it is referred to as
the “mystery” of iniquity – because it hardly ever makes sense to choose it,
yet we do. How does one kill the source
of life anyway? Perhaps this is why
Jesus said He had to lay down His own life, that no man could take it from Him. John records in verse 11, that because of
Lazarus, many Jews, even those in leadership “went away” and believed on
Jesus. Even the threat of being put out
of the Temple was losing its grasp.
John begins in verse 12 saying … “On the next day much
people that were come to the feast, when they heard that Jesus was coming to
Jerusalem, [verse 13] Took branches of palm trees, and went forth to meet him,
and cried, Hosanna: Blessed is the King of Israel that cometh in the name of
the Lord.” Battle over, priests had
lost. Nothing was going to keep the
people from openly declaring in favor of the coming of the true Messiah. It was to be His coronation day, today,
whether He wanted it or not. The priests
had lost the PR war, and the actions of the masses of the people proved
it. They went to greet the proposed King
of Israel in the traditional manner dating all the way back to King David. The joy of Israel was unbridled and
unrestrained. All they could imagine was
that this would be the last day of Roman occupation, the last day of servitude,
and the first day of the ascendency of Israel to the preeminence among the
nations. The joy therefore was great,
but the understanding misguided.
How like us. We come
to Christ and find great joy in the belief that from now on, all our prayers
will be answered in the affirmative. We
never stop to think that our hearts have not been changed enough yet to “want”
the right things. So we treat Christ
more like Santa Clause, than like our Savior.
When the answers to our prayers do not come in the way we wanted, we go
away sorely disappointed. Just like the
people who would leave to greet Him with palm branches expecting to return with
a new King, and instead would return only with the memory of that day. Our disappointment comes because we want
things that are not in harmony with the will of God. We see through self-centered eyes, and with
the limited scope of human vision that cannot see past the grave. God sees what is best for us, now, and for
the eternal life He wants to give us, which is really the only one that truly
matters. If we saw things through the
eyes of God, we would gladly accept His answers, and realize what we ask for is
not always in our best interests. How
different would the lives of those aspiring servants of Christ been, if He had
granted their requests to overthrow Rome, but did nothing to overthrow the evil
in their hearts. Israel would have amounted
to only another dictatorship ruling by fear and the sword, and the greed of men. Instead Christ did nothing to change the
political status of those servants, choosing rather to offer them freedom from
within, that no power on earth could ever take away, and a life of service that
would be the only one worth living. It
does not matter if Rome is in charge on the outside, if Christ is in charge on
the inside.
Verses 14 through 18 outline the fulfillment of prophecy, in
Christ riding in to Jerusalem triumphant, and on a young colt of an ass. The people were drawn there in great numbers,
singing, praising God, and expressing great joy. The resurrection of Lazarus was the crowing
miracle of achievement in His ministry, it was the confirmation the common
people and leaders alike could only attribute to being divine. And in verse 19, the Pharisees state the
facts … they have lost the war of hearts and minds of the people. The people flock to Christ no matter what
threats they can conjure. Against this
revelation of truth, they could have responded by giving in, yielding, and
joining the crowds in acknowledging Christ as divine. They too could not dispute the resurrection
of Lazarus. The facts were plain. But when a choice is made, to refuse to believe,
facts do nothing to persuade. The
Pharisees knew the truth, and refused to accept it. And so the only path laid out to them was one
of death. They thought to kill Christ
and be done with it. But in truth, they
were signing away the only hope for redemption that would be offered to
them. It was their own death warrants
they were issuing. To refuse Christ, to
refuse truth, to refuse redemption, was to embrace not only the first death,
but the eternal one as well. This is
where the pursuit of self, and of power, will ALWAYS lead – to the death of the
pursuer. This is why the wages of sin is
death, because death is the only welcome release from the pain of sin. And the choice to refuse to believe, in spite
of what they knew, left them no other path to follow.
We face an equal danger.
There are those Christian who treat the holding on to a cherished sin,
or pleasure of self, as if this choice bears no fruit and carries no
consequences. We hold back from Christ
that thing which we do not want Him to change.
And so our sin remains, and our pain remains with it. Instead of being willing to lay all on the
alter, we keep some cherished pleasure hidden away. But like a cancer it grows and grows, until
it reaches a point where we begin to question whether we want God more than we
want that thing we have been holding on to.
Our sin begins to cloud our judgment until we begin to think there is no
moral conflict at all with it. We can
have BOTH God and our favorite sin. We
rationalize that we do not need to change anymore. And like the Pharisees of old, we plant seeds
in ourselves that reap a harvest of pain on a pathway to death. Refusing to accept redemption can lead to no
other outcome. Redemption is designed to
spare us from ALL pain. Redemption and
recreation teaches us to want different things, and let go of the things that are
hurting us. But we must be willing to be
re-created completely, not just in part.
We must learn to trust God with ALL of us, not just the parts we think
need tuning up. And when we do, we find
relief from the pain, and a pathway of life, not a highway towards death. Let us never refuse to accept what we know to
be true … and perhaps we can avoid finding ourselves in a plot to kill The
King.
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