Because Jesus proclaimed
God’s love for the
Gentiles…
“But I
tell you truly, there were many widows in Israel in the days of Elijah, when
the sky was shut for three years and six months and a great famine came over
the entire land; yet Elijah was not sent to any of them, but only to a widow at
Zarephath in Sidon. And there were many
lepers in Israel in the time of the prophet Elisha, yet not one of them was
cleansed—only Naaman the Syrian. When
the people in the synagogue heard this, they were all filled with rage, and
they got up, drove him out of the town, and led him to the brow of the hill on
which their town was built, in order to throw him down the cliff. But Jesus passed through the midst of them and
went on his way” (Luke 4:25–30).
I desire to receive the lesson given to us as we meditate on this
passage:
(1) In “Nazareth, the town where he had grown up” (Lk.
4:16), Jesus did not receive “welcome” (v.24) or “honor” (Mt. 13:57; Mk. 6:4);
rather, he suffered rejection (Mt. 13:57; Mk. 6:3). Seeing that his hometown people did not
believe in him, Jesus could not help being amazed (Mk. 6:6).
(a) On the Sabbath, as he customarily did, Jesus
went into the synagogue (Lk. 4:16), read from the scroll of the prophet Isaiah
(v.17), and after reading (vv.18–19) said, “Today this scripture is fulfilled
in your hearing” (v.21). The people
gathered in the synagogue (v.20) were amazed at the gracious words that came
from his mouth (v.22). But now it was
Jesus who was amazed at their unbelief (Mk. 6:6).
(i)
These
people—Jesus’ own townspeople—who had marveled at the gracious words coming
from his mouth did not welcome him, nor did they honor him; instead, they
rejected him. In today’s passage, Luke
4:28–29, we see that after hearing what Jesus said, they became furious, stood
up, drove him out of the town, and dragged him to the cliff on which the town
was built in order to throw him down.
·
Why were
they so extremely enraged? What did they
hear from Jesus—whom they had admired and whose gracious words they had
marveled at (v.22)—that made them so furious as to drag him to the cliff
outside the town built on a hill and attempt to throw him off (v.29)?
-
At this
point I recalled the third temptation with which the devil tested Jesus in the
wilderness: “Then he led him to Jerusalem and set him on the pinnacle of the
temple, and said, ‘If you are the Son of God, throw yourself down from here.
For it is written: He will command his angels concerning you to guard you
carefully; and they will lift you up in their hands, so that you will not
strike your foot against a stone’” (vv. 9–11).
I was reminded of this because just as the devil led Jesus to Jerusalem
and “set him on the pinnacle of the temple,” tempting him to throw himself
down, so also the “children of the devil”—all who were in the synagogue—became
enraged (“indignant,” Korean Modern Bible), rose up, and dragged Jesus to the
cliff outside the town built on a hill intending to push him over (vv.28–29).
n The reason everyone in the synagogue became so
enraged that they attempted to throw Jesus off the cliff was that, from their
perspective, Jesus was guilty of treason against the nation. According to Jewish tradition, a common
method of executing a traitor was to push the person off a cliff [(2 Chr 25:12)
“The people of Judah also captured ten thousand alive, took them to the top of
a cliff, and threw them down from there, so that all of them were dashed to
pieces”] (Hochmah).
(2) Is it not astonishing? How could those very people—who had admired
Jesus and marveled at his gracious words—so suddenly turn and attempt to throw
him off a cliff to kill him? The reason
is that, from their perspective, Jesus had committed national treason. In other words, those Jews regarded Jesus as
a traitor because he proclaimed God’s love for the Gentiles, and so they sought
to carry out the traditional Jewish execution for traitors—pushing him off a
cliff (Hochmah).
(a) So then, what was the proclamation of God’s love
for the Gentiles that Jesus gave? It is
found in today’s passage, Luke 4:25–27: “But I tell you truly, there were many
widows in Israel in the days of Elijah, when the sky was shut for three years
and six months and a great famine came over the entire land; yet Elijah was not
sent to any of them, but only to a widow at Zarephath in Sidon. And there were many lepers in Israel in the
time of the prophet Elisha, yet not one of them was cleansed—only Naaman the
Syrian.”
(i)
The
proclamation of God’s love for the Gentiles that Jesus made to the people
gathered in the synagogue consisted of two points: (1) First, in the days of
Elijah, when there was a great famine throughout the land because it did not
rain for three and a half years, there were many widows in Israel, yet God sent
Elijah only to a widow in Zarephath of Sidon (vv.25–26). (2) Second, in the days of Elisha, there were
many lepers in Israel, but none of them was cleansed—only Naaman the Syrian
(v.27).
·
Both Old
Testament examples mentioned by Jesus—what Elijah and Elisha did—were acts
performed not for Jews, but for Gentiles.
Elijah was sent only to a Gentile widow living in Zarephath of Sidon
(today in southern Lebanon), and through the miracle of the flour and oil not
running out, she received God’s great grace and provision during the severe
famine. Elisha, likewise, instructed
Naaman, the Syrian commander (from the region of modern Syria), to wash seven
times in the Jordan River; as a result, Naaman was healed of leprosy. In citing these two examples to the people
gathered in the synagogue, Jesus was declaring that just as God had sent these
two prophets to Gentiles and delivered them, so now God had sent “the Prophet”
(Acts 3:23; cf. Deut. 18:15), Jesus, into the world so that not only Jews but
also Gentiles who come to him (who believe in him) might have the door of
salvation opened wide to them [(Matt 8:11) “And I tell you this: Many from the
east and the west will come and sit down at the banquet in the kingdom of
heaven with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob”; (John 6:37) “Everyone whom the Father
gives me will come to me, and I will never reject anyone who comes to me”].
-
This message
of Jesus was more than enough to arouse intense anger among those Jews whose
minds were filled with the ideology of Jewish chosenness. Their fury reached its height, turning into
murderous intent, and they attempted to justify their hostility and attempt to
kill Jesus by dragging him to the cliff outside the town built on the hill and
pushing him off (Hochmah) [Note: The Jewish doctrine of chosenness is the
belief that the Jewish people alone are God’s specially chosen nation. Even today, they regard themselves as God’s
people and view all others as Gentiles who are unrelated to God. This sense of chosenness remains among Jews
and Judaism, leading them to think that no one except Jews can be saved
(Internet)].
n Hochmah Commentary writes: “Jesus’ words must
have been received by Jews filled with the ideology of chosenness as a grievous
insult. Thus, the synagogue, a place for
worship and praise of God, instantly turned into chaos. The audience, who
should have listened to Jesus’ words and humbly sought his blessing, went
beyond cynical unbelief and suddenly transformed into a mob of blind hatred and
fury. … When anger reaches its peak, it becomes murderous intent. The audience, who at first listened with
goodwill, suddenly became a violent mob. When compared to the scene where the crowd
that once shouted ‘Hosanna’ for Jesus later turns into a hostile mob crying
‘Crucify him,’ this may well be seen as a natural outcome” (Hochmah).
(3) But because the time for Jesus’ death had not
yet come, he passed through the midst of them and went on his way (Lk. 4:30). In other words, Jesus continued on the path
he intended to walk (Hochmah).
(a) Seeing Jesus, who did not bend his purpose even
when facing the obstacle of death, but faithfully continued his ministry and
quietly walked the path for the sake of the gospel (Hochmah), we also must
imitate him. Following each of our
callings, with a deep sense of mission, we must devote our lives for Jesus and
the gospel (Mk. 8:35), and even if we face the obstacle of death, we should
quietly walk our path, praying, ‘Whether living or dying, let your will be done’.
(i)
Hymnal “My
Jesus, as Thou Wilt”:
(v. 1) My Jesus, as Thou wilt! Oh,
may Thy will be mine! Into Thy hand of
love I would my all resign; Through sorrow, or through joy, Conduct me as Thine
own,
And help me still to say, My Lord, Thy will be
done!
(v. 2) My Jesus, as Thou wilt! Though seen through many a tear, Let not my
star of hope Grow dim or disappear; Since Thou on earth hast wept, And sorrowed
oft alone, If I must weep with Thee, My Lord, Thy will be done!
(v. 3) My Jesus, as Thou wilt! All shall be well for me; Each changing
future scene
I gladly trust with Thee. Straight to Thy rest above I travel calmly
on, And sing, in life or death,
·
This hymn
was written by Benjamin Schmolck (1672–1737), a German Lutheran pastor, during
a time of suffering more difficult to bear than death. In 1704, when he was 32, he and his wife
returned home from visitation to find their house burned to the ground and
their two sons charred to death. He
cried out in agony, but then saw a vision of the Lord praying in the Garden of
Gethsemane, and wrote the hymn “Mein Jesu, wie du willst” (“My Jesus, as You
Will”). The final line of verse
3—“Whether living or dying, let your will be done”—is his confession of faith
(Internet).
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