Chapter 15
the opposition to
the King.
Behind this chapter is
the principle of religion. Remember that religion is Satanic in nature, it is
the devil’s ace trump, it is Satan trying to gain control of the world which he
rules. In verses 1-9 of this chapter we have the opposition of religion to
Bible doctrine.
Verse 1 — a religious
delegation coming to Jesus Christ. “Then came to Jesus scribes and Pharisees
which were of Jerusalem, saying.” The scribes and the Pharisees are often
mentioned together because the Pharisees were the political party in the Sanhedrin
but with a very strong religious background. We might call them the political
party which was actually a religious group. Their concept as far as the
southern kingdom was concerned was that religion ought to rule the state, and
they favoured the union of religion and state and, of course, they were all
very religious people personally. Then they had a hierarchy called the scribes
who were theologians and were often Pharisees. They studied the Old Testament
scriptures extensively. The word “were” in verse one is not found in the
original, it is literally, from Jerusalem. As they approached the Lord Jesus
Christ they came in opposition and immediately their opposition is expressed,
as is often the case, by a question.
It is very interesting
about religious people that they often appear to be very interested in the
scripture, and they come as though they were seekers and they seek you on that
basis. But in reality they are not seekers at all they are simply looking for
an opportunity to express opposition. These people came to Jesus, as it were,
seeking information, seeking enlightenment. Therefore they ask a question.
Verse 2 — “Why do thy
disciples transgress the tradition of the elders? for they wash not their hands
before [not “when"] they eat bread.” The scribes and the Pharisees contend
that the disciples are violating the tradition of the elders.
The tradition of
elders
1. The tradition of
the elders is the oral law handed down in Israel. It was developed outside of
the scriptures, then eventually reduced to writing and collected under a
manuscript system called the Mishna. So the tradition of the elders refers to
the Mishna.
2. The washing of
hands before meals is not a commandment in the Old Testament scriptures but
became a very strong part of the Mishna. This is why they did not use the word
“scripture” .
3. It was however an
excellent practice for sanitary reasons, but the rabbis and the elders made it
a sign of spirituality. In other words, they said you were not spiritual unless
you washed your hands before meals.
4. Whatever the
benefits of sanitation they do not extend into the spiritual realm.
5. Here is a case,
then, of taking something good and making a false issue out of it.
6. Washing before
meals is not a means of spirituality, it is merely a sanitary precaution.
7. The disciples of
Jesus quite obviously did not observe this taboo and therefore they came under
the critical guns of the scribes and Pharisees.
Eleven of the
disciples are from Galilee and they run the gamut from fishermen to publicans.
Apparently the Galileans were not too strong on sanitation, the Judaeans were.
The only possible person who could have washed his hands before meals would be
Judas Iscariot because he was the only one from Judaea. The rest are all from
Galilee.
Now the question of
the scribes. The principle is that religion is constantly looking for the
opportunity to criticise anyone who loves the truth or seeks to learn doctrine.
This is something we should all remember. We are going to get opposition from
other believers on this point. It is from the shallow believer, the believer
who is not interested in doctrine, the believer who is confused about doctrine,
the believer who thinks that happiness in life is simply going out and having
fun. It is this kind of believer who is going to give you the opposition.
Principle: Religion is
constantly looking for the opportunity to criticise those who love Bible
doctrine. The second principle is: good in itself is not spirituality. This is
a good taboo because it has to do with sanitation but good in itself is not spirituality.
Verse 3 — Jesus
answers a question with a question. “Why do ye also transgress the commandment
of God by your tradition?” We have here doctrine versus tradition. In tradition
here we have a good thing, a taboo, and there is nothing wrong with it except
that it is not spirituality. Jesus therefore says that this is not an issue.
Whether the disciples wash their hands or not is not an issue in spirituality.
But the scribes have brought this up, the issue of Bible doctrine versus the
tradition of the elders, so Jesus is going to give them a bona fide
illustration of what they are trying to say, and He is turning it against them.
They have something in their tradition called the corbon, and He is going to
show them the corbon versus the fifth commandment.
What is the fifth
commandment? — Exodus 20:12. It has to do with divine institution number three,
the family. “Days … long” refers to life span. If you are going to have a long
life span here is one of the issues which determines it. The word “honour” has
a number of concepts. As it occurs in the Hebrew here it refers to the
principle of obedience to the authority in the home, the mother and the father.
This commandment is designed not only for that period of time which we call
childhood but it also have some concepts later on after one reaches adulthood.
However, its primary concept is in childhood. This is the Word of God; this is
not tradition; this is not the Mishna, and corbon is tradition, a tradition
connected with giving. It is a giving gimmick. We have giving gimmicks today
and they had them in that day. Apparently the synagogues were having trouble
raising money and they thought of corbon became a part of the tradition.
Matthew 15:3 — “But he
answered and said unto them, Why do ye [plural],” now He puts it on their
backs, “also transgress the commandments of God by your tradition?” The
commandment refers to the doctrine of the Word of God, in this case Exodus
20:12. The religious traditions of the Pharisees are legalistic and therefore
are contrary to the principle of grace. Washing the hands before meals is a
good thing but to make it a part of spirituality is a bad thing and becomes
legalism. In other words, you are doing something to become spiritual, you are
washing your hands. So a good thing is magnified out of its context and it
becomes legalism when it is brought into the spiritual realm. And now Jesus is
going to show them that they are the ones out of line. So He says, “by your
tradition,” which is dia plus the
accusative, and literally, “because of [the existence of] your tradition” you
are in violation of the Word of God.
Verse 4 — So this
question is going to be resolved now but not by their tradition. When they
approached they put the emphasis on their tradition, that is their criterion,
but Jesus is going to answer them by going from the traditions and taboos which
they have developed to the Word of God. He is going to start from the Word of
God.
There is a problem
here, and that is the fact that religion always substitutes tradition and a
program for doctrine. They emphasised their tradition and their program and the
Word always emphasises doctrine (and this is an issue that we have to face as
believers).
The fifth commandment
is given in this verse — “For God commanded,” this is the Word now, “saying,
Honour thy father and they mother.” And Jesus now gives the meaning of the
second part of that commandment. The Greek word “honour” means not only to
obey, but it also means to have respect for authority, to honour on the basis
of respect for authority rather than on the basis of love. And notice: The word
“commanded” is in the aorist tense; the word “saying” is present linear
aktionsart: kept on saying. The aorist tense means that this is a once and for
all principle and He keeps saying this to every generation. There is a contrast
between the aorist and the present tense: “God commanded,” aorist tense; “saying,”
present tense [keep on saying]. Every generation is involved. “He that curseth
father or mother, let him die the death.” This is the way God looks at it.
There is a divine discipline for believers or unbelievers and those who reject
parental authority are going to die the death, and it means they are going to
die young; “let him die the death” is a very difficult phrase. There is no way
to get around it, it is tough and it is meant to be that way because the only
thing that holds a nation together is divine institution number three.
Stability in family life leads to stability in national life, and as goes the
families of the nation so goes the nation itself. Instability in family life
leads to instability in national life.
The corbon gimmick,
verses 5,6.
Verse 5 — “But ye say.” “Ye say” is tradition, and
we now have another part of the Mishna; “Whosoever shall say to his father or
his mother, A gift ["It is” is not found here].” A gift is the corbon.
Corbon is the Greek
word and is translated “gift” here. Corbon is the word used in Mark chapter
seven, verse eleven, and the word is actually taken from a Hebrew word charav, and it is a word for sacrifice,
to make something a sacrifice. The word refers to a sacrifice or a gift which
was brought to the altar. It was used for the Levitical sacrifices in Leviticus
1,2, and 3. This word was taken out of its context by the religious crowd and
given a broader religious meaning. They decided when they wanted to raise money
the way to do it was this: Get a person to leave his money to the synagogue or
to the temple, and in order to do that what you do is pronounce all of your
estate corbon. And when you say your estate is corbon it means that it will go
to the temple, but in the meantime you can use it, you can spend it, and you do
not have to pay taxes on it. So here was a way of avoiding income tax and keep
from giving to your parents. And that is the way it was used and that is the
principle that is involved here.
Now what is the
problem? The parents come to the child, the parents are destitute, and they ask
for help, for money. The child who is now an adult says: “I am sorry, I can’t
give you any of my money, my estate is corbon.” Therefore he can spend it any
way he wants to, he can live it up and have a big time, but he doesn’t have to
give his parents a cent because everything he has by way of money belongs to
the temple, it is corbon. This is the way they avoided helping their parents.
They did it in the
name of tradition; they did it in the name of corbon. So corbon, then, violates
the fifth commandment. And Jesus points out that the traditions actually
violate Bible doctrine. Rather than criticising these disciples for not washing
their hands before meals they had better take another look at tradition. They
claimed tradition was salvation and spirituality when in reality tradition was
in violation to salvation and spirituality.
The last phrase in
this verse is an idiom, “by whatsoever thou mightest be profited by me” means
literally: Everything that I might have used for helping you is corbon.
Verse 6 — He now makes
the application. “And honour not his father or his mother.” In other words,
when they say corbon they honour not mother and father; “Thus have ye made the
commandment of God null and void by your tradition.” In other words, legalism
always attacks doctrine and legalism always makes null and void the grace of
God. One ounce of legalism destroys the grace of God.
Verses 7-9, the
indictment.
Verse 7 — “Ye
hypocrites, well did Isaiah prophesy of you, saying.” Jesus is talking to the
religious hierarchy, the scribes and the Pharisees.
Verse 8 — quotation
from Isaiah 29:13, “This people [the Jews] draweth nigh unto me with their
mouth, and honoureth me with their lips; but their heart [frontal lobe] is far
from me.” And what counts with God? What you say, or what you think? What you
think, think, think. Christianity is what you think, not what you say, not what
you do.
Verse 9 — “But in vain
they do worship me, teaching for [instead of] doctrine the commandments of
men.” You cannot teach human tradition as doctrine. Religion has the wrong
emphasis.
Verses 10-20, the
condemnation of religion.
Verses 10,11 —
religion has the wrong emphasis.
Verse 10 — “And he
called the multitude, and said unto them, Hear and understand.” Notice that
first the scribes and the Pharisees approach and then Jesus calls in all the
people. He wants the people to get in on this; He wants them to hear what
religion really is and He wants to warn them against religion.
Verse 11 — a parable.
A parable takes an ordinary event in life which everyone understands and uses
it to match up with doctrine. “Not that which goeth into the mouth defileth a
man.” This takes us right back to the washing of hands. So the disciples didn’t
wash their hands, and this means that their food was possibly defiled,
especially if they handled their food with their fingers as they habitually
did. So they eat something that is perhaps going to cause them some trouble
physically; “but that which cometh out of the mouth, this defileth the man.” In
other words, it isn’t what you eat that is going to ruin you with God, it is
what you say, and what you say is what you think. Words are formed in the mind,
and so speaking is inevitably what you think. And if you are thinking envy and
jealousy then you are going to malign and gossip; and if you are thinking
hostility and implacability then you are going to run down someone else. So the
mouth, when it speaks, merely indicates what is being thought. Principle: it is
the old sin nature, not sanitation which is the issue in our relationship with
God. If the old sin nature controls the life then the person thinks hatred,
envy, hostility, pride, jealousy, legalism, and so on. And notice that religion
always places the emphasis on the externals, not what you think.
Verse 12 — we have a
small parenthesis here to indicate that at this point even the disciples were
mad at Jesus. “Then came his disciples, and said unto him, Knowest thou that
the Pharisees were offended, after they heard your remarks?”
Principle: People who
will not accept doctrine are offended by doctrine. Religion rejects doctrine,
therefore religion fights doctrine. Legalism and religion try to obscure and
phase out Bible doctrine — always. And even these disciples have been touched
by religion. Instead of being influenced by what Jesus just said, doctrine,
these disciples are influenced by the criticism of the scribes and Pharisees.
The disciples were not impressed with the doctrine that Jesus gave, the
disciples were impressed with the criticism of the Pharisees. And woe to us
when we become impressed with criticism of Bible doctrine.
Verse 13 — religion is
not a part of the plan of God. “But he answered and said, Every plant, which my
heavenly Father hath not planted, shall be rooted up.” The plant which the
heavenly Father plants is any person who believes in Jesus Christ. Regeneration
is the planting. It is in the aorist tense, indicating a once and for all
planting. If you are not planted by the heavenly Father — which is
regeneration, salvation — the you are going to be rooted up. Rooted up is a
future passive indicative, the future tense is logical. It is logical that if
you are not born again you are going to be rooted up at the last judgement. The
passive voice indicates the last judgement; you are going to receive judgement
even though you don’t want it. The indicative mood is the reality of the last
judgement for the unregenerate.
There is another side
which is not stated here. Jesus is only stating one side of the doctrine, He
says “every plant [reference to the member of the human race] which my heavenly
Father hath not planted [the unbeliever] shall be rooted up [the last
judgement].” And on the other side of the coin, anything the Father plants
cannot be rooted up [eternal security]. But the scribes and the Pharisees have
rejected Bible doctrine, the plan of God, and salvation.
Verse 14 — an analogy
to religion. “Let them alone [separate yourself from them].” Stay away from
legalistic people, and that means born again believers who are critical of you
because you study doctrine and because you come to Bible class. Phase them out;
stay away from them. These Pharisees and scribes aren’t doing the disciples any
good. The disciples are taking the Pharisees’ side against Jesus, and therefore
against doctrine. They are not listening to Jesus, they are only listening to
the criticism of the Pharisees, “they be the blind leaders of the blind.” Here
you are listening to people who are blind, leading the blind. And who are the
blind at this point? The disciples of Jesus are the blind. Who is leading them?
Not Jesus but the scribes and the Pharisees. “And if the blind lead the blind,
both shall fall into the ditch.” The rooting up is the principle of eternal
judgement but falling into the ditch means failing in life. And a believer who
gets tangled up with religion or legalism is going to spend phase two, the
Christian life, in the ditch, and they are going to be led by religious leaders
rather than by Bible doctrine.
Principle: We as
believers are to be led by Bible doctrine, not by religious and legalistic
leaders.
Verse 15 — “Then
answered Peter and said unto him, Declare unto us this parable.” Peter is a
little uncomfortable right now because he just realises that the Lord is
talking about him. Peter and the other disciples are being led by the blind.
Peter understands the narrative but he doesn’t understand the doctrine.
Verse 16 — “And Jesus
said, Are ye yet without understanding?”
Verse 17 — “Do not ye
yet understand?” Notice that He twice says, Don’t you understand yet? — “Whatsoever entereth into the
mouth.” He is explaining the parable of verse 11 — “goeth into the belly, and
is cast out into the draught?” into the latrine.
Verse 18 — “But those
things which proceed out of the mouth.” Words are formed where? In the mind;
“come forth from the heart [frontal lobe]: and they defile the man.” In other
words, the sins of the tongue receive emphasis because the sins of the tongue
express the sins of the mental attitude.
Verse 19 — “For out of
the heart [frontal lobe] proceed evil thoughts, murders.” In other words,
before you murder someone you lose your temper, you have a mental attitude —
“adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, blasphemies”
Verse 20 — “These are
the things which defile a man: but to eat with unwashen hands defileth not a
man.”
Principle: It is the
old sin nature, not sanitation, which is the issue in life. And in our
relationship with God as believers it is again what you do about the old sin
nature, rebound, rather than washing your hands. In other words, it is better
to be inwardly clean than to have clean hands.
What did the Pharisees
have? They had clean hands but dirty minds. Jesus is saying that it is better
to have a clean mind and dirty hands than to have clean hands and a dirty mind.
The solution to
religion: regeneration.
Verse 21 — “Then Jesus
went thence, and departed into the coasts of Tyre and Sidon.” Tyre and Sidon
are the two cities of Phoenicia which have been rebuilt. They are occupied by
Phoenicians, a branch of the Canaanites, and these people have resumed their
great sea trade. When Jesus goes there He is going to a Gentile area.
Verse 22 — “And,
behold, a woman of Canaan,” a Phoenician woman, “came out of the same coasts,
and cried [kept on crying] after him.” She didn’t cry in the sense of using
tears, she cried in the sense of importunity. In other words, she kept calling
to Him to get His attention; “saying [kept on saying], Have mercy on me, O Lord
[title for deity].” Here is a Gentile woman who recognises the deity of Christ,
and we assume from this address that the woman is already eternally saved,
based on the principle of 1 Cor. 12:3, that no one can call Jesus Lord apart
from the ministry of the Spirit; “son of David” — she recognises that Jesus
Christ is the God-Man and that in His humanity He is the ruler of Israel. She
calls Him the son of David and all of the Canaanites and all of the Phoenicians
are familiar with David and the Davidic line and the Davidic claims to the
throne of Israel. This woman is most unusual because apparently this is her
first contact and already she knows more than most of the disciples because she
has a clear understanding of the doctrine of the hypostatic union. She
understands that Jesus Christ is the unique person of the universe, that He is
God, and at the same time He is true humanity, and that He is the God-Man
forever and that He can help her.
This woman has a
daughter who is dying and one thing is clear: she definitely understands the
source of problem-solving. She has a very serious problem and she recognises
that only Jesus Christ has the answer. She is relying entirely upon the Lord,
not on any outside help, no strategy of human viewpoint, it is strictly a
matter of depending on what the Lord has provided.
“my daughter is grievously vexed with a
demon.” Actually the Greek does not say “grievously vexed with a demon,” it
simply says, “demon-possessed.”
Verse 23 — Jesus
Christ refuses to answer her. The reason is because He is trying to teach His
disciples a lesson; He is trying to emphasise the importance of the faith-rest
technique to them and He is testing them. And they failed to pass the test.
There is a series of tests in this chapter and they failed to pass all of them.
“But he answered her not a word.” The aorist tense refers to a point of time
and also indicates He is going to answer her later on. But first of all the
disciples have to be tested, and they are going to fail miserably as only
stupid believers can, and especially when there is no excuse when Jesus Christ
has been doing the teaching; “and his disciples came,” aorist tense indicating
the same point at which Jesus was maintaining silence; “and besought him,” imperfect
tense which means they kept on begging him; “saying, Send her away; for she crieth
after us.” This means simply that they were embarrassed and they were
inconvenienced by her importunity. It was very embarrassing for them because
they are Jews and a Gentile woman is following, screeching “Have mercy.”
However, if they had listened to her words they would have saved themselves
some real embarrassment later on with their faith-rest down! And that is
exactly why the Lord kept quiet. They had their eyes on self [they are
embarrassed], they are guilty of a little self-pity, and the only way the
disciples could have passed the test was to have a little compassion. They
cannot help but they could take her to Jesus or ask Jesus to stop and help this
woman. After all, He has been healing people all over the place.
Verse 24 — Jesus
answers. “Then Jesus answered and said,” now the test increases, “I am not sent
except to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.” Immediately He challenges the
woman’s faith. In the previous verse His silence challenges the faith-rest of
the disciples. Have they learned anything? Have they developed any compassion?
What is their mental attitude in an embarrassing situation? And, above all, are
they relaxed? In fact the disciples were just as tense as they could be. So he
now tests the woman when He says that He is sent to the lost sheep of the house
of Israel. And this woman doesn’t qualify in any way because, first of all, she
is saved and not lost, and secondly, she is a Gentile and not a Jew, and what
makes it embarrassing for the disciples is that she is a Gentile woman.
One thing that tenses
up people more than anything else is self-righteousness. This is a situation
that the disciples cannot handle. You’ll never stay loose until you learn to
claim the promises of God. When you do you will stay loose in all kinds of situations,
regardless of what legalistic believers think. Just remember something about
legalistic believers: What ever they think or say, it is not important. Forget it.
Whatever comes from self-righteousness is no good.
The disciples are out
of line but the woman is in line. The woman is right and Jesus proves it by
making this statement: “I am not sent, except to the lost sheep of the house of
Israel.” Obviously she recognises the problem that the Lord has and yet she comes
back with this tremendous persistence of faith. She knows that even though the
doctrinal position is to the lost sheep of the house of Israel she is a
believer and she knows that grace supersedes any purpose stated through
doctrine. And she is appealing to His grace in the only way that we as
believers can appeal to the grace of God, and this is through the faith-rest
technique. Even though the Lord’s mission is to Israel here is a woman in a jamb,
in a helpless situation, and she knows that God deals with individuals even
while He is fulfilling an overall plan. God in His grace never overlooks a
believer in a jamb. Jesus really went to Tyre and Sidon to help that woman, and
at the same time to alert His disciples to the importance of the faith-rest
technique which they are going to need very shortly. And so the Holy Spirit is
telling us the by the wording of this particular paragraph that the only reason
Jesus went to Tyre and Sidon was to contact this woman, so that this woman
could follow Him, and so that the disciples could get tied up in knots and fail
to see the issue, and so that Jesus could help a woman who has a persistent
faith-rest life. While her situation was hopeless, Jesus has just stated a plan
which makes it doubly hopeless. Now, you have a hopeless situation at some time
in your life and you look at a piece of doctrine which says it is twice as
hopeless. What are you going to do? Fall apart? No! When you have a hopeless
situation and it suddenly becomes twice as hopeless you faith-rest it. Put it
in the Lord’s hands, and leave it there. And that is exactly what this woman
does, she is consistent and persistent in her faith.
Verse 25 — “Then came
she and worshipped him, saying [she kept on saying], Lord, help me.”
Verse 26 — “But he
answered and said,” He continues to test her faith, “It is not fitting to take
the children’s bread.” Who are the children? The Jews; “and to cast it to
dogs.” He is amplifying His previous statement that His mission is to the lost
sheep of the house of Israel. The word “dog” is first used for Gentiles in
Psalm 22. In the ancient world dogs were unclean and vicious, they lived on
garbage, and men rode horses whenever possible so they wouldn’t be bitten by
the dogs, and the dogs and the rats fought for all the trash in the city. The
Jews regarded the Gentiles as dogs because the Gentiles ate pork and other
things that were forbidden in the Mosaic law.
Verse 27 — “And she
said, Truth [doctrine], Lord: yet [she now applies a superseding principle of
doctrine] the dogs eat of the crumbs which fall from their master’s table.” She
regarded her problem as a crumb. She had the divine perspective. She is saying
in effect: “Now look Lord, I am not asking for bread. Problem-solving is
crumbs.” The crumbs refer to problem-solving.
Verse 28 — “Then Jesus
answered and said unto her, O woman, great is thy faith.” Now remember that
Jesus has healed thousands of people and there wasn’t any faith involved at
all. Why is faith involved here and why does He mention it? He is telling His
disciples: Take a look at this woman. This is what you need.
“be it unto thee even as thou wilt” — she has
positive volition, she has put the problem in the Lord’s hands, the Lord hands
it back solved; “And her daughter was made whole from that very hour” .So there
we have the victory of the faith-rest technique.
Having seen the great
object lesson the disciples are going to fall flat on their faces again on
exactly the same principle. There has to be a lesson which will test all of the
disciples at the same time with regard to the faith-rest technique.
Verses 29-39, the
failure of the disciples.
Verse 29 — “And Jesus
departed from thence.” He left this Gentile country of Phoenicia and now goes
back into the land; “and came nigh unto the sea of Galilee; and went up into a
mountain, and sat down there.” When He came near to the Sea of Galilee He was
setting up the situation so that the eleven disciples an have a chance to use
faith-rest. These disciples are born again but all of them together do not have
nearly as much faith as the one Gentile woman. The Sea of Galilee is a place
where Jesus has demonstrated before many times the principle of the faith-rest
technique. He probably sat down where the disciples could watch the Sea of
Galilee to remind them of the incident of the great storm and the incident when
Jesus came to them on the water. They had needed faith-rest and they failed. So
they cannot look at the Sea of Galilee without remembering faith-rest and the
importance of it. Jesus is now doing something to physically demonstrate the
principle, He sat down. That’s faith-rest.
Verse 30 — “And great
multitudes came unto him, having with them those that were lame, blind, dumb,
maimed, and many others, and cast them down at Jesus’ feet; and he healed
them.” Once again the setting for the test is made. All of these hopeless cases
were brought along to Him. They have just left Canaan where a hopeless case was
healed, now they are going to see in one day again hundreds of hopeless cases.
These cases are all going to be handled the same way, Jesus will demonstrate
His power by healing them all. So in this sense the crowd demonstrates more
faith than the disciples.
Verse 31 — “Insomuch
that the multitude wondered [was astounded], when they saw.” “They saw” is a
present active participle, present linear aktionsart, they kept on seeing it.
They saw it time after time, and it means the disciples saw it. What did they
see? — “the dumb to speak [to chatter], the maimed were made whole, the lame to
walk [kept on walking], the blind to see [kept on looking]: and they glorified
the God of Israel [Jesus Christ].” Now we have the setting to find out if the
disciples have learned anything.
Verse 32 — “Then Jesus
called his disciples to him, and said, I have compassion on the multitude
because they continue with me now three days.” After these people were healed
they didn’t leave, they were grateful. There was just one problem up on that
mountain, there was no supermarket, no food; “and have nothing to eat.” Now He
calls in His disciples because they have had many illustrations of the
faith-rest technique and now He wants to see if they have learned anything.
They flunked the test; “and I will not send them away fasting.” Fasting has no
spiritual connotation or blessing to it here. And fasting, when it has
spiritual connotation, has nothing to do with giving up food or giving up
anything else. It has the connotation of spending time ordinarily used for legitimate
things such as eating in Bible study and prayer. Here, on this occasion, it has
no spiritual connotation at all, they simply were without food. And that is all
it means, “lest they faint in the way.”
Verse 33 — “And his
disciples say unto him, Whence [“should we have” is not found in the
original].” And the word “whence” means, What do you want us to do about it?
They have been watching the Lord perform miracles for three days and they just
stand there with a blank expression. The teaching of our Lord was fantastic, He
taught them in every way, and yet they all stand around and say, “Whence.”
Dumb! There is just one thing we can say about the disciples: they were the
recipients of the grace of God or they never would have made it.
“so much bread in this
desert, as to fill so great a multitude?” Notice, they have failed to
remember and apply the feeding of the five
thousand (Matthew 14), they failed to remember the Lord’s faithfulness to them
on the Sea of Galilee, and they failed to appreciate the miracles of our Lord
on this very mountain in the past three days.
Verse 34 — “And Jesus
said unto them, How many loaves do you have? And they said, Seven, and a few
little fishes.” But what difference does it make whether the fishes are little
or big? There is a reason why they said “little fishes.” They are piling on
unbelief on unbelief.
Verse 35 — “And he
commanded the multitude to sit down on the ground.” Notice, He did it. Last
time He told the disciples to tell the people to sit on the ground but this
time He tells them Himself.
If we were organising
such a group today we would have them all working — some fishing, others
hunting, etc., just to get some food. But Jesus said: Sit down and do nothing.
That is grace. That doesn’t mean to have a blank mind, it means you put your
mind in gear and your body in neutral, and you claim the promises of God. God
does not help those who help
themselves.
Verse 36 — “And he
took the seven loaves and the fishes, and gave thanks, and brake them, and gave
[kept on giving] to his disciples, and the disciples to the multitude.
Verse 37 — “And they
did all eat, and were filled: and they took up of the fragments that were left
seven baskets full,” one basket for each loaf of bread.
Verse 38 — “And they
that did eat were four thousand men, beside women and children.” So, again,
there could have been as many as ten thousand people present on this occasion.
Verse 39 — “And he
sent away the multitude, and took a ship, and came into the coasts of Magdala.”
The disciples have failed, and that is why Jesus has sent the multitude out and
that is why He clears out. He has to train the disciples again; new situation.
Since chapter eight the disciples have been consistent, they have consistently
fallen on their faces. Every time they have had an opportunity to claim the
promises of God and to use a little doctrine they have consistently failed to
use the faith-rest technique, they have consistently failed to apply doctrine,
in fact they have consistently failed to learn doctrine.
Before there will a
breakthrough there have to be more such experiences, and every now and then
there will be a glimmer. There was a glimmer in chapter 14 when Peter climbed
over the gunwales of the boat. In chapter 16 there will be another glimmer: Peter
is going to open his mouth and say the right thing — for once. And then for
another year he will close his mouth and say the wrong thing. In fact he will
say the wrong thing so long that by the time we get to chapter 26 he is denying
the Lord. And then he is going to say the right thing to God, which is 1 John
1:9. And then, before you know it, he is going to start saying the right thing
again, and that is his famous sermon on the day of Pentecost. So, if you have
had your foot in your mouth for a long time, think of Peter.