A 5-day per week study.
Read and believe in Jesus.
“Tell us, by what authority do you do these things… who gave you this authority?” Luke 20:2
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The Gospel according to Luke
Review – Jesus rode triumphant into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday to the cheers of the crowds and wild expectations of His disciples … and the terror of the religious leaders. He cleansed the Temple and then taught there, and the temple authorities could do NOTHING against Him….yet.
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Vss. 20:1-8.
Smarting at having lost all their income from the marketplace in the Temple courtyard, these three groups of religious leaders accosted Jesus while He was teaching and preaching the gospel … in that very Temple courtyard.
“WHAT authority do you have to do this? WHO gave you this authority? They said, fists on hips, evil in their eyes.
“I’ll ask YOU a question,” said Jesus calmly. “Was the baptism of John from heaven (God) or from man?
The accusers muttered among themselves, seeing that Jesus had them over a barrel. No matter which way they answered His question, they were in trouble. So … “We do not know where it came from,” they finally spat out.
Jesus knew their dilemma. If they said John’s ministry was God-given, then the question was, why didn’t they heed it? If they said it was by John’s own doing, the people would attempt to stone them because they believed (rightly) that John was a prophet of God.
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Vss, 20 9-15.
Jesus then tells a parable to those religious leaders (about themselves – would they understand?) The people around Jesus also listened intently.
“A man planted a vineyard…”
Right away, the song in Isaiah 5:1-7 must have come to mind, at least to these teachers of the Law. It is the story of Israel portrayed as a vineyard. The men (and maybe the general people) would know what this story was going to be about.
A vineyard = Israel. But who are the characters? Jesus would make that plain.
In Jesus’s parable, He tells of the landowner (representing God) going to a far country for a long while, leaving his vineyard in the care of the tenant farmers.
(Who, but the Jewish leaders, could be represented by the tenants? THEY knew, and so did the people listening to the parable.)
Jesus continues. Harvest time came, and the landowner sent his servant to collect the crop (money earned). But these tenants beat up the servant and sent him away empty-handed.
The landowner sent another servant, perhaps a more forceful one, but the greedy tenants treated him shamefully and sent him packing as well.
The landowner sent a third servant to collect his due. The now-confident tenants wounded him and threw him out without the landowners’ wages.
These servants the landowner sent represented the prophets God sent to Israel, hoping to turn them from their wicked ways and give Him the worship due to Him. Often, the religious leaders in Israel’s history disregarded and often tortured and killed God’s prophets.
Was the crowd around Jesus “getting the picture?”
Jesus continued, “Then the owner of the vineyard said, ‘What shall I do? I will send my beloved son; perhaps they will respect him.” WHO but Jesus Himself was Jesus portraying?
But the murderous tenants threw the son out of the vineyard and killed him, believing that now the vineyard would be THEIRS.
Did Jesus gaze at those religious leaders standing around? Of course, He knew their murderous hearts, plotting HOW they might catch Him and kill Him.
Jesus asks a question to the people and those religious leaders, “What then will the owner of the vineyard do to them? His answer shocked them.
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Vss. 20:16-20.
Jesus said forcefully, “He will come and destroy those tenants and give the vineyard to others!”
Whoa, did that ever cause a reaction!
“SURELY NOT!” Exclaimed the crowd. Yes, they understood very well what Jesus was saying. Israel without their priests and teachers!
But Jesus quotes from Psalm 118:22 and Isaiah 8:13-15. HE was the “stone” that the builders rejected. But HE would become the Cornerstone of the new order.
“The one who falls on this stone will be broken to pieces.” And, “When this stone falls on anyone, it will crush him.” Whether a vase falls on a rock or a rock falls on a vase, the result is the same. Both those who are not interested in Christ and those who hate Him… the result is the same. They will be crushed.
Okay, the scribes and chief priests knew that Jesus told this parable against them.
They sought to lay hands on Jesus that very hour, but … they feared the people. So they watched Him. And they sent spies who pretended to be sincere to “catch Him” in something He said. They wanted to deliver Jesus up to the authority and jurisdiction of the governor (Pilate).
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In tomorrow’s reading, we will see some of these attempts by quasi-sincere questioners. Jesus knows. He always gets the better of them.
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(I use the 2010 MacArthur Study Bible, English Standard Version, for my studies.)
