Wednesday
Evening Bible Study
November 22, 2000
Introduction
The Pharisees had trouble seeing how John the Baptist and Jesus could be
cut out of the same cloth. John was a
crazy guy living out in the desert, wearing burlap clothes, eating grasshoppers
and honey, and fasting. Jesus, on the
other hand, seemed to be gaining a reputation as a “party animal”.
(Luke 5:27-39 KJV) And after these things he went forth, and
saw a publican, named Levi, sitting at the receipt of custom: and he said unto
him, Follow me.
The “publicans” were Jewish men who worked as tax collectors for the
Romans. They were required to collect
so much from each person, but were also allowed to collect more than just the
minimum. Whatever they collected over
and above what they had to, they were able to keep for themselves. They were despised greatly by the Jews.
{28} And he left all, rose
up, and followed him. {29} And Levi made him a great feast in his own house:
and there was a great company of publicans and of others that sat down with
them. {30} But their scribes and Pharisees murmured against his disciples,
saying, Why do ye eat and drink with publicans and sinners?
For a Jewish person, eating with another person was a way of expressing friendship. They saw it as becoming “one” with another
person.
{31} And Jesus answering
said unto them, They that are whole need not a physician; but they that are
sick. {32} I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance. {33}
And they said unto him, Why do the disciples of John fast often, and make
prayers, and likewise the disciples of the Pharisees; but thine eat and drink?
They had trouble seeing how Jesus and John could be from the same God.
{34} And he said unto them,
Can ye make the children of the bridechamber fast, while the bridegroom is with
them? {35} But the days will come, when the bridegroom shall be taken away from
them, and then shall they fast in those days.
Jesus was saying that His disciples ought to be partying because He was
with them. He was the guest of honor,
the reason for the season.
When we’ve gotten to Luke 7, John the Baptist had again become a topic of
conversation. John had been imprisoned
by King Herod, and had begun to express doubts as to whether Jesus was the
Messiah or not, sending some of his disciples to Jesus to talk to Jesus. Jesus answered John’s questions and then
went on to talk about how important John’s ministry had been.
:31-35 Jesus talks of John
:31 And the Lord said, Whereunto then shall I liken the men of this
generation? and to what are they like?
liken – homoioo – to be
made like; to liken, compare; illustrate by comparisons
generation – genea –
fathered, birth, nativity; that which has been begotten, men of the same stock,
a family; the whole multitude of men living at the same time; an age (i.e. the
time ordinarily occupied by each successive generation), a space of 30-33 years
:32 They are like unto children sitting in the marketplace, and calling one
to another, and saying, We have piped unto you, and ye have not danced; we have
mourned to you, and ye have not wept.
children – paidion – a
young child, a little boy, a little girl
marketplace – agora – any
assembly, especially of the people; the place of assembly; market place, street
calling – prosphoneo – to
call to, to address by calling; to call to one’s self, summon
piped – auleo – to play on
the flute, to pipe
dance – orcheomai – to
dance
mourned – threneo – to
mourn, to lament; of singers of dirges, [to wail]; to bewail, deplore
wept – klaio – to mourn,
weep, lament
The picture is that of children in a public area running around and playing
with each other.
Have you ever seen a group of kids trying to decide what to play?
One group of children says, “Let’s play wedding party!” and they begin to
play happy music, but the other group of children doesn’t want to play
that. Another group of children says,
“Let’s play funeral!” and they begin to pretend crying, but the other group
doesn’t want to play that.
Sometimes when we decide to go out to eat, I think my children purposely
each choose something different, just to make sure that their brothers don’t
get their way.
:33 For John the Baptist came neither eating bread nor drinking wine; and
ye say, He hath a devil.
devil – daimonion – the
divine power, deity, divinity; evil spirits or the messengers and ministers of
the devil
People had been critical of John for his lifestyle.
:34 The Son of man is come eating and drinking; and ye say, Behold a
gluttonous man, and a winebibber, a friend of publicans and sinners!
gluttonous – phagos – a
voracious man, a glutton
winebibber – oinopotes – a
winebibber, given to wine, a wino
friend – philos – friend,
to be friendly to one, wish him well
Jesus is saying to these people, “Nothing satisfies you! John the Baptist lived a life of denial and
fasting, and you said he was possessed.
I came and ate and drank with people, and you’ve called me a drunkard!”
:35 But wisdom is justified of all her children.
justified – dikaioo – to
render righteous or such he ought to be
wisdom – sophia – wisdom,
broad and full of intelligence; used of the knowledge of very diverse matters
Solomon talks about wisdom (Prov. 8:1 - 9:12) and foolishness (Prov.
9:13-18) and describes both as being like women calling out to men to come and
live with them.
Jesus is saying that both He and John could be considered children of
“wisdom”, and their own unique lifestyles showed that they were wise men.
They each lived different kinds of lives, but they were both wise because
they were both living the way they ought to.
The wise thing to do is the thing that is appropriate for the moment.
God in His wisdom has planned that John the Baptist and Jesus live two
different lives.
We’re not all the same. In a sense,
we don’t all have to act alike.
Lesson
Be what God wants you to be now.
Sometimes we give in too much to being what others want us to be, when God
might want us being something different.
God has given each of us a different set of gifts, talents, experiences,
and personality. We need to be
comfortable being what God has us to be.
(1 Cor 12:14-20 KJV) For the body is not one member, but many.
{15} If the foot shall say, Because I am not the hand, I am not of the body; is
it therefore not of the body? {16} And if the ear shall say, Because I am not
the eye, I am not of the body; is it therefore not of the body? {17} If the
whole body were an eye, where were the hearing? If the whole were hearing,
where were the smelling? {18} But now hath God set the members every one of
them in the body, as it hath pleased him. {19} And if they were all one member,
where were the body? {20} But now are they many members, yet but one body.
We are all parts of the body. We
all have different functions. No
function is better than any other. All
are important. But we need to learn to
do what we are designed to do.
Illustration
A Fable by Aesop:
One day it occurred to the members of the body that they were doing all the
work and that the belly was having all the food. So they held a meeting and
after a long discussion decided to strike work until the belly consented to
take its proper share of the work. So
for a day or two the hands refused to take the food, the mouth refused to
receive it and the teeth had no work to do. But after a day or two members
began to find that they themselves were not in very active condition. The hands
could hardly move, the mouth was all parched and dry, while the legs were
unable to support the rest. Thus they
found that even the belly in its dull quiet way was doing necessary work for
the body and that all must work together or the body would go to pieces.
Even us “bellies” are important.
Illustration
Captain Kirk and Mr. Scott decided to take a ship out on the ocean one day
and started arguing over who was most important to the ship. To prove their point to each other, they
decided to swap places. The Mr. Scott,
the chief engineer ascended to the bridge, and the captain went to the engine
room. Several hours later, Captain Kirk
suddenly appeared on deck covered with oil and dirt. “Scotty!” he yelled, waving aloft a monkey wrench. “You have to get down there: I can’t make
her go!” “Of course you can’t,” replied
the chief. “She’s aground!”
We all have our specialties. We all
have things that only we can do best.
It’s okay to try new things. But when you find that it doesn’t work, learn to move on, find
the things that are just specially made for you.
Illustration
When little David came into the camp of Israel to check on his big
brothers, he found that the entire army was paralyzed with fear at the threats
of the giant Goliath. David knew that
God was big enough to handle Goliath, and he believed that God could use anyone
to bring defeat to the Philistines.
After talking with King Saul, and convincing Saul that since he was able
to defeat a bear and lion, that he was surely able to defeat this giant with
God’s help,
(1 Sam
17:38-40 NLT) Then Saul gave David
his own armor--a bronze helmet and a coat of mail. {39} David put it on,
strapped the sword over it, and took a step or two to see what it was like, for
he had never worn such things before. "I can't go in these," he
protested. "I'm not used to them." So he took them off again. {40} He
picked up five smooth stones from a stream and put them in his shepherd's bag.
Then, armed only with his shepherd's staff and sling, he started across to
fight Goliath.
David was young, but he was wise enough not to try and
fight in armor that he wasn’t used to, trained in, or ready for. It’s not that he couldn’t one day use armor
like Saul’s, but this wasn’t the time.
He knew that the best way to fight the giant was to just
be himself and let God use him.
Questions to ask yourself
1. Are you trying to be
something you shouldn’t be, or you’re not ready to be?
Sometimes it’s hard to tell if you’re doing the right thing.
You can be on track doing exactly what God wants you to do, and you’re
going to have difficult times.
Difficulty isn’t a sign that you’re doing the wrong thing.
But if you’re in the wrong place, it will also be difficult.
There are two kinds of people.
There are some people who are constantly questioning everything they
do. They need to come to a place where
they stop questioning and just move on to serving.
But there are others who tend to jump into places they don’t belong or
aren’t ready for.
Sometimes this isn’t any big deal.
The things they are doing don’t really cause much harm. I don’t think a person has to be specially
gifted to help pass out cookies in Sunday School. They just have to love kids.
But sometimes it can be a big deal.
A long time ago we let a guy play bass in the worship band
at Calvary Anaheim. We let him play
bass because we didn’t know anyone any one else who could play bass, and well,
he had a bass. But he couldn’t play. And some of us didn’t take the time to find that out up front. We
would hear comments from some of the musicians in the church that things didn’t
sound right, but we kind of just didn’t want to deal with it because we all
liked the guy. After a couple of years,
he eventually learned to play bass, but I’m not sure the place to learn to play
bass is on stage in front of the whole church.
I’m not sure it was worth hurting the ears of the church for a couple of
years just so we didn’t hurt this one guy’s feelings.
Do you have a friend who can really be honest with you and who is able to
say to you, “I think you’re doing the wrong thing.”?
What if they say to you, “Yes, I think you’re doing the right thing”, will
you stop questioning yourself and just serve?
2. Are you reaching the people
you’re with?
Sometimes we get starry-eyed ideas about certain kinds of people we ought
to be ministering to or being with. And
we sit around and daydream about these ideas when there is a group of people
surrounding us right now.
I can sit and daydream about being at church with my Christian friends on
Thanksgiving, when I’m sitting in an easy chair surrounded by my family. Surrounded by my kids.
I can sit at work and daydream about being in another job or doing some
sort of ministry when there’s a person sitting next to me that is going through
a divorce and needs to connect with Jesus.
I can go out on a date with my wife and sit and daydream about doing this
thing or that thing, talking to this person or that person, when my wife is
sitting right in front of me, and she’s the one I need to be talking to.
I used to have a home Bible Study and I would worry about all individuals
that had phoned that day to say they weren’t going to show up. I’d worry about all the people that weren’t
there and not focus on the people who WERE there.
Jesus ministered to the people He was with.
There will be times when He is with “holy” Pharisees.
There will be times when He is with filthy rotten sinners.
He will minister to both (just wait until next week!).