To Believe in Jesus – Part 44

To Believe in Jesus – Part 44

 

ཡོ་ཧ་ནན། 5:19-24

19དེ་ནས་སྐྱབས་མགོན་ཡེ་ཤུས་མི་དེ་རྣམས་ལ་འདི་སྐད༌དུ། བདག་གིས་ཁྱོད་རྣམས་ལ་ཡང་དག་པར་བདེན་པར༌སྨྲ་སྟེ། ཡབ་ཀྱིས་དོན་གང་ཞིག་མཛད་པ་བཞིན་སྲས་ཀྱིས་ཀྱང་དེ་ལྟར་མཛད༌པས། སྲས་རང་ཉིད་ཀྱིས་ཡབ་ལ་མ་བརྟེན་པར་ལས་ཅི་ཡང་བྱ་མི་ནུས༌ཤིང༌། ཡབ་ཀྱིས་དོན་གང་ཞིག་མཛད་པ་སྲས་ཀྱིས་མཐོང་གྱུར་ན་སྲས་རང་གིས་ཀྱང་དེ་ལྟར་བྱ་ནུས༌སོ།། 20རྒྱུ་མཚན་ནི་ཡབ་ཀྱིས་སྲས་གཅེས་སུ་འཛིན༌ཞིང་། ཁོང་ཉིད་ཀྱིས་མཛད་བཞིན་པའི་དོན་ཐམས་ཅད་སྲས་ལ་སྟོན་པར་མ༌ཟད། ཁྱོད་རྣམས་ངོ་མཚར་བའི་ཆེད་དུ་འདི་རྣམས་ལས་ཆེ་བའི་འཕྲིན་ལས་ཀྱང་སྟོན་པར་མཛད་ངེས་སོ།། 21ཡང་ཡབ་ཀྱིས་གཤིན་པོ་རྣམས་ཇི་ལྟར་སླར་གསོན་པར་མཛད་དེ་ཚེ་སྲོག་གནང་བ༌བཞིན། སྲས་ཀྱིས་ཀྱང་རང་གི་འདུན་པ་བཞིན་མི་རྣམས་ལ་ཚེ་སྲོག་གནང་བ་ཡིན། 22ཡང་ཡབ་ཀྱིས་མི་སུ་ལའང་ལེགས་ཉེས་ཀྱི་ཁྲིམས་ཐག་མི་གཅོད་པར་དབང་དེ་ཐམས་ཅད་སྲས་ལ་སྤྲད་པ་ཡིན་ནོ།། 23དེ་ནི་མི་ཐམས་ཅད་ཀྱིས་ཡབ་ལ་མོས་གུས་བྱེད་པ་ལྟར་སྲས་ལའང་མོས་གུས་བྱེད་པའི་ཕྱིར༌ཡིན། འོན་ཀྱང་སུ་ཞིག་གིས་སྲས་ལ་མོས་གུས་མི་བྱེད་ན། སྲས་མངགས་མཁན་ཏེ་ཡབ་ལའང་མོས་གུས་མི་བྱེད། 24ཡང་བདག་གིས་ཁྱོད་རྣམས་ལ་ཡང་དག་པར་བདེན་པར་སྨྲ༌སྟེ། སུ་ཞིག་གིས་བདག་གི་བཀའ་ལ་ཉན་ཞིང་ང་རང་མངགས་མཁན་ལ་དད་པ་བྱས་ཡོད་པ་ཡིན༌ན། མི་དེ་རྣམས་ལ་མཐའ་མེད་པའི་ཚེ་སྲོག་ཐོབ་ཡོད་པ༌དང༌། ཉེས་ཆད་གཅོད་པར་མི་འགྱུར་ཞིང་། མི་དེ་རྣམས་འཆི་བ་ལས་གྲོལ་ནས་ཚེ་སྲོག་གི་ནང་དུ་ཞུགས་པ་ཡིན་ནོ།།

John 5:19-24

19 So Jesus said to them, “Truly, truly, I say to you, the Son can do nothing of his own accord, but only what he sees the Father doing. For whatever the Father does, that the Son does likewise. 20 For the Father loves the Son and shows him all that he himself is doing. And greater works than these will he show him, so that you may marvel. 21 For as the Father raises the dead and gives them life, so also the Son gives life to whom he will. 22 For the Father judges no one, but has given all judgment to the Son, 23 that all may honor the Son, just as they honor the Father. Whoever does not honor the Son does not honor the Father who sent him. 24 Truly, truly, I say to you, whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life. He does not come into judgment, but has passed from death to life.

 

What Jesus said here may appear very deep and difficult to understand.

However by comparing what Jesus said to what these local Jewish folks had learned from their synagogue teachers, the Law of Moses, and the writings of the prophet, it was a very clear message.

Jesus specifically speaks of father and son relationship, and in this context pointing to His relationship with the Father in heaven.

In previous post I mentioned addressing God as Father is not entirely taboo or forbidden among the Jewish people but depends who is saying it and for what purpose.

In the wordings of the prophet Malachi who was placed at the last book of the old testament, this particular subject of father and son relationship was highlighted but in a negative way.

Let’s look at it

 

མཱལ་ཨ་ཀེ 1:6-7

6དཔུང་ཚོགས་ཀུན་གྱི་དཀོན་མཆོག་ཡ་ཝཱེས་ཁྱོད་རྣམས་ལ་འདི་སྐད་དུ། ཀྱེ་བདག་གི་མིང་ལ་མཐོང་ཆུང་བྱེད་པའི་མཆོད་དཔོན་རྣམས། བུ་ཡིས་ཕ་ལ་བཀུར་ཞིང་གཡོག་པོས་བདག་པོར་གུས་ཤིང་འཇིགས་པ་ཡིན། གལ་ཏེ་ང་རང་ཕ་ཡིན་ན་ཁྱོད་ཀྱི་གུས་བཀུར་གང་དུ་ཡོད་དམ། གལ་ཏེ་ང་རང་བདག་པོ་ཡིན་ན་འཐོབ་འོས་པའི་གུས་ཞུམ་གང་དུ་ཡོད་དམ། ཁྱོད་རྣམས་ན་རེ། ངེད་ཅག་གིས་ཁྱེད་ཀྱི་མཚན་ལ་ཅི་ལྟར་མཐོང་ཆུང་བྱས་སམ་ཞེས་འདྲིའོ། ། 7ཁྱོད་རྣམས་ཀྱིས་ཁ་ཟས་མི་གཙང་བ་བདག་གི་མཆོད་ཁྲིའི་སྟེང་དུ་ཕུལ་ནས་ད་དུང་ན་རེ། ངེད་ཅག་གིས་ཁྱེད་ཀྱི་མཆོད་ཁྲི་ཅི་ལྟར་མི་གཙང་བར་བཟོས་སམ་ཟེར་ཏེ། ཅིའི་ཕྱིར་ཞེ་ན། ཁྱོད་ཅག་གིས་དཀོན་མཆོག་ཡ་ཝཱེའི་གསོལ་ལྕོག་ལ་མཐོང་ཆུང་བྱས་ཆོག་པར་འདོད་པས་སོ་ཞེས་གསུངས་སོ།

Malachi 1:6-7

6 “A son honors his father, and a servant his master. If then I am a father, where is my honor? And if I am a master, where is my fear? says the Lord of hosts to you, O priests, who despise my name. But you say, ‘How have we despised your name?’ 7 By offering polluted food upon my altar. But you say, ‘How have we polluted you?’ By saying that the Lord’s table may be despised

 

This message from Malachi was to the returning Jews from Babylonian Exile who made the willing and intentional effort to go back to Jerusalem to rebuild the Temple that was burnt down during the time of Jeremiah.

It is a known fact among historian that majority of Jewish exile chooses to remain in those foreign lands they were exiled to. That because most of them were born and raised in foreign lands by the end of the 70 years exile proclaimed by the prophet Jeremiah. And by the time Nehemiah returned to Jerusalem to help rebuild the Temple it was way beyond 70 years after the siege of Jerusalem by the Babylonian army.

That generation, who witnessed the destruction of Jerusalem and were exiled to Babylon, the majority of them would not live through that 70 years of exile except for people like Daniel and he did not return to Jerusalem due to his very old age and duty to the Persian court. So the majority of the Jews who were born and raised in foreign land may not feel the connection with Jerusalem anymore and did not return.

So a minority group of Jews returned to Jerusalem with the pledge and commitment to rebuild the Temple but they were not doing it as according to what God specifically instructed. Those 70 years of exile how did they keep faith? How did they read and interpret scripture?  How did they put into practice what God instructed?  How and what did they do during the Lord’s feast without the Temple? It was during this 70 years exile we could trace the beginning of the synagogue system where teachers and scribe had their way of interpreting scriptures and how to practice faith in God.

There are actually a few clear connections between Malachi’s message and Jesus’ message.

  1. 1. The time of Malachi was known as the Second Temple Period, the same with Jesus.
  2. 2. Both message had that specific reference to father and son relationship in the context of relating to God as Father.
  3. 3. Both Malachi’s message and what Jesus said exposed the deep seeded problem of how these people who were called of God to worship and honor God interpreted or misinterpreted scripture and therefore engaging in practices not pleasing to God.
  4. 4. I mentioned earlier it was during the 70 years exile we could trace the beginning of the synagogue system and it was highly possible those returning Jews in the time of Malachi had been influenced by what they had been taught in the synagogue. And Jesus very often was confronting those Pharisees and Scribes running the synagogue system.
  5. 5. Malachi’s prophetic message in chapter 3 points to the coming Messiah. Today we have the benefits of hindsight knowing that this message was indeed pointing to John the Baptist and Jesus.

 

མཱལ་ཨ་ཀེ 3:1

དཔུང་ཚོགས་ཀུན་གྱི་དཀོན་མཆོག་ཡ་ཝཱེས་འདི་སྐད་དུ། ལྟོས་དང་། ངས་རང་གི་ཕོ་ཉ་མངགས་ཏེ་ངའི་མདུན་དུ་ལམ་གྲ་སྒྲིག་བྱེད་པ་དང་། ཁྱོད་རྣམས་ཀྱིས་འཚོལ་བའི་གཙོ་བོ་ནི་གློ་བུར་ཉིད་ལ་ཁོང་གི་མཆོད་ཁང་ནང་དུ་ཕེབས་ངེས་ཤིང་། ཁྱོད་རྣམས་ཀྱིས་ཡིད་སྨོན་བྱེད་པའི་ཞལ་ཆད་ཀྱི་ཕོ་ཉ་དེ་འོང་བར་འགྱུར་ཞེས་གསུངས་སོ།

Malachi 3:1

“Behold, I send my messenger, and he will prepare the way before me. And the Lord whom you seek will suddenly come to his temple; and the messenger of the covenant in whom you delight, behold, he is coming, says the Lord of hosts.

 

There were very clear connections between what Jesus said in John 5 and Malachi’s message those people hearing Him would not missed it especially those Pharisees and Scribes .

The message of Malachi exposed the unfaithfulness and corruptions of the priests who were appointed by God to serve the community. And the focal point of this argument was about how they should honor their relationship with God as their Father.

A very important question needs to be answered here.

What kind of standard God use to judge if a person honor Him as Father or not?

 

Obedience

 

And since this argument was directed at the priests then it had to do with Temple service and there were clear directives recorded in Leviticus how things ought to be done. And the accusation highlighted in Malachi deals with a complicated situation. The priests did continue doing the Temple service but they did it in a corrupted manner and God was not pleased. And the kind of corruptions and malpractice lead to despising the Holy Name of God.

This is a very serious accusation in the message of Malachi against the priests of God. It was a bad example of how they were relating to God as Father.

Back to Jesus message in John 5, what Jesus did was an example of proper relationship with the Father in heaven.

Very often Jesus confronted the synagogue leaders, namely the Pharisees, of misleading the people through their corrupted interpretation of scriptures and thus teaching a different kind of practice which eventually do not encourage real obedience to God the Father.

Remember the many arguments Jesus had with the Pharisees was about true obedience to God the Father.

Here in the context of John 5, Jesus directly address the issue of believe and obedience. Was it because they do not believe and thus they do not obey?

So we believe Jesus is the Messiah chosen of God and therefore we pay attention and obey what Jesus teach and instructed.

 

To be continue …

 

David Z

To Believe in Jesus – Part 43

To Believe in Jesus – Part 43

 

ཡོ་ཧ་ནན། 5:17-18

17སྐྱབས་མགོན་ཡེ་ཤུས་དེ་རྣམས་ལ་འདི་སྐད༌དུ། བདག་གི་ཡབ་ཀྱིས་ད་ལྟའི་བར་དུ་འཕྲིན་ལས་སྣ་ཚོགས་མཛད༌ཅིང༌། བདག་གིས་ཀྱང་འཕྲིན་ལས་མཛད་པ་ཡིན་ཞེས་གསུངས་པ༌ན། 18ཡ་ཧུ་དཱ་པ་རྣམས་ཀྱིས་སྔར་ལས་ལྷག་པར་ཁོང་ཉིད་དགྲོང་འདོད༌པ་རེད། རྒྱུ་མཚན་ནི་ཁོང་ཉིད་ངལ་གསོ་བའི་ཉིན་མོའི་ཆོས་ཁྲིམས་དང་འགལ་བར་མ༌ཟད། དཀོན་མཆོག་ནི་རང་གི་ཡབ་ཡིན་ཞེས་ཀྱང་གསུངས༌ཏེ། ཁོང་དང་དཀོན་མཆོག་གཉིས་འདྲ་མཉམ་ཡིན་པར་བྱས་པའི་ཕྱིར༌རོ།།

 

John 5:17-18

17 But Jesus answered them, “My Father is working until now, and I am working.”

18 This was why the Jews were seeking all the more to kill him, because not only was he breaking the Sabbath, but he was even calling God his own Father, making himself equal with God.

 

In previous post I discussed a key problem why this same group of people identified as Jews who refused to believe Jesus is the Messiah chosen of God. And what is important to note is that they do not represent every Jewish person but those who were under control and authority of the Sanhedrin and the synagogue system operated by the Pharisees.

The Pharisees who oversee the vast network of synagogue and having direct authority and control over the social-economic lives of the majority of Jews, they had their own interpretation of God’s law and how to practice. Those who disagree risk being excommunicated and condemned as outlaws.

The synagogue system continues till today with a different leadership structure but this vast network of systematic organized gatherings had facilitated the survival of Jewish culture and traditions known as Judaism after the destruction of the Temple in AD 70.

Back to the situation in John 5, on the background of the various arguments these Jews had with Jesus very often it happened on the Sabbath because it was the designated day of gathering at the local synagogues and where many civil and social issues were discussed.

In this context John highlighted that apart from their teachings and rule about Sabbath they had problem with Jesus addressing God as His Father!

God being addressed as Father is not entirely taboo or banned among the Jewish people but such addressing is to be done with utmost respect and depending on the purpose and who is claiming and proclaiming God as Father.

The identity of Jesus had become a divisive issue among the Jews especially those who live in Jerusalem and were directly involved with the Temple service. They were expecting the Messiah but not this Jesus who keep preaching against their sins!

John noted on what basis these Jews were angry to the points of intending to kill Jesus

 

18ཡ་ཧུ་དཱ་པ་རྣམས་ཀྱིས་སྔར་ལས་ལྷག་པར་ཁོང་ཉིད་དགྲོང་འདོད༌པ་རེད། རྒྱུ་མཚན་ནི་ཁོང་ཉིད་ངལ་གསོ་བའི་ཉིན་མོའི་ཆོས་ཁྲིམས་དང་འགལ་བར་མ༌ཟད། དཀོན་མཆོག་ནི་རང་གི་ཡབ་ཡིན་ཞེས་ཀྱང་གསུངས༌ཏེ། ཁོང་དང་དཀོན་མཆོག་གཉིས་འདྲ་མཉམ་ཡིན་པར་བྱས་པའི་ཕྱིར༌རོ།།

18 This was why the Jews were seeking all the more to kill him, because not only was he breaking the Sabbath, but he was even calling God his own Father, making himself equal with God.

 

The issue of Jesus being equal with God was offensive to them. Basically they don’t believe and do not receive Jesus as having that position to claim that kind of relationship with God.

The root causes of being offended seem to be in how they interpreted scripture and what had they been taught about the coming Messiah. In this context the Gospel of Matthew recorded an incident worth taking note

 

མད་ཐཱ། 22:41-46

41ཕ་རུ་ཤི་པ་རྣམས་གནས་དེར་འཛོམས༌དུས། སྐྱབས་མགོན་ཡེ་ཤུས་དེ་རྣམས་ལ་འདི་སྐད༌དུ། 42མཱ་ཤི་ཀའི་སྐོར་ནས་ཁྱོད་ཅག་གི་བསམ་ཚུལ་ཅི་ཡིན༌ནམ། ཁོང་ནི་སུ་ཞིག་གི་སྲས་ཡིན་ནམ་ཞེས་བཀའ་འདྲི་གནང་བ༌ལ། དེ་རྣམས་ཀྱིས་དཱ་བིད་ཀྱི་རིགས་སྲས་ཡིན་ཞེས་ཞུས༌སོ།། 43ཡང་སྐྱབས་མགོན་ཡེ་ཤུས་འདི་སྐད༌དུ། དེས་ན་དཱ་བིད་ཀྱིས་དམ་པའི་ཐུགས་ཉིད་ཀྱི་ངང་ནས་མཱ་ཤི་ཀ་ལ་གཙོ་བོ་ལགས་ཞེས་འབོད་པ་ཅི་ཡིན༌ནམ། དེ་ལ་ཇི་སྐད༌དུ།

44དཀོན་མཆོག་གིས་ནི་ང་ཡི་གཙོ་བོ༌ལ།།

བདག་གིས་ཁྱོད་ཀྱི་བསྟན་དགྲ་ཐམས་ཅད༌ཀུན།།

ཁྱོད་ཀྱི་ཞབས་ཀྱི་འོག་ཏུ་འཇུག་པའི༌བར།།

བདག་གི་གཡས་སུ་བཞུགས་ཤིང་སྒུག་པར༌བྱའོ།།

ཞེས་གསུངས༌ཤིང༌། 45དཱ་བིད་ཀྱིས་ཁོང་ལ་གཙོ་བོ་ཞེས་ཞུས༌ན། ཁོང་ནི་དཱ་བིད་ཀྱི་རིགས་སྲས་སུ་ཇི་ལྟར་གྱུར་པ་ཡིན་ནམ་ཞེས་གསུངས་པ༌ན། 46མི་སུས་ཀྱང་ཁོང་ལ་ལན་འདེབས་མ་ནུས༌ལ། ཉིན་དེ་ནས་བཟུང་སུས་ཀྱང་ཁོང་ལ་དྲི་བ་ཅི་ཡང་ཞུ་མ་ཕོད༌དོ།།

Matthew 22:41-46

41 Now while the Pharisees were gathered together, Jesus asked them a question, 42 saying, “What do you think about the Christ? Whose son is he?” They said to him, “The son of David.” 43 He said to them, “How is it then that David, in the Spirit, calls him Lord, saying,

44 “‘The Lord said to my Lord, “Sit at my right hand, until I put your enemies under your feet”’?

45 If then David calls him Lord, how is he his son?” 46 And no one was able to answer him a word, nor from that day did anyone dare to ask him any more questions.

 

This conversation in Mathew was directed at the Pharisees, namely the synagogue leadership. And there were many others gathered there at the meeting.

Those present at that gathering who heard Jesus knew He quoted from Psalm 110, and they already knew that message from Psalm 110 was speaking of the coming Messiah!

Jesus was very well aware what these community leaders, namely the Pharisees, had been teaching and how they interpreted scripture and how eventually they have been hindering the people from believing in Jesus being the Messiah chosen of God.

The first chapter of the Gospel of John, the author already addressed the issue of having the rights to be sons of God and even pointed out on what basis people will receive or reject the invitation to address God as Father

 

ཡོ་ཧ་ནན། 1:9-13

9གཟི་འོད་དེ་ཉིད་འོད་ཟེར་དངོས་མ༌སྟེ།།

འཇིག་རྟེན་ཡོངས་སུ་འཕྲོས་ནས་མི་ཀུན༌གསལ།།

10དེ་ཡང་ཁོང་ཉིད་འཇིག་རྟེན་འདིར་བཞུགས༌ཤིང༌།།

ཁོང་ཉིད་བརྒྱུད་ནས་འཇིག་རྟེན་བསྐྲུན་ན༌ཡང༌།།

འཇིག་རྟེན་མི་ཡིས་ཁོང་ཉིད་ཤེས་མ༌གྱུར།།

11ཁོང་ནི་རང་ཡུལ་ཕྱོགས་སུ་ཕེབས་ན༌ཡང༌།།

རང་ཡུལ་མི་ཡིས་ཁོང་ལ་བསུ་བ༌མེད།།

12ཁོང་ཉིད་བསུ་ཞིང་ཁོང་གི་མཚན་ལ་ནི།།

དད་པའི་མི་རྣམས་དཀོན་མཆོག་བུ་ཕྲུག་ལ༎

འགྱུར་བར་མཛད་པའི་དབང་ཡང་ཁོང་གིས༌གནང༌།།

13དད་ལྡན་སྐྱེ་བོ་སོ་སོ་དེ་རྣམས༌ནི།།

མི་ཡི་ཁྲག་ལས་སྐྱེས་པ་མ་ཡིན༌ལ།།

མི་ཡི་འདོད་ཆགས་དབང་གིས་མ་སྐྱེས༌ཤིང༌།།

མི་ཡི་འདོད་མོས་བཞིན་དུ་སྐྱེས་པའང༌མིན།།

དེ་ནི་དཀོན་མཆོག་ཉིད་ལས་སྐྱེས་པ་ལགས།།

John 1:9-13

9 The true light, which gives light to everyone, was coming into the world. 10 He was in the world, and the world was made through him, yet the world did not know him. 11 He came to his own, and his own people did not receive him. 12 But to all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God, 13 who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God.

 

The key is to believe in Jesus, to receive Jesus as the Messiah chosen of God to redeem and restore us back to relationship with God.

Who do we recognize and receive as the Messiah chosen of God to redeem us from sin and death is crucial to our future hope of eternal life.

 

To be continue …

 

David Z

To Believe in Jesus – Part 42

To Believe in Jesus – Part 42

 

ཡོ་ཧ་ནན། 5:15-16

15དེ་ནས་མི་དེ་ཡ་ཧུ་དཱ་པ་རྣམས་ཀྱི་གམ་དུ་སོང༌སྟེ། རང་གི་ནད་འཇོམས་པར་མཛད་མཁན་དེ་ནི་སྐྱབས་མགོན་ཡེ་ཤུ་ཡིན་པར་སྨྲས༌སོ།།

16སྐྱབས་མགོན་ཡེ་ཤུས་ངལ་གསོ་བའི་ཉིན་ལ་དེ་ལྟར་མཛད་པས་ཡ་ཧུ་དཱ་པ་རྣམས་ཀྱིས་ཁོང་ལ་གནོད་འཚེ་བྱས།

 

John 5:15:16

15 The man went away and told the Jews that it was Jesus who had healed him. 16 And this was why the Jews were persecuting Jesus, because he was doing these things on the Sabbath.

 

Why was this incident recorded by John?

The plan reading of the text highlighted a key reason why Jesus was persecuted and by whom and for what reason. It also addressed a key problem why this same group of people refused to believe Jesus is the Messiah chosen of God.

 

To believe in Jesus we need to be prepared for persecution!

 

Persecutions can arise from various reasons and we need to carefully observe exactly where is it coming from and for what purpose, and when necessary we need to stand firm in our faith in Christ.

John identified this group of people who were persecuting Jesus as “Jews” but that was not referring to every Jewish person! In the context of John’s message, these Jews most likely refer to those strict religious minded Jews who had settled within Jerusalem.

Locations and contexts are the initial clues we need to watch out for with regards to Christian persecutions.

Today we have the benefit of hindsight; we can look back in history and differentiate the different groups of Jewish people during the time of the Four Gospel and Acts.

In Acts 2 when we read of what happened during Pentecost and there were Jewish Diaspora gathered in Jerusalem because they came from outside Jerusalem to do obligation for the feast.

Why did they come to Jerusalem? Because the Temple was there! And there was only one designated Temple for doing their obligations to God with regards to the yearly feast and sacrifices.

There is growing consensus among bible historian that after the Babylon Exile, majority of Jewish Diaspora did not return to Jerusalem but prefer to continue living in the various places and nations where they were exiled to. However many did make the regular pilgrimages to Jerusalem to observe the feast of the Lord but did not live permanently in Jerusalem.

By the time of Jesus, majority of the total Jewish population worldwide were living outside Jerusalem, and away from the Promised Land. That situation continues till today whereby majority of Jewish Diaspora can be found in North America. The minority ultra-orthodox Jews today do settle in modern day Jerusalem and Israel.

In the days of Jesus and the apostle Paul, there was a minority group of Jews who did permanently resettled back to Jerusalem after the Babylon Exile and these were most likely the religious minded and followed a more strict code-of-conduct enforced by the authority of the Sanhedrin and the synagogue system operated by the Pharisees.

In those days there were already various disagreements and divisions among the Jews themselves especially between those who permanently settled in Jerusalem being identified as Judeans and those who live outside Jerusalem and far away.

Do not be surprised that even Jews from Jerusalem and Jews from Galilee could not agree with each other about what was written in the Law of Moses and the writings of the Prophets, especially about the coming Messiah. That was perhaps just one of the many reasons why we often read of the Pharisees continuously bombarding Jesus with absurd questionings and arguments.

In the days of Jesus the land of Israel was governed by Rome and most of these Jews who were living within the old city depended on either the Sanhedrin or the synagogue system for verification of their identity as Jews and Judeans, and certain civil rights protection against Roman laws which may expose them to pagan worship. And why would they want to switch camp to follow Jesus? Jesus did not promise them membership privileges but continue preaching against their sins and calling for repentance.

The problem with the Sanhedrin and the Pharisees was that they had their own sets of interpretation about the Law of Moses and how to keep God’s commandments and we do have record of Jesus’ confrontation with them. For example

 

མཱཪ་ཀུ 7:5-8

5དེ་ནས་ཕ་རུ་ཤི་པ་དང་མཁན་པོ་རྣམས་ཀྱིས་སྐྱབས་མགོན་ཡེ་ཤུ༌ལ། ཁྱེད་ཀྱི་ཐུགས་སྲས་རྣམས་ཀྱིས་ཅིའི་ཕྱིར་གནའ་མིའི་ལུགས་སྲོལ་བཞིན་མི་བྱེད༌པར། ལག་པ་མི་གཙང་ནའང་བག་ལེབ་ཟའམ་ཞེས་དྲིས་པ༌དང༌། 6སྐྱབས་མགོན་ཡེ་ཤུས་འདི་སྐད༌དུ། ཚུལ་འཆོས་པ་ཁྱོད་ཅག་གི་སྐོར་ལ་ཡེ་ཤ་ཡཱ་ཡིས་ལེགས་པར་གསུངས་པ་འདི་ལྟ༌སྟེ།

མི་སྡེ་འདི་ཡིས་ངག་ནས་ང་རང་བཀུར་ན༌ཡང༌།།

ཁོ་ཚོའི་སེམས་ནི་ང་དང་ཡོངས་སུ་བྲལ་བ༌ཡིན།།

7འཇིག་རྟེན་མི་ཡིས་བརྩམས་པའི་བསླབ་བྱ་སྣ་ཚོགས༌པ།།

བདེན་པའི་ཆོས་ཀྱི་གཞུང་ལུགས་ཡིན་ཁུལ་སྟོན་བྱེད༌པས།།

བསྙེན་བཀུར་དེ་འདྲ་བདག་ལ་བྱས་ཀྱང་སྙིང་པོ༌མེད།།

ཅེས་བཀོད་པ༌ལྟར། 8ཁྱོད་རྣམས་ཀྱིས་དཀོན་མཆོག་གི་བཀའ་སྤངས་ནས་མིའི་ལུགས་སྲོལ་སྲུང་བཞིན་འདུག་ཅེས་གསུངས་པ༌དང༌།

 

Mark 7:5-8

5 And the Pharisees and the scribes asked him, “Why do your disciples not walk according to the tradition of the elders, but eat with defiled hands?” 6 And he said to them, “Well did Isaiah prophesy of you hypocrites, as it is written,

“‘This people honors me with their lips, but their heart is far from me; 7 in vain do they worship me, teaching as doctrines the commandments of men.’

8 You leave the commandment of God and hold to the tradition of men.”

 

In the context of Mark 7, the Pharisee were complaining about certain issues with hand washing rituals before eating but did God ever issued such laws?

Back to the situation in John 5, it was beyond common sense that Jesus did His miracle to heal a man who had been sick for 38 years and these Jews went head on to persecute Jesus because this happen on the Sabbath! But God had never issued any commandment against healing on the Sabbath!

Furthermore the issue these Jews had with the man and Jesus was that he picks up his bed and walk on the Sabbath. What’s wrong with that?

 

To believe in Jesus as against man’s traditions

 

The “tradition of the elders” and “commandments of men” the Pharisees and Sanhedrin had indoctrinated that generation of Jews living in Jerusalem were adulterated and corrupted interpretation of God’s commandment.

On the background of the various arguments these Jews had with Jesus very often it happened on the Sabbath because it was the designated day of gathering at the local synagogues and where many civic and social issues were discussed. And the Pharisees were teaching the Jews how to behave based on how they interpreted God’s instructions to Moses.

How these synagogue leaders – namely the Pharisees – interpreted God law and how to practice became a hindrance to believing and accepting Jesus as the Messiah chosen of God.

However, among the Jews there were those who believed.

 

ཡོ་ཧ་ནན། 8:31-32

31དེ་ནས་སྐྱབས་མགོན་ཡེ་ཤུས་རང་ཉིད་ལ་དད་པ་ཡོད་པའི་ཡ་ཧུ་དཱ་པ་རྣམས་ལ་འདི་སྐད༌དུ། གལ་ཏེ་ཁྱོད་རྣམས་བདག་གི་བཀའ་ཡི་ནང་དུ་གནས་ན། ཁྱོད་ཅག་ནི་དངོས་གནས་བདག་གི་རྗེས་འབྲང་པ་ཡིན༌ལ། 32ཁྱོད་རྣམས་ཀྱིས་བདེན་པ་ཉིད་དེ་ཤེས་པར་འགྱུར་ཞིང་བདེན་པ་ཉིད་ཀྱིས་ཀྱང་ཁྱོད་རྣམས་ལ་རང་དབང་ལྡན་པར་མཛད་ངེས་ཡིན་ཞེས་གསུངས་སོ།།

John 8:31-32

31 So Jesus said to the Jews who had believed him, “If you abide in my word, you are truly my disciples, 32 and you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.”

 

What Jesus said to these Jews who believed in Him was encouraging but they need to stand firm in their faith and continue to believe and not fall back to old ways of following man-made doctrines.

 

To believe in Jesus is to walk in freedom to receive the salvation of God.

To believe in Jesus is to freely receive the grace and forgiveness of Christ.

To believe in Jesus we must be prepared for persecutions due to man-made doctrines and traditions which contradict the will of God to redeem us from the system of this world.

 

As Jesus continues to preach and teach, divisions and disagreements continue among the Jews.

Regardless of Jews or Gentiles, as we believe in Jesus and continue to believe we are on the path to eternal life because this is the promise Jesus as Messiah gave to those who trust in Him!

There will be those who do not agree but we must continue to stand firm on the promises of Jesus the Christ, our hope of eternal life.

To be continue …

 

David Z