Mark 12:35-44. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on August 30, 2020.
Our passage today is broken up into three teachings that are connected. Here, Jesus puts the scribes themselves under the microscope of judgment as they have done to him. Jesus is not doing this out of spite. Rather, it warns others not to follow the life of these men, and it gives opportunity for the Holy Spirit to convict some of the scribes so that they can be saved. Truth opens the door for salvation and freedom from our sins. This is exactly what the scribe in Mark 12:34 needed to hear.
We will all one day come under the judgment of Jesus. If we listen to God’s Word and the Holy Spirit then we will have nothing to fear about that day. However, if we follow the desires of our flesh then we will not be prepared for that day. God loves us too much to leave us without a warning, or to leave us without the help that we need in order to follow Jesus.
Until that Day comes, we must be careful how we live our lives, and what purpose we pursue. Our own judgments can be fraught with error and self-deception. Only coming into a relationship with the Truth himself can truly set us free from our self-wisdom and the so-called wisdom of this world.
Verses 35-37 come on the heels of a particular scribe whom Jesus stated was not far from the Kingdom of God. Though the following lessons can be helpful to the rest of us, it is more than likely that Jesus is throwing a lifeline to this scribe through this first lesson. The scribe was close, but close is not good enough. To close the remaining distance, he would need to recognize the errors of his group and fully embrace the wisdom of Jesus. Otherwise, he would just be led astray. You can’t hold onto Jesus and the wisdom of the group that were in when you came to him. You will eventually hold onto one and despise the other.
The scribes were teachers of Israel and masters of the Law of Moses. They taught the people that God had an anointed man that He would send, Messiah. This Messiah would be the son of David. Everything about this teaching is correct. Psalm 2 is the classic passage that promises an Anointed One or Messiah sent by God to be King over Israel and all the earth. This promise of a righteous king from God was supplemented by more prophecies through the years. God promises David that one of his descendants would have an everlasting throne. The phrase “son of David” can mean an immediate offspring, but it can also refer to later descendants by extension.
The Old Testament does reveal these teachings, but it is best summed up by the angel who spoke to Mary the Mother of Jesus in Luke 1:32-33. “He [Jesus] will be great, and will be called the Son of the Highest; and the Lord God will give him the throne of his father David. And he will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and of his kingdom there will be no end.”
Jesus then highlights the problem. In Psalm 110:1, David is clearly talking about the promised Messianic Kingdom. However, he refers to the Messiah as his lord, and he does so “by the Holy Spirit,” that is under the inspiration of God. We are not told what the typical scribe taught about this verse and the identity of David’s lord. Today, if you go to Jewish commentaries or online articles, you will find that they give several possible answers that can point to David talking about Abraham, or someone else. Ultimately, they will deny that it can ever refer to Jesus. However, these are not views that were established by the scribes in those days. Those modern views were developed in response to Christian teachings.
Basically, Jesus is showing that these who claim to be masters of the Law had a problem in perfectly explaining it. They were correct in some things that they taught because they were using the Scriptures. However, they did not know everything, or not nearly as much as they thought they did. They promoted the concept of an oral tradition handed down from Moses that explained the written tradition. It is clear that some of these traditions were not actually from Moses. If they had taught what they knew was true, but then humbly admitted areas of ignorance, then they would have been able to hear the Spirit of God speaking through Jesus. Pride and arrogance, declaring that you have all truth, is not what any prophet of the Lord ever claimed.
So, how can the Messiah be David’s descendant and simultaneously be his lord? To be his son, the Messiah would have to be a descendant of David, which Jesus was. However, in those cultures, the elder is always higher than the younger. This is not a mere mistake either because Jesus establishes that David was a prophet and was writing this psalm as a prophecy, which is what the scribes believed.
Though God is faithful to give us revelation, that is, things we cannot know without Him telling us, He doesn’t tell us everything. Through Jesus, the world has received a greater revelation of the Truth of God. However, even we must not be arrogant. We must humbly teach what is clear and be honest about what is not. The scribes pretended to be able to identify the Messiah, and yet could not explain this puzzler. This should have been a red flag that there was something about Messiah unexplained.
The answer is in the reality of who Messiah is. There was something hidden about the true identity of Messiah. In his Gospel, the apostle John describes the reality that Jesus was a man born of the woman Mary. Yet, he was more than a man. He was the eternal Word of God by whom the whole creation was brought into existence. John purposefully uses the language of Genesis 1 to reveal to us that when the Father spoke, it was Jesus who went forth to make His will happen. Thus, the Messiah would be both human and divine, man and God.
As a human, he would qualify to pay the price for humanity’s rebellion, but as God He would have the power to pull it off. In Jesus, God has stepped into our world and put His back under the crushing weight of sin that lies upon us. He has lifted it up and offers us to be rescued out from underneath of it by his grace.
So, the scribes lacked humility in their teachings. Next, Jesus moves to their lives and how they lived. He starts out by telling people to beware of them. They are not innocent and will lead people into the ditch. Those who are supposed to be their teachers were not worthy to be listened to. Even today, we must beware of the many teachers in this society. We can be led astray by people who look good, but are not. Humility will do us in good stead.
Jesus points out several things about the scribes. First, they desire to look good in front of others with their long robes and long prayers. These were the daily trappings of their life in front of others. The second thing is connected to the first. They desire public honor from others, like honored seats at public events. Now, the problem is not that people are honored, or that the scribes were honored. The Bible tells us to honor those who lead well. The problem is that such honor had become their desire. Their desire should have been to know God and to help others to know Him. They should have worked to receive the honor and praise from God and not from the people. Many in this world operate to get the adulation of the crowds and their co-workers. They hope by it to be elevated. The Bible shows us another way. “Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, that He may exalt you in due time.” 1 Peter 5:6 (NKJV). And, “Humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and He will lift you up.” James 4:10 (NKJV).
Their desire for honor wasn’t their only lust. We are told that they devoured widow’s houses. The picture here is of their lust for the religious donations of wealthy widows by which they would benefit. Instead of caring for the plight of the widow, they saw them as a means to an end. It is fitting that the next section is about a widow, so I will save some comments about this situation until then.
Jesus also notes that their long prayers are only for show; they are a pretense. Again, it was about getting people’s honor, not God’s. The length of our prayer has nothing to do with its goodness. It is the target of our prayer that matters more. Am I truly speaking to God and desiring Him in it? Or, am I putting on a show so that people will think more highly of me than they ought? The scribes may have looked good on the outside to those who couldn’t see their hearts, but God had seen through them, and He brings them out into the open through Jesus.
Jesus ends by declaring that they will receive a greater condemnation. The Bible doesn’t explain exactly what a greater condemnation would look like, but it will be greater nonetheless. James says it this way in chapter 3 verse 1. “My brethren, let not many of you become teachers, knowing that we shall receive a stricter judgment.”
We could say that this makes Jesus look judgmental, but he is speaking the truth. The previous scribe who wasn’t far from the kingdom of God was also in jeopardy of being influenced by his peer group. He would need to change; he would need to reject that mindset that he was mixed up in. Only embracing the Truth could set him free. The Bible warns us of our condemnation so that we can flee to Jesus and be saved from it. That is why it says that He is not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance and believe in Jesus. They would receive a greater condemnation, if they didn’t change their hearts and minds about Jesus.
So, their teachings and their lives were not the light that they pretended to be.
Just as wealthy widows were the hunger and target of the scribes, Jesus uses a poor widow who could offer the scribes nothing. In their eyes, she is practically worthless and can bring no honor to them or God. This is a powerful contrast that Jesus reveals.
They were in the temple compound and people would be coming and going. Some would be bringing sacrifices and others financial offerings to put in the offering box. Many rich men had come and put in large bags of money, but then a poor widow comes to the box and puts in two small coins. Several times up to now, we have mentioned that a denarius was one day’s wage for a common laborer. Two mites would have been equivalent to 1% of a day’s wage. Let’s say about $1.50.
Jesus asks who has given more. When the honor of people is your desire, large amounts of money are more important. Yet, God does not judge like humans judge. We tend to honor those who give the most, and despise those who give the least or nothing at all. However, God sees the heart. This widow was giving all that she had. Perhaps, she was desperate and was down to her last dollar. She could buy her last meal with that dollar and then starve, or she could take it to the temple and offer it up as a prayer to God. Please, God, see me; help me! Oh, did God ever see her that day. He just happened to be in the temple in human form that day.
We don’t know the rest of her story, but we do know that God saw her. I think, somehow, she was taken care of from that day on.
There are two sides to religious donations. Those in charge of receiving are not always rotten. It can be done righteously, and God expects it to be done so. Also, those who give are not always pure as the driven snow. It can be done wickedly. The key to receiving is to recognize that it is a holy thing devoted to God. He will hold any financial trustees accountable to the holy gifts of His people. The key to giving is to give it to the Lord and not remain attached to the gift. We can be overly controlling over how funds are spent. Even in the area of charity to others, we must recognize that how they spend it is between them and God because you were giving it in the name of the Lord. It is a holy gift. If you receive such “holy” funds then you should fear God enough to put it to good use and not be spending it upon your lusts.
Praise God that when we have a clean heart in this area, both as givers and receivers, then a true blessing can be upon the community in which we live. This widow, who would be despised by the great teachers of the day, gave far more that day than they would ever know. She would receive the pleasure and honor of God in far greater amounts than the trickle that the scribes would receive from others. God is the husband of the widow and the Father of the orphans, and if we want to be like Him, we will be too!