The Bible Recap - Day 301 (Luke 16-17) - Year 4
Episode Date: October 28, 2022SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: I...nstagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today!
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Jesus opens today by telling his disciples a parable, but apparently the Pharisees are still
in the crowd listening.
In my opinion, this is one of his most confusing parables, in part because of his use of irony.
A rich man's household manager has slacked on collecting money people owe his boss.
He gets fired, but his pride and entitlement motivate him to action.
He hustles in a last-ditch effort to reclaim his job, and he manages to collect most of the money.
Being fair to the boss isn't his goal, but it all works out in his favor.
Jesus calls him shrewd.
Thord shrewd in itself isn't good or bad,
but the tone of the parable seems to convey
that Jesus isn't on board with his methods.
He uses this guy as an illustration,
showing how the worldly are wiser and worldly matters
than the disciples are in eternal matters.
He wants them to wise up.
And this is where Jesus inserts some irony.
In verse 9, it seems like he's saying,
this guy is so concerned about being welcomed into people's homes that he's willing to be dishonest.
If you attempt that with my eternal dwelling place, you will fail.
No amount of wealth or shrewdness can get you there.
Jesus implores them to value true things, eternal things.
True riches are eternal riches.
Jesus reiterates the point by saying, you can
either be a slave to your bank account or you can be a slave to God, but you can't be
both. Money is a non-issue in the kingdom. Setting your hopes on it isn't a front to
God. Then Jesus says something else confusing in verse 16. It's confusing mainly because
this sentence doesn't have a verb in it. English translations say, the law and the prophets were until John,
but in Greek it says,
the law and the prophets until John.
Some people use the English rendering of this verse
to argue that the law no longer applies.
But if we keep reading, we see that can't be what it's saying.
Because the very next verse says,
it is easier for heaven and earth to pass away
than for one dot in the law to become void.
So to be clear, verse 16 is not Jesus abolishing the law.
It's more likely that he was saying the law in the prophets, which is his shorthand way
of referencing the Old Testament, were proclaimed until JTB came, or that they served as guides
until then.
The law is not being disparaged or discarded. It's being honored and fulfilled
by Jesus. The law is a blueprint, and Jesus builds the house. He tectons that thing perfectly,
and we get to move in. That's why it's important that none of it can pass away. Otherwise,
we end up missing a support beam or the glass pane for a window. Then the next thing you
know, your kitchen has collapsed and birds have built a nest in your closet. We need the law.
We need the blueprint.
The next story Jesus tells is often referred to as a parable, and maybe it is, but one reason
some scholars think it isn't is because some of the people in this story have names.
So if this is a parable, it's the only one that names people.
It's a story about a rich man and a beggar named Lazarus, who also had a skin disease.
After they both died, Lazarus was carried away and dropped down beside Abraham. Lazarus' proximity
to Abraham is emphasized here not because Abraham is the end-all be-all, but because the Pharisees
who are hearing this story definitely assume that Abraham, their patriarch, is in the best possible
eternal destination. So the gist of it is that Lazarus goes to heaven.
This would have been disgusting for the Pharisees. Not only that someone they regard as a sinner
is accepted into the kingdom at all, but also that Abraham himself has to be near the
guy with the skin disease. I imagine the Pharisees listening to this with scrunched-up faces
recoiling and disgust. So Lazarus was with Abraham, the rich man, however, was being
tormented in Hades. He saw Lazarus hanging out with Abraham and begged Abraham for a
drop of water, but Abraham said, not possible. There's no path from here to there. Apparently
their eternal destinations are fixed. The text doesn't reference any kind of purgatory
or second chance option here. Then the rich man begged Abraham to send messengers to his family to warn them about the torment,
and Abraham's response is as shocking as it is true.
He basically said, I hate to break it to you, but they have the law and the prophets.
They have the Hebrew scriptures.
If that's not enough to convince a person to repent and turn to God, then they wouldn't
be convinced even if someone raised from the dead. For those of you who are with us in the Old Testament, you can probably attest to this.
We saw sufficient evidence of who God is. We saw plenty of calls to repent and turn to him.
Some people did, but the vast majority ignored it and did their own thing.
So here, Jesus references their hard hearts and emphasizes that if the Old Testament isn't
enough to prompt repentance, then his very death and resurrection won't be either. He knows it's not too far off.
The hour is approaching, as he would say. In chapter 17, Luke gives a few illustrations about
what kind of posture honors God. In the parable of the unworthy servant, Jesus encourages his disciples
to be humble, not entitled, to remember that
they are servants of the One True God. Then Jesus continues toward Jerusalem, heading toward
His death, and He runs into a leper colony. All ten of them beg Him for healing, and He
sends them to see the priest. Two interesting things are happening in this command. First,
lepers aren't allowed to see a priest until after their healed, so this is an act of faith on their parts, and their healed on the way.
Second, this serves as a reminder that Jesus is a law abiding Jew. He's keeping God's purity laws by sending them to the priest.
After they've all been healed, the only leper who returns to thank him is the foreigner, the Samaritan.
Then the Pharisees ask Jesus about when the kingdom of God
is going to be established.
Lots of Jews in this day read the Hebrew scriptures
and see the promise of a Messiah and an eternal kingdom
and peace on earth and the elimination of their enemies,
and they expect God to set up a political
or military leader to make all this happen,
but Jesus says, nope, it's not gonna be like that.
Then he makes a statement in verse 21 that frequently gets taken out of context, misquoted,
and misapplied.
There's a solid chance that if you hear someone quote this verse, whatever follows is quite
possibly inaccurate.
The verse says, behold, the kingdom of God is in the midst of you.
Some versions say, within you, and others say, among you.
The Greek word can mean all those things,
but it's clear that within you communicates a very different idea than among you or in the midst of you.
Jesus is saying, I am the Kingdom of God.
I'm right here in front of you, among you, in the midst of you.
But what he's definitely not saying is, the Kingdom of God is within you,
because A, he's talking to the Pharisees,
who me as previously called whitewash tombs
and children of Satan, and B,
even if you were talking to his disciples here,
which he isn't, the Holy Spirit hasn't come to dwell
in people yet.
So in short, Jesus is saying,
here's what the kingdom looks like.
It's standing right in front of you.
It me.
My God shot was kind
of all throughout the text today. I noticed how Jesus kept directing different statements at
different audiences. He switched back and forth between the Pharisees and His disciples and
everyone, and He met each of them where they were. He met the Pharisees and their unbelief and
pointed out how foolish it is. He met the disciples in their confusion and bewilderment,
but to their dismay, He didn't always give them straight answers. This really the disciples in their confusion and bewilderment, but to their dismay, he
didn't always give them straight answers. This really hit home in the final paragraph
of chapter 17. I feel like he's so eager to make sure they have everything they need
for when he dies and for when he ascends, like the first time parent who's about to leave
their newborn with a babysitter and just keeps going over the list and put my number in your
speed dial and when were you certified in CPR.
Don't get me wrong, I don't think he's panicked in any sense.
He knows the father is in control.
I just think he's emotional about it all.
He says some things to prepare them that don't make sense to them yet, of course.
They still don't understand that he's going to die, be raised, ascend to heaven, then
someday return.
He says, you're going to want the kingdom to come soon too.
People will try to convince you that it's about to happen, but they're liars. No one knows when
it's going to happen. When the time comes, people will be living life as usual, just like in the days
of Noah and Lot, having no idea what judgment awaits them. By the way, some say the final verses of
chapter 17 about one person being taken
and the other left, refer to God taking the righteous people into heaven while the pagans
are left behind. Others believe these verses refer to God killing off the wicked, or taking
them in death, and leaving the faithful alive to be united with him in the new heavens
and the new earth. Regardless of which it is, or even if it's some other option we haven't thought of yet,
Jesus gives these words to His disciples as a comfort and a promise.
They are a reminder that He's coming back and we'll be united with Him.
I, for one, cannot wait, because He's where the joy is.
Okay, Bible readers, it's time for our weekly check-in.
I want to congratulate you on making it through some of the most challenging text in the
Gospels this week.
You didn't throw in the towel.
You're still here.
God is still drawing you in and meeting you here.
When questions come up for you, write them down.
Do some research.
But I want to free you from the burden of reaching a firm conclusion until we finish the
whole book.
Be patient with yourself.
He is. Ask him to give you eyes and ears
to see and hear the truth.
Ask him to soften the soil of your heart.
Ask him to show you more of who he is all the time.
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