Alastair's Adversaria - Biblical Reading and Reflections: October 25th (Isaiah 7 & Mark 7:1-23)
Episode Date: October 24, 2021Isaiah's message to King Ahaz. Conflict with the Pharisees about purity. My reflections are searchable by Bible chapter here: https://audio.alastairadversaria.com/explore/. If you are interested in ...supporting this project, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or buying books for my research on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/36WVSWCK4X33O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035?mt=2.
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Isaiah chapter 7. In the days of Ahaz, the son of Jotham, son of Uzair, king of Judah, reason the king of Syria and piqu of the son of Ramalaya, the king of Israel, came up to Jerusalem to wage war against it, but could not yet mount an attack against it.
When the house of David was told, Syria is in league with Ephraim, the heart of Ahaz and the heart of his people shook as the trees of the forest shake before the wind.
And the Lord said to Isaiah,
Go out to meet Ahaz,
you and Shiajashab your son,
at the end of the conduit of the upper pool
on the highway to the washers' field.
And say to him,
Be careful, be quiet.
Do not fear, and do not let your heart be faint
because of these two smouldering stumps of firebrands,
at the fierce anger of Reason and Syria and the son of Remaliah,
because Syria with Ephraim and the son of Remelaire
has devised evil against you, saying,
let us go up against Judah and terrify it, and let us conquer it for ourselves, and set up the
son of Tabil as king in the midst of it. Thus says the Lord God, it shall not stand, and it shall not
come to pass, for the head of Syria is Damascus, and the head of Damascus is reason, and within
65 years, Ephraim will be shattered from being a people, and the head of Ephraim is
Samaria, and the head of Samaria is the son of Remaliah. If you are not firm in faith,
will not be firm at all. Again the Lord spoke to Ahaz. Ask a sign of the Lord your God. Let it be as deep as
Sheol or high as heaven. But Ahaz said, I will not ask and I will not put the Lord to the test.
And he said, here then, O House of David, is it too little for you to weary men that you weary my
guard also? Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign. Behold the Virgin shall conceive
and bear a son and shall call his name Emmanuel. He shall eat Kurds and honey when he knows how to
refuse the evil and choose the good. For before the boy knows how to refuse the evil and choose the good,
the land whose two kings you dread will be deserted. The Lord will bring upon you and upon your
people and upon your father's house such days as have not come since the day that Ephraim departed
from Judah, the king of Assyria. In that day the Lord will whistle for the fly that is at the end of
the streams of Egypt, and for the bee that is in the land of Assyria, and they will all come and settle
in the steep ravines, and in the clefts of the rocks, and on all the thorn bushes, and on all the pastures.
In that day the Lord will shave with a razor that is hired beyond the river, with the king of
Assyria, the head and the hair of the feet, and it will sweep away the beard also. In that day a man
will keep alive a young cow and two sheep, and because of the abundance of milk that they give,
eat curds, for everyone who is left in the land will eat curds and honey. In that day, every place
where there used to be a thousand vines, worth a thousand shekels of silver, will become briars and thorns.
With bow and arrows a man will come there, for all the land will be briars and thorns,
and as for all the hills that used to be hoed with a hoe, you will not come there for fear
of briars and thorns, but they will become a place where cattle are let loose and where sheep tread.
The years of the ministry of Isaiah were years of mortal threat for Judah.
They faced both the alliance of the Northern Kingdom of Israel and Aram,
and then the rising power of Assyria,
which would all but wipe out the nation in 701 BC,
the waters of the Assyrian invasion coming up to the neck of Jerusalem.
In the teeth of such grave threats,
the message of Isaiah was to hold steady,
to trust in the Lord rather than in human power.
Judah would be sorely tempted to place its trust in alliances,
with mighty nations that could come to their aid in their distress,
especially Assyria and Egypt,
the dominant powers in the north and the south, respectively.
Terrified by such existential threats to the nation,
the nerve of Judah could easily snap,
and rather than trusting in the Lord,
it could throw in its lot with other powers.
Trust in false gods and trust in foreign nations and human might
were too closely associated forms that idolatry could take.
Judah, in its dire distress, when it seems almost certain that it is about to be extinguished as a nation,
is forced to face the question of the ones in whom it ultimately places its trust.
It was easy during the peace and prosperity of the reign of King Uzziah to pay lip service to the Lord,
when things seemed secure and the stakes were low.
However, now Judah's continued existence rests upon the answer to such questions,
spiritual compromises that seem to be of no more than minor consequence a decade prior
will now be revealed for what they always were, as the shallow veneer is stripped away by crisis
and the heart of the people and their king is disclosed in the moment of decision.
In Isaiah chapter 7 to 39, this theme of trust is prominent.
The section is bookended by narratives in which Isaiah addresses two different kings of Judah
in times of national crisis.
In Chapter 7, Isaiah addresses King Ahaz during the crisis of the Cyro-Ephromite War and the invasion of the land by reason in the King of Syria and Pika the King of Israel.
In Chapter 36 to 39, Isaiah addresses King Hezekiah during the crisis of the Assyrian invasion.
In both cases, acting in terms of the immediate threat, the kings are in danger of missing the darker storm clouds on their horizons,
the greater powers that will later come up against them. Assyria, in the case of
King Ahaz, and Babylon in the case of King Hezekiah. The narrative of Isaiah's commission in the
preceding chapter was dated to the year of King Uzziah's death. Although largely a righteous king,
Uzziah had been struck by the Lord with leprosy, as he sought to trespass upon the temple.
He had lived out the final years of his life in separation from others, while his son Jotham had largely
held the reins of power for him. Jotham was a righteous king like his father, but his sole reign was probably
only a relatively short one. After he died, his idolatrous son Ahaz exceeded to the throne.
During the reign of Uzziah, the kingdom of Assyria had been weak, and as the Arameans were
largely a spent force, having earlier been crushed by the power of Assyria, Israel and Judah
thrived under two long-reigning monarchs, Jeroboam II in the north and Uzziah in the south.
This situation radically changed with the accession of Tiglath-Pilesa III to the throne of
Syria in 745 BC. Tiglath-Pylaeleza pursued an expansionist policy and regained dominance over territories
that had slipped out of Assyria's control in the preceding decades. Faced with a resurgent
Assyria, the other countries in the region needed to determine how to relate to it.
Judah adopted a pro-Assyria foreign policy under Ahaz, while some other tributary nations of
Syria like Israel and Aram sought to break free of its clutches. Assyria had ravaged both Syria or
Aram and the northern kingdom of Israel. Israel and Aram joined together to form an anti-Assyrian
coalition, and wanting to bolster this and crushed support for Assyria to their south, Aram or Syria
and Israel joined forces to attack Judah. In the Cyro-Ephramite war, which started in the mid-730s
BC, the Arameans and Israelites invaded Judah, devastating Ahaz's kingdom. Their intent seems to
have been to replace Ahaz with a puppet king, the son of Tabil, a name that can mean either
God is good, or more ironically, good for nothing. Under this puppet king, Judah would join their
anti-Assyrian alliance. Second Chronicles chapter 28 describes the devastation that this war wrought
upon Judah. Judah would lose 120,000 men in battle against Israel and would have 20,000 more people
taken captive in just a single day of this war. This was the threat that provides the context
of Bazaar Chapter 7. The adulterous king Ahaz had received news of the
the alliance of Israel and Syria, hearing that they are coming up to attack Jerusalem,
he and his people were naturally terrified.
The events of this chapter were probably said in 736 or 735 BC.
The Lord sends Isaiah to speak to Ahaz.
Ahaz is faced with a moment of decision.
Is he going to trust in the Lord, or will he place his trust in the might of Assyria instead?
Central to this and the following few chapters are a series of children who serve as signs to the people.
John Oswald notes the importance of Shiar Jashab and Emmanuel in this chapter,
Mehaar Shal al-Hashbaz and Isaiah's children more generally in the following chapter,
and the promised royal child in chapter 9, verses 6 to 7.
These children are symbols of weakness, vulnerability and dependence,
but also hope, the possibility of a new dawn through the pangs of suffering,
God's promises coming to fruition in the timescale of their processes of maturation
and of the Lord's fatherly provision and protection.
Christopher cites observes further that the children are distributed evenly both over the text and over time.
He writes, the first, Shiar-Jashab is already born, the second, Emmanuel, about to be born,
and the third, Mehaeshawaz, not yet conceived.
We also see children in their names serving as prophetic signs in the ministry of the prophet Hosea.
The Lord sends Isaiah out to meet King Ahaz with his son Shiar Jashab.
Shiar Jashab's name means a remnant will return.
It is quite possible that Shiar Jashab's name was related to the message of the end of chapter 6,
in the final verse of which we read,
and though a tenth remain in it, it will be burned again, like a terribanth or an oak,
whose stump remains when it is felled.
The holy seed is its stump.
The import of Isaiah's son's name here is mostly negative.
It foretells the fact that Judah will be almost extinguished,
and only the smallest remnant would remain.
However, it is not without its element of hope.
As we have already seen in the preceding chapters,
it would be through a purified remnant
that the Lord would make his people glorious once more.
King Ahaz and Judah would suffer a devastating blow,
but it would not prove to be a mortal one.
We are also reminded here that it is the House of David that has threatened.
The Davidic dynasty, to whom the Lord had made great covenant promises,
seems to be on the brink of annihilation.
It isn't merely human rule that is under threat,
but the promises of the Lord.
Isaiah is sent to meet the king at the end of the conduit of the upper pool of the city.
It's quite likely that, anticipating a siege,
Ahaz is inspecting the water supply of the city,
while Hezekiah would later build a water tunnel.
At this juncture in history, Jerusalem was an unusual city
in that it did not have any reliable water supply within its walls.
Of course, having large enough water supplies would be essential
were the city to withstand a coming siege.
One can imagine that his mind preoccupied with the city's great strategic weakness,
King Ahaz's mind would be particularly unsettled when Isaiah met with him.
A few decades later, in events recorded in Isaiah chapter 36,
the Rabshakeh would confront Hezekiah, Ahas's son, at the same location.
The Lord's message to Ahaz is one of reassurance.
The appearance of these two powerful kings approaching to take Jerusalem,
with its limited capacity to withstand a siege, is doubtless terrifying.
However, notwithstanding this apparent threat, Ahaz should not be afraid.
Israel and Aram are already doomed and spent forces, smouldering stumps of what they once were.
If Ahaz will only trust in the Lord and hold his nerve, he and his people will survive their assault,
without any need to sell the nation out to some foreign protector, which is what they ended up doing.
Ahaz turned to Assyria, and also to its gods, and ended up bringing a greater rod upon Judah's back.
The Lord reminds Ahaz that for all of their supposed might, Syria and Israel are ultimately founded upon two mortal men, Rizin and Pika.
Judah, if it will only trust in the Lord, could be established upon the might and the wisdom of the Lord of hosts.
However, if Ahaz and his people will not trust in the Lord, they will not enjoy any security.
Their only hope is trusting in him, living by faith rather than by sight.
The second half of verse 8 presents the interpreter with a difficult problem, as it speaks
of the shattering of Ephraim so that they are no longer a people within 65 years.
However, while technically true, Ephraim would be shattered in just over a decade's time.
Some commentators have raised the possibility that the 65 years
looks beyond this to the full and mopping up of the scattered remnants of the land of Israel,
with the further deportations under later Assyrian rulers described in places like Ezra
chapter 4 verses 2 and 10.
In verses 10 to 17, the Lord addresses King Ahaz a second time.
offering the king a sign. Ahaz and his kingdom, facing such an existential threat, would naturally
struggle to trust in the Lord against all of those appearances. The Lord recognises such human weakness
and graciously offers a sign of Ahaz's choice to steal him, giving him some sight to strengthen him
in the course of his faith. Ahaz, with a show of false piety, claims that he does not want to put the
Lord to the test, turning down the Lord's offer. However, the Lord's offer of a sign was to help
Ahaz take some of the first faltering steps in a path of faith, to help a man of little faith who
wanted to believe deal with lingering unbelief. Ahaz's false piety was not a reaction of faith, but one of
unbelief, of a man who had no intention of taking the path of faith at all. The Lord grants his
servants physical signs, concrete promissory assurances, to equip them in their struggle to live by faith,
and declining these is not a sign of faith or of piety, but of their opposites. We see
an example of such a sign in the three signs that Saul was given in 1 Samuel chapter 10,
assuring him that the Lord had set him apart for kingship. Even though Ahaz rejected the Lord's offer of a sign,
the Lord would give him a sign nonetheless. The sign of verses 14 to 17 has been the occasion
of intense discussion among commentators, especially on account of its use in Matthew chapter 1,
verses 20 to 23. But as he considered these things, behold, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream,
saying, Joseph, son of David, do not fear to take Mary as your wife, for that which is conceived in
her is from the Holy Spirit. She will bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus, for he will save
his people from their sins. All this took place to fulfil what the Lord had spoken by the prophet,
behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call his name Emmanuel, which means
God with us. In Matthew's use of Isaiah chapter 7, verse 14, the prophecy is directly related to the
fulfillment of Jesus' birth of a virgin. However, it is not clear that the key term translated as
virgin in the Septuagint and in most English Bibles, and related to the virgin birth in the New Testament,
ought to be taken in such a narrow sense in Isaiah Chapter 7. Brether Childs, discussing some of the
challenges of translating the term, observes that it seems to refer primarily to young women who
had reached puberty. Translating the term as young woman, on the one hand, would give the
misleading impression that it would typically include young married women. On the other hand,
translating it as virgin would be, as Charles writes, misleading in too narrowly focusing on virginity
rather than on sexual maturity. Besides the meaning of the term translated as virgin in most of our
vibles, we need to consider what the reference to the virgin means. Is it a more generic reference
to a class of women who have only recently reached sexual maturity, or a more specific reference
to a known woman. It seems more likely that it is the latter, which raises the further question
of the identity of the woman in question. Considering that the two other children that serve as prophetic
signs in these chapters are the children of Isaiah himself, many commentators think that
Emmanuel is likely also the sign of Isaiah. Isaiah writes in chapter 8 verse 18,
Behold, I and the children whom the Lord has given me are signs and portents in Israel from the
Lord of hosts who dwells on Mount Zion. May her Shal al-Hashba.
is, in chapter 8 verse 3, described as the result of the prophetess conceiving after Isaiah had relations with
her. There is no similar account of the child's conception here. More importantly, the child is a sign
expressly given to the king, which would give way to the possibility that the maiden in question
is within the king's house. This is further strengthened by the way that the child is bound up with
the destiny of the king's house. Yet more support for this theory comes from the connection between
Emmanuel and the child of Isaiah chapter 9, verses 6 to 7. For to us a child is born, to us a son is given,
and the government shall be upon his shoulder, and his name shall be called,
Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, everlasting father, Prince of Peace. Of the increase of his
government and of peace there will be no end, on the throne of David and over his kingdom,
to establish it and to uphold it with justice, and with righteousness from this time forth and
forevermore. The zeal of the Lord of hosts will do this. Putting the larger picture together,
several commentators argued that the figure in view here is Hezekiah, the son of Ahaz, who would be a
righteous king. In the concluding chapters of this section of Isaiah, Hezekiah would show faith
that contrasted with his father Ahaz's unbelief. His birth in the house of David would be the first
glimmer of a possible new dawn for the people, of a reversal of their fortunes, of new life
after devastating judgment and of a change of heart.
The main problem for this theory is reconciling it with the chronology of Second Kings.
However, the chronology of Second Kings is a very shaky foundation upon which to build.
It's like a jigsaw puzzle with many of the pieces missing.
There are uncertainties about the duration of co-regencies, for instance,
that makes it challenging to construct a coherent picture.
Second Kings chapter 18 verses 1 to 2 seems to present Hezekiah as beginning to reign
at the age of 25. However, earlier in 2nd Kings chapter 16 verse 2, we were informed that Ahaz,
Hezekiah's father, began to reign at the age of 20 years and reigned for 16 years, presumably dying
at around the age of 36. The problem here is that this would suggest that Hezekiah was conceived
when his father was still around 10 years of age. We are almost certainly missing some part of the picture
here, or perhaps some detail of the text of Second Kings has been corrupted. Further problems are
rise even in terms of second kings itself, as events dated to the 14th year of Hezekiah's reign
in chapter 18 verse 13, occurred in 701 BC, which implies that he came to the throne in 715 BC,
seven years after the northern kingdom had been destroyed, and yet in chapter 18 verse 1,
we're told that he began to reign in the third year of Hosea, king of Israel. It isn't merely the
fact that Ahaz is supposedly under 10 years of age at the time of Hezekaacar's conception,
that is a problem with the surface appearance of the numbers of kings.
Clearly, there is a period of co-regency, usurpation,
or some problem of textual transmission of the relevant numbers here,
greatly weakening the supposed counter-evidence provided by Second Kings
against the identification of this figure of Emanuel with Hezekiah.
The story of Israel and Judah's kings is, as commentators both conservative or liberal,
almost universally recognized,
not one of stable and untroubled succession,
but one that judders and jolts, with a mission.
and overlaps. Hezekiah then is the most likely candidate for the figure of
Emmanuel here. In Isaiah he represents the hope of the house of David and the inverse of his
wicked father Ahaz. Emmanuel, God with us, is a name that fits the historical figure of Hezekiah
very well. Hezekiah and his reign are described in Second Kings chapter 18, verses 5 to 7.
He trusted in the Lord the God of Israel so that there was none like him among all the kings of
Judah after him, nor among those who were before him, for he held fast to the Lord. He did not depart
from following him, but kept the commandments that the Lord commanded Moses, and the Lord was with him.
Wherever he went out, he prospered. He rebelled against the King of Assyria, and would not serve him.
The fulfilment of the Lord's word is mapped onto the stages of the infant and child Hezekiah's
growth and his maturation towards kingship. While Kurds and honey might refer to foods that a child
starts to eat at an earlier stage of their development. In the context, it is more likely that they
were specific forms of food associated with a land that had fallen into disuse and was uncultivated.
We see this in verse 22 of this chapter. Curs and honey were foods drawn more directly from the
land, and they recall the blessed character of the land, a land flowing with milk and honey. However,
they are also wilderness foods, the foods that people would return to after cultivated land
reverted to its wilderness state. Likewise, if we take Emmanuel to be the Davidic heir, Hezekiah,
the reference to knowing how to refuse the evil and choose the good, might not be a reference to a
level of early childhood maturity, as many suppose, but rather a reference to attaining to rule.
We see Solomon using similar language of his exercise of rule in 1st Kings chapter 3 verse 9.
Give your servant, therefore, an understanding mind to govern your people, that I may discern between
good and evil, for who is able to govern this your great people.
Before Hezekiah attains his majority and exceeds to rule, Aram and Israel will be forsaken.
However, the news is not all good for Ahaz.
There is a much more dreadful foe lying behind Israel and Aram.
The might of Assyria would come up against his land, bringing the darkest days that
Judah had experienced since its earliest days with the division of the kingdom.
In Isaiah chapter 5, verses 26 to 30, the Lord had declared that he would whistle
for foreign nations to come up against his land and people. At the end of chapter 7,
we return to this image. The Lord would whistle for the might of Egypt and Assyria,
the fly and the bee, who would come up against the land and overwhelm it with their multitudes.
Assyria is compared to a razor with which the Lord would shave his people's heads,
beards, and the hair of their feet, quite possibly a euphemistic reference to the genitals.
The shaving off of hair was a form of extreme humiliation, employed upon prisoners of war
for instance, Judah is going to be shorn of all of its glory, utterly humiliated.
The situation that will result from the humiliation that Assyria will bring upon the land
is a seemingly contradictory one. On the one hand, the land will be utterly devastated,
reverting to a wilderness state. Former vineyards, their walls broken down,
and their terraces overrun with thorns and briars, as the vineyard of Israel itself in Chapter 5
would now become places to hunt and trap wild beasts, hunters, gatherers, and nomadic herdsmen,
taking the place of farmers and settle forms of existence in the land.
On the other hand, however, it will be a time during which the people will enjoy the natural bounty
of the promised land as a land flowing with curds and honey.
While the remnant of the people will depend largely upon the uncultivated foods of the land,
in the wake of the Assyrian bee, honey will be plentiful, and cow's milk will be so abundant
that they will feast on curds.
Here, as elsewhere in this chapter, we see the two-sided character of Isaiah's message,
which is one of the most horrific destruction,
but also one of a blessed re-establishment for the people
on the other side of that judgment.
A question to consider,
Isaiah's prophecy of Emmanuel is prominently used in Matthew chapter 1
verses 20 to 25.
How, given our understanding of the original context and referent of Isaiah's prophecy,
does the evangelist's use of this prophecy take on a richer import?
Mark chapter 7 verses 1 to 23.
Now when the Pharisees gathered to him with some of the scribes who had come from Jerusalem,
they saw that some of his disciples ate with hands that were defiled, that is, unwashed.
For the Pharisees and all the Jews do not eat unless they wash their hands properly,
holding to the tradition of the elders, and when they come from the marketplace,
they do not eat unless they wash.
And there are many other traditions that they observe,
such as the washing of cups and pots and copper vessels and dining couches.
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?
And he said to them,
Well did Isaiah prophesy of you hypocrites, as it is written,
This people honours me with their lips,
but their heart is far from me.
In vain do they worship me,
teaching as doctrines the commandments of men.
You leave the commandment of God and hold to the tradition of men.
And he said to them,
you have a fine way of rejecting the commandment of God in order to establish your tradition.
For Moses said, honour your father and your mother, and whoever reviles father or mother must surely die.
But you say, if a man tells his father or his mother, whatever you would have gained from me as Corban,
that is given to God, then you no longer permit him to do anything for his father or mother,
thus making void the word of God by your tradition that you have handed down,
and many such things you do.
And he called the people to him again and said to them,
Hear me, all of you, and understand,
there is nothing outside a person that by going into him can defile him.
But the things that come out of a person are what defile him.
And when he had entered the house and left the people,
his disciples asked him about the parable.
And he said to them,
Then are you also without understanding?
Do you not see that whatever goes into a person from outside cannot defile him,
since it enters not his heart, but his stomach and is expelled.
Thus he declared all foods clean, and he said,
What comes out of a person is what defiles him.
For from within, out of the heart of man, come evil thoughts, sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, coveting, wickedness, deceit, sensuality, envy, slander, pride, foolishness.
All these evil things come from within, and they defile a person.
In Mark chapter 7 the Pharisees once again challenged Jesus on account of his disciples' behaviour.
In chapter 2 it was on account of their supposed breaking of the Sabbath as they walked through the grain fields.
Here it is due to their failure to ritually cleanse before eating.
It's an objection story.
It begins with the objections of the Pharisees and some of the scribes from Jerusalem.
It's followed by an address to the people.
And then it's concluded with a private discussion with the disciples.
When the Pharisees and the scribes challenged Jesus'
concerning his disciples' failure to richly wash their hands,
Jesus responds by referencing Isaiah chapter 29, verse 13.
He argues that they undermine the commandment of God through their tradition.
They seek to reject the commandment in order to establish their tradition.
The two are presented as antithetically related.
Jesus underlines the importance of the commandment to honor parents
by adding to his reference of the Fifth Command,
the citation of Exodus chapter 21 verse 17.
The use of the Corbyn vow to defraud one's neighbour, in this case parents, from what is due to them,
is putting the love of God at odds with love to neighbour, which should be its necessary corollary.
They're engaging in a sort of casuistry designed to circumvent the intent of the law,
rather than to establish it.
We've already seen this with the Sabbath.
Their very particular observance in all these little details actually offers them means to avoid obedience, to avoid what the Lord wants from them.
The verse that Jesus quotes in Isaiah chapter 29 verse 13 is important because of its context also.
In verses 9 to 14 of that chapter we read, astonish yourselves and be astonished, blind yourselves and be blind, be drunk but not with wine, stagger but not with strong drink,
For the Lord has poured out upon you a spirit of deep sleep,
and has closed your eyes, the prophets, and covered your heads, the seers.
And the vision of all this has become to you like the words of a book that is sealed.
When men give it to one who can read, saying, read this, he says, I cannot, for it is sealed.
And when they give the book to one who cannot read saying read this, he says, I cannot read.
And the Lord said, because this people draw near with their mouth and honor me with their lips,
while their hearts are far from me,
and their fear of me as a commandment taught by men,
therefore, behold, I will again do wonderful things with this people,
with wonder upon wonder,
and the wisdom of their wise men shall perish,
and the discernment of their discerning men shall be hidden.
The applicability of the judgment here to Jesus' ministry
and the responses to it should be immediately apparent.
Jesus doesn't directly answer the Pharisees question,
rather he levels a counter-accusation,
he fundamentally challenges the grounds on which they are making the accusation.
They are falsely claiming authority as arbiters of proper adherence to God's law,
while violating it themselves.
Perhaps hand-washing was for them originally a supererogatory matter
of special cleanness that could be voluntarily adopted,
but which through the development of the tradition gradually became an absolute standard
and a way in which to judge others.
Tradition is to be judged by scripture,
and hypocrisy is a constant problem.
They draw near to God with their lips,
but their hearts are far from him.
And Jesus, throughout his teaching,
focuses upon purity of the heart.
That's what matters.
The point is not primarily here arguing against food laws,
but against the phariseic misuse of the tradition.
Even the law itself highlighted
that it was what came out that was the problem.
Jesus goes on to teach the people
that what comes out of the mouth is what really matters.
The importance of the truth.
tongue is that it manifests the heart. We should beware of seeing this simply as a light dismissal
of the food laws, rather than as a disclosure of their true rationale. Jesus is fond of highlighting
the radical antithesises that one encounters in the prophets, for instance, that pit the external
practice over against its inner rationale and purpose. So for instance, mercy against sacrifice. I desire
mercy, not sacrifice. The point is not that sacrifice shouldn't be made, or that it should be
negated. The tradition isn't being rejected wholesale. The point is that sacrifice needs to be
understood in terms of mercy. In verse 19 here though, there's something a bit more radical. Thus he declared
all foods clean. It's an extremely important statement. Is Jesus merely saying that all foods have
always already been clean? Or is he overturning the system of food laws? I think there's a bit of both.
Jesus' argument about digestion is a timeless one. It's not debiless. It's not debunking.
dependent upon some new event in history. This has always been the case that people take the food into themselves and it doesn't actually pollute their heart. It's a matter of just going through the digestive system. Yet the statement itself implies that Jesus actually made a performative utterance, something that changed the status of foods by his statement.
In Acts chapter 10 verses 10 to 16, I think we see more about this.
and he became hungry and wanted something to eat
but while they were preparing it
he fell into a trance and saw the heavens opened
and something like a great sheet descending
being let down by its four corners upon the earth
in it were all kinds of animals and reptiles and birds of the air
and there came a voice to him rise Peter kill and eat
but Peter said by no means Lord for I have never eaten anything
that is common or unclean and the voice came to him again a second time
what God has made clean do not call common.
This happened three times and the thing was taken up at once to heaven.
You can see the same thing in Romans chapter 14 verse 20.
Everything is indeed clean,
but it is wrong for anyone to make another stumble by what he eats.
What I believe that Jesus is doing here is laying the foundation
for the later abrogation of the food laws.
What he's showing is that the food laws did not depend upon the inherent cleanness
or uncleanness of the foods in themselves.
themselves. Rather, clean and unclean foods were to be observed as signs of the separateness of
Israel from the nations and of their special relationship with God. There were symbols. They weren't
the reality of cleanness or uncleanness that lay in the heart. Once the Gentiles were included,
the food laws could be left behind because their rationale was never the defiling power of foods
in themselves, but rather their symbolic import. A question to consider. Jesus' emphasis,
the absolute importance of the handed down tradition to the Pharisees and the way that they are attached to it over God's commandment.
As tradition ostensibly functions to guard the authority of the commandment,
what are some of the ways that we can guard against our traditions being valued in themselves,
merely for their own sakes, in ways that set them at odds with the commandment and the word of God?
