The Bible Recap - Day 309 (Matthew 23, Luke 20-21) - Year 7

Episode Date: November 5, 2025

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible Recap. Today, Jesus covers a lot of ground with the Pharisees that may seem familiar. It's possible that Matthew has collected all Jesus' sayings to the Pharisees and put them all in one convenient filing cabinet labeled Chapter 23, but it's also possible that Jesus is just giving them a big once-and-for-all summary of everything he's been communicating to them over the the past few years. His words to them are full of woe. Seven woes, to be exact. They are, number one, woe to those who don't enter the kingdom and who, by their lies, prevent others from entering two. Number two, woe to those who make converts to false religions, taking them from one lie to another. Number three, woe to the blind guides who value the symbol over the source
Starting point is 00:00:52 and the creation over the creator. Number four, woe to those who neglect the weightier things, who tithe religiously while oppressing others. Number five, woe to those who try to look righteous while they're greedy and selfish. Number six, woe to those who work hard to seem perfect on the outside, when they're full of sin and death. And number seven, woe to those who repeat the sins of their fathers, killing the prophets. There are a few things worth pointing out in these woes. First, I think it's interesting that in verse three, Jesus tells the crowds to follow the commands of the scribes and the Pharisees, but not their actions. He doesn't wholesale condemn their practices, they're teaching the Hebrew scriptures after all,
Starting point is 00:01:32 so as long as they interpret the books of Moses accurately, the people should obey what they say. The foundational problem with the Pharisees is that their hearts are off, and because of that, they're adding a lot of stuff to God's laws to try to prove themselves. So Jesus doesn't throw the baby out with the bathwater. He knows that obedience to the truth is a good thing, even if the truth is preached by hypocrites. Second, in verse five, Jesus says they make their philacteries broad and their fringes long. Until a few years ago, I would have had no idea what this meant, because it's not part of our culture. A philactory is a small leather box that some people strapped to their forehead and their left arm
Starting point is 00:02:07 as a way of literally applying the command from Deuteronomy 1118, where God tells the Israelites, You shall therefore lay up these words of mine in your heart and in your soul, and you shall bind them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as frontlets between your eyes. So they take scripture, put it in the little leather box, and bind the box to their forehead and their left arm. And the fringe is a reference to the four tasseled ends of a prayer shawl. In Numbers 15, God commands the Israelites to wear this as a reminder to them that they belong to Yahweh. Jesus definitely isn't condemning the act of wearing a prayer shawl. In fact, we know that he wore one himself because that's what scripture is referencing in Matthew 920
Starting point is 00:02:45 when it says the sick woman touched the fringe of his garment. What he's condemning is the motivation of using these things to show. off. He says the Pharisees make their philactories wider and their fringes longer to be seen by others instead of God's original intent, which was to remember that they belonged to him. They'd taken something that's about him and made it about themselves. By the way, if you want to see what a philactory and fringe look like, come to Israel with me. They're everywhere in Jerusalem. Or I suppose you could just look at the pictures we've linked in the show notes. Whatever. Third, in verse 9, when Jesus says, call no man on earth your father, do you think he's saying we
Starting point is 00:03:21 shouldn't call our dad father. So is it okay if we call him dad instead? Is that a loophole? And we can't have instructors or teachers either? That sounds crazy. What Jesus is communicating here has very little to do with language, actually. It has more to do with perspective and intent. This whole section is about the sins of the Pharisees, right? So what are their sins associated with these titles? They aspired to them in order to feel awesome about themselves, to be showy, to be in power. So by telling people not to seek out those people, Jesus is actually directing them away from not only feeding the pride of the Pharisees, but also becoming like them. Fourth, in the final woe, Jesus points to the fact that the Pharisees are like their ancestors, killing the prophets. Jesus references Abel and Zachariah, and that's probably
Starting point is 00:04:06 because Abel was the first person murdered in the Old Testament, and lots of scholars say it's possible Zachariah was the last. So Jesus seems to be encapsulating all the Old Testament murders in this woe, knowing full well that he's next in line. In Luke, we encounter some things we covered yesterday and some things will cover tomorrow. However, there's one thing from yesterday's reading that I want to touch on in today's account. Luke 2036 says that God's kids will become equal to angels when they die. The original word here means like angels. The text isn't saying we'll become angels. They're a totally different created being, and unlike humans, they're not made in the image of God. What this verse is saying is that we'll become like them in the sense that we won't be able to die after the resurrection.
Starting point is 00:04:51 We'll be immortal, like the angels. As far as equality with angels goes, we don't want equality with them. 1st Corinthians 6.3 says that we will judge the angels someday. I know people love to say things at funerals like, I guess God needed another angel, but actually that's a downgrade if you think about it. Humans are God's image bearers. And angels are God's interdimensional messengers who serve him primarily and his kids secondarily. Here's something else important to note.
Starting point is 00:05:18 In 21, 10 through 19, where Jesus is warning his disciples about wars and persecution, he's talking to them about actual wars they'll encounter soon. He says they'll be brought before kings and rulers. He's talking about Judea and Jerusalem specifically. These instructions are very specific to them and their timeline. There are certainly aspects of this that apply to all of us as we wait for his return, but a lot of this is directed toward their specific life timeline. People are certainly still martyred all the time around the world,
Starting point is 00:05:48 but this warning was for a specific people at a specific time. There's still truth we can carry with us from this passage, though. For instance, in verse 16, he says, Some of you they will put to death. But then verse 18 says, Not a hair on your head will perish. How is this possible? They die, but their hair survives?
Starting point is 00:06:06 No, he's pointing to eternal life. That's how they can die but not perish. And verse 19 says, endurance is what marks the believer. Not endurance as in survival, but endurance as in the faith, despite our trials. If we read this and think that it's up to us to maintain our perseverance, this sounds really challenging, especially not knowing what specific trials lie ahead. But remember that he's already told us that no one can snatch us out of his hand. Remember that he promises to finish what he started in us. Perseverance is his doing, not ours. We display and
Starting point is 00:06:41 demonstrate the preserving he does. First 34 also really caught my eye. It says, Watch yourselves, let your hearts be weighed down with dissipation and drunkenness and the cares of this life, and that day came upon you suddenly like a trap. I had to look up what dissipation meant in this context. It's basically another word for drunkenness. So he's repeating himself here, which tells us this is important.
Starting point is 00:07:03 The word means drunkenness specifically, but it also means too much of anything in general. So Jesus is telling them to live intentionally. don't get caught up in too much of anything, least of all alcohol, or it will weigh our hearts down, and don't let our attentions and affections fall on fleeting things, the cares of this life, because the things that matter are eternal. This is similar to something we've heard him say a few other times. The good and the bad both have a way of taking our eyes off of him. He doesn't want us to get mired in fears or distractions.
Starting point is 00:07:33 And that actually connects to my godshot for today. In 219, Jesus says, when you hear of wars and tumults do not be terrified, for these things must first take place, but the end will not be at once. He says not to be terrified of these things. He knows it sounds scary, but he also knows how it ends. So he's the only person who can say this with any kind of authority. He doesn't say things won't be scary or hard. He just promises that we don't go through those things alone, and that on the other side of it, we will live with him internally. Whatever Darkness comes our way is no threat to his light. He's where the joy is. We love TBR Kids. And in January, we're releasing a brand new TBR Kids podcast with our host and a dear friend of mine, Emily Piquel, or Miss Emily, to our younger Bible readers. This daily podcast follows the same 365-day TBR reading plan so you and the kids in your life can read and recap together. And we're going to keep growing our TBR
Starting point is 00:08:34 Kids Division because we want to help people of all ages read, understand, and love the Bible. Find out more at the Bible recap.com forward slash kids or click the link in the show notes.

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