April 27, 28 A.D.  – Jesus rides in a parade, rearranges furniture, and kills a tree.— The Year of the Lord’s Favor #80

Week 63 — Jesus rides in a parade, rearranges furniture, and kills a tree.
Matthew 21:18-19

As we follow Jesus’ ministry day by day, in 28 AD, this is the week of Passover, the week between Palm Sunday and the Resurrection.  At times over the past year, I had only had one short scripture passage to cover the events of that week in Jesus’ ministry.  But the week between the triumphal entry and the resurrection is so important to the story of Jesus that there is a lot of material: Seven chapters of Matthew, five chapters of Mark and Luke, and eight chapters of John.   Almost one-fourth of the material in the four gospels is about this final week.

There is no way to cover the material in those 20 chapters.   So I want to step back this week and get one aspect of the big picture of what is going on in the story of the Bible in that week.  The Bible is one cohesive story of how God is working to reestablish his relationship with his creation, and the key to that plan is what happens in this week and 50 days later.  Jesus does three symbolic acts at the beginning of that week.  We have already discussed two of them, so today, we will look at the third one and see how these fit into that big picture.

Matthew 21:18-19   In the morning, as he was returning to the city, he became hungry.  And seeing a fig tree by the wayside, he went to it and found nothing on it but only leaves. And he said to it, “May no fruit ever come from you again!” And the fig tree withered at once.  

I know what you’re thinking.  “So, out of 20 chapters of Gospel Material from Jesus’ final week, this is what you pick as a focal passage?  And why is Jesus hating on a fig tree? “

At the beginning of Jesus’ passion week, he performs three significant symbolic acts, which carry a lot of meaning to his followers who are familiar with the scriptures. He rides a donkey into the city (the Palm Sunday triumphal entry that we discussed two weeks ago). He drives the money changers and animal salespeople out of the temple area (which we discussed last year), and then he curses a fig tree.

These may seem out of character for the Jesus we have seen this past year—that meek and mild Jesus who told people not to talk about his miracles, who was leaving town when he gathered crowds to try to fly under the radar, and who mostly avoided confrontation. Here, we see him in a big parade entering the capital city, jumping into the middle of a confrontation in the temple, and then performing a miracle of destruction. What has changed? Let’s look at these events.

The cleansing of the Temple happens twice in Jesus’ ministry.  Both at the same time of the year, just before Passover..  Every Jewish person at that same time every year would, in preparation for the feast of Unleavened Bread, go to great lengths to remove every bit of yeast from their homes.  This is to commemorate the exodus from Egypt when they left after Passover and ate only unleavened bread, because they didn’t have time to let the bread rise as they hurried out of Egypt.  Yeast came to represent sin and corruption.  So every home would be cleansed to remove any traces of yeast every year.  Walls would be scrubbed, and cooking utensils boiled in water.  This still happens in Orthodox Jewish homes today.  Jesus enters the Temple and sees that the House of God is full of corruption and takes it upon himself to do some spring cleaning in preparation for the festival.  This has great symbolic meaning to the people of Jesus’ day.  (You can go back to my blog entry of April 10 last year to review.)

Then there is this episode about the fig tree, which seems odd to us.  Again, these are very symbolic acts.  To understand what is really going on in these events, you have to have a good working knowledge of the first 2/3 of the Bible.  But most people don’t spend much time in the ‘First Testament.’  We call it the ‘Old Testament.’   Why study something old when you have something newer?   I really don’t like the ‘old/new’ nomenclature.  Jesus just called the Old Testament ‘the Scriptures.’  The only Bible that Jesus and the disciples ever read is the one that very few people now ever read.

But the Old Testament is the context for the New Testament. Jesus assumes you have a working knowledge of the Scriptures when he talks. Ten percent of his teachings are quotes from the Old Testament.  If you don’t understand his quotes, then you misunderstand what Jesus is saying.  These acts are a good example.  We miss what God is communicating if we are ignorant of the context and connection to the Scriptures.  So bear with me while I go way back to give you the big picture you need to understand the fig tree.

The key to these incidents is found in Malachi, the last book of the Old Testament.  

Malachi 3:1-2a “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 Yehovah Tzavaot. But who can endure the day of his coming, and who can stand when he appears?”

Let me put this verse in its historical context for you.  The Jews were conquered by Babylon in 586 BC.  The Babylonians destroyed the city and the temple. Most of the Jews were taken to Babylon, where they lived in exile for 70 years.  When they finally returned, they rebuilt the wall around the city and the temple.  But they didn’t have the riches of Solomon to build the temple this time, and this temple they built was a sad imitation of the grand structure that had been.  The people came back from Babylon expecting to have all the promises of the prophets come true, that the Messiah would come and set up God’s kingdom over Israel and restore the nation with a time of prosperity, justice, and peace.

But the people don’t see that, so in Malachi, they complain to God, 

“Hey God, things are going very well.”  

And God could answer, 

“You’re telling me, I allowed your country to be conquered because of your sins, hoping that the time of exile would lead to repentance and that you would come back ready to truly follow me and my commandments and abandon your idols.  But you have not repented.  You are committing the same sins as your ancestors did, which got them exiled.”

The people keep complaining to God. (The book has six disputes between the people and God), And he says, 

“You are on my last nerve with all this griping and complaining and bad behavior.”  

(Or maybe that was my wife talking to one of my sons in the backseat of the car one day.)  But Malachi says it this way:

Malachi 2:17  “You have wearied Yehovah with your words.”    [He is tired of your griping.]

They are asking, “Where are you, God?”   Why are they asking this?  They have been back in the land for almost 100 years.  They had rebuilt the temple, and everyone came to the grand opening except God.   He didn’t show up.  To understand this, we have to go back even further.

Remember when Israel first encountered Yehovah in the wilderness of Sinai.  They had escaped from Egypt, and 50 days later came to Mt Sinai.  God invited them to come up on the mountain with him, but on that day, God came on the mountain with a great cloud of smoke, and with fire and the sound of a loud shofar, like a roaring wind.  And it scared the people so that they would not go up on the mountain to meet God.   So Moses goes for them, and while up on Mount Sinai, God gives him instructions to build a tabernacle, a tent of meeting.  God told Moses, 

Exodus 25:8  “Have them build me a tabernacle, a holy place so that I might dwell with them.”

God wants to dwell with his people.  He wants to walk with us like he did with Adam and Eve in the Garden.  Sin destroyed the fellowship between humans and God in the Garden, and the whole story of the Bible is God working a way to restore that fellowship so that he may dwell with his people again.

So they built the tabernacle, and when they dedicated it:

Exodus 40:34-38   Then the cloud covered the tent of meeting, and the glory of Yehovah filled the tabernacle. And Moses was not able to enter the tent of meeting because the cloud settled on it, and the glory of Yehovah filled the tabernacle.

Leviticus 9:23-24  And Moses and Aaron went into the tent of meeting, and when they came out, they blessed the people, and the glory of Yehovah appeared to all the people. And fire came out from before Yehovah and consumed the burnt offering and the pieces of fat on the altar, and when all the people saw it, they shouted and fell on their faces.

Just like on Mount Sinai, God comes in a cloud with fire.  Since they wouldn’t come up on the mountain, God comes to dwell with them in the cloud and fire and leads them with a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night.

 And 400 years later, Solomon builds a more permanent structure. And the nation of Israel was at the pinnacle of its wealth.  So this temple was very impressive.  And when it is time to dedicate the temple:

2 Chronicles 7:1-3    As soon as Solomon finished his prayer, fire came down from heaven and consumed the burnt offering and the sacrifices, and the glory of Yehovah filled the temple. And the priests could not enter the house of Yehovah, because the glory of Yehovah filled Yehovah’s house. When all the people of Israel saw the fire come down and the glory of the Yehovah on the temple, they bowed down with their faces to the ground on the pavement and worshiped and gave thanks to Yehovah, saying, “For he is good, for his steadfast love endures forever.”

First at Sinai, then at the tabernacle, and now at Solomon’s temple, God’s presence comes in mighty fashion.  Have you ever been in a church service where you wondered if God was present?  No one left these dedication services wondering if God showed up.  

But things go downhill in Israel, and God punishes the Northern and Southern Kingdoms by allowing them to be conquered by a foreign nation.  Four hundred years after Solomon’s Temple was built, the Jews were conquered by Babylon in 586 BC.  The Babylonians destroyed the city and this wonderful Temple. Most of the Jews were taken to Babylon, where they lived in exile for 70 years.  And that horrible day of destruction is still mourned by Israel today on their calendar on the ninth day of their month of Av.

But the worst part of this tragedy is seen in a vision by the prophet Ezekiel.  Now, most people reading the Bible miss this because Ezekiel is not exactly an easy book to read.  In his vision in Ezekiel 10, he sees God on His throne leave the temple in Jerusalem.  This is that odd vision of the throne chariot with the cherubim and the ‘wheels within wheels.’  God abandoned his temple and allowed the temple to be destroyed.  

Ezekiel 11:23. And the glory of Yehovah went up from the midst of the city and stood on the mountain that is on the east side of the city.   

(What mountain is on the east?  The Mount of Olives.)

But in Ezekiel, there is hope.  God abandoned the temple, but he didn’t abandon his people, and Ezekiel talked about God preserving a remnant and that God will one day take away the heart of stone and give them a new heart.   And in Ezekiel, we have the vision of the restoration, the valley of dry bones brought back to life.  And finally, in Ezekiel, there is a vision of God’s presence returning to the temple. Ezekiel sees God coming back from the East

Ezekiel 43:1-2   Then he led me to the gate, the gate facing east.  And behold, the glory of the God of Israel was coming from the east. 

And 70 years later, Ezekiel’s prophecies started coming true.  A remnant of the people returned from Babylon to Jerusalem and rebuilt the city and the temple, though as I said, it was nowhere near as grand a structure.  And as before, they held a dedication service:

Ezra 6:16-18   And the people of Israel, the priests and the Levites, and the rest of the returned exiles, celebrated the dedication of this house of God with joy.  They offered at the dedication of this house of God 100 bulls, 200 rams, 400 lambs, and as a sin offering for all Israel 12 male goats, according to the number of the tribes of Israel. And they set the priests in their divisions and the Levites in their divisions, for the service of God at Jerusalem, as it is written in the Book of Moses.

It was a grand service, and huge numbers of people crowded in to see the spectacle. But something was missing.  God was missing.  There is no great storm of wind, thunder, clouds, and fire that shows God’s presence in the temple.  They set up the altar, but this time, fire didn’t come from heaven to consume the sacrifice.  They have to light the fire themselves, because God doesn’t show up.

That is why the people of Malachi’s day asked, “Where is God? We rebuilt the temple, but he didn’t show up.”

They knew Zechariah had prophesied of the time when God would return.

Zechariah 8:3  Thus says Yehovah: I have returned to Zion and will dwell in the midst of Jerusalem, and Jerusalem shall be called the faithful city, and the mountain of the Yehovah Tzavaot, the holy mountain.

So we see in Malachi that they complain that God has not returned as he promised. They had conveniently forgotten the first part of Zechariah, which made it clear to them that this was a conditional promise.  

Zechariah 1:3  Therefore, say to them, Thus declares Yehovah Tzavaot: Return to me, and I will return to you, says Yehovah Tzavaot.

But God explains, “You returned to the land, you returned to the city, but you didn’t return to me.  You haven’t repented.   You are still committing the same sins your fathers did that got them exiled.  So I have not returned to you. 

But when the people complain, Malachi answers, “Oh, God is going to come back to his Temple…”

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 Yehovah Tzavaot.”

Malachi says that a messenger of the covenant will come, and then God is coming back to his temple, but he may not come exactly like you want him to come.  The next verse, Malachi 3:2a

“But who can endure the day of his coming and who can stand when he appears?”   

Uh-oh… he is coming in judgment.  Malachi is the last prophet in the Old Testament. There would be 400 years of waiting until another prophet comes, until the time Malachi predicted.  And the Gospels tell us the messenger did come, John the Baptist, preaching repentance, and after that, God returns to the temple 

So in his final week, Jesus is again staying at the home of Lazarus, Martha, and Mary in Bethany.  He has his disciples get a donkey from the nearby town of Bethphage.  And Jesus rides into Jerusalem on the colt of a donkey, with people shouting praise and proclaiming him as king, and he enters the temple. This is the first of those three symbolic acts Jesus did this past week. People of his time easily recognized the symbol of the king being coronated and triumphantly entering the city just as David and Solomon did.  But more than that, God, in the form of Jesus, is coming back to the temple as Zechariah and Malachi prophesied.  And he is coming just as Ezekiel predicted, from the east, from the Mount of Olives.

Ezekiel said, “Behold, the glory of the God of Israel was coming from the east.”  The Triumphal Procession on Palm Sunday – God returning to his temple.

And how does Jesus enter the temple?  As Malachi said, He comes not in peace but in judgment.  God’s presence will eventually come, never to depart again.  And it will come with a great sound of rushing and with fire.  But first, God has to deal with the problem of sin.  There has to be a cleansing of the temple first.  Jesus enters the Temple and sees that the House of God is full of corruption, and begins the process of cleaning it out.

Matthew 21:12-13   And Jesus entered the temple and drove out all who sold and bought in the temple, and he overturned the tables of the money-changers and the seats of those who sold pigeons.   He said to them, “It is written, ‘My house shall be called a house of prayer,’ but you make it a den of robbers.”

He drives out the money changers who are charging exorbitant fees for the special coin that could be used to pay the temple tax. Then he turns over the seats of those selling animals and taking advantage of people who have to purchase animals to sacrifice.  And which animals does Matthew specifically note? The pigeons. They were the sacrifices of the poor who could not afford a sheep or goat.  Religion for profit, stealing money from the poor.

He is coming to judge.  As Malachi asked, “Who can endure the day of his coming, and who can stand when he appears?”  But Jesus is just getting started with the cleansing.  Every time he comes back into the temple, the next week he is coming with his gloves off, he speaks in judgment, especially of the Scribes and Pharisees.  Matthew chapter 23 has 7 statements of woe on these leaders because they are ‘hypocrites,’ ‘false teachers,’ ‘blind guides,’ ‘all show and no substance,’ ‘dead on the inside,’ ‘sons of snakes,’ ‘people who will not enter the kingdom of God.’

This is the same Judgment God had passed on Israel in the past.  Look at the similarities from the prophet Jeremiah:

Jeremiah 7:2-11   Hear the word of Yehovah, all you people of Judah who come through these gates to worship Yehovah.  This is what the Yehovah Almighty, the God of Israel, says: Reform your ways and your actions, and I will let you live in this place.  Do not trust in deceptive words and say, “This is the temple of the LORD, the temple of the LORD, the temple of the LORD!”   If you really change your ways and your actions and deal with each other justly, if you do not oppress the foreigner, the fatherless or the widow and do not shed innocent blood in this place, and if you do not follow other gods to your own harm, then I will let you live in this place, in the land I gave your ancestors for ever and ever.

But look, you are trusting in deceptive words that are worthless.  Will you steal and murder, commit adultery and perjury, burn incense to Baal and follow other gods you have not known, and then come and stand before me in this house, which bears my Name, and say, “We are safe”—safe to do all these detestable things?   Has this house, which bears my Name, become a den of robbers to you?  But I have been watching! declares Yehovah.”

And the third symbolic act we find in Matthew 21:

Matthew 21:18-19   In the morning, as he was returning to the city, he became hungry.  And seeing a fig tree by the wayside, he went to it and found nothing on it but only leaves. And he said to it, “May no fruit ever come from you again!” And the fig tree withered at once.  

He sees this fig tree full of leaves.  And these fig trees produce an early fruit that comes when the leaves appear.  It is not as big as the later harvest of figs in the summer.  This fruit is not as good or mature, but these early figs bring the promise of more mature fruit later.   Early figs in Hebrew are ‘phage.’  And this happened in a town called Bethphage, which is in Hebrew, the house of early figs.

If you know the scriptures (the Old Testament), you know the prophets frequently used this symbol of early figs. I could give a bunch of examples, but we only have time for one.

Micah 3:9-12   Hear this, you leaders of Jacob, you rulers of Israel, who despise justice and distort all that is right; who build Zion with bloodshed, and Jerusalem with wickedness.  Her leaders judge for a bribe, her priests teach for a price, and her prophets tell fortunes for money.

Yet they look for Yehovah’s support and say, “Is not Yehovah among us? No disaster will come upon us.”  Therefore, because of you, Zion will be plowed like a field, Jerusalem will become a heap of rubble, the temple hill a mound overgrown with thickets.

Micah 7:1-4  What misery is mine!  There is no cluster of grapes to eat, none of the early figs that I crave.  The faithful have been swept from the land;  not one upright person remains.…

Now is the time of your judgment.

You are wicked and producing no fruit.  You will be judged.

So, as Malachi predicted, God would come back to his Temple, but in judgment. This condemnation of this fruit tree that was all leaves and no fruit is a symbol of Jerusalem. Its leadership is all leaves and no fruit, all show and no substance.  

You have to bear fruit.  This is the message of the messenger that Malachi predicted would come before God came back to the temple.  That messenger was John the Baptist, and he had a 2-part message.

First, “Repent for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”  — Clean your house, God is coming back.  So all these people were coming to repent, and John said, “Hey, that’s great that you want to repent, but you can’t just say ‘I repent ‘ and then get baptized.  Your life has to change.  

Repentance is not something you say; it is something you do.

So the second part of the message is “You have to bring fruits worthy of repentance.”  You have to perform acts that are consistent with the life you have decided to live.  Don’t tell God you are going to change — show God how you have changed.  Then he warns them that a time of judgment is coming— either bear fruit or perish. And Jesus shows that symbolically with the fig tree.

Remember the reason God didn’t come back to the Temple they built in Malachi’s day?  They didn’t repent.  There is a reason Malachi saw the messenger coming before God came back to his Temple.  There is a reason John comes before Jesus.  The Messenger has to preach repentance before God returns. 

 And John told them it is judgment time, either bear fruit or perish.  Because the Kingdom of God is near.  God it about to return to his temple.  And we are in week 63 of this 70-week study.  You don’t want to miss week 70.  Because that is when God returns in power to his temple, as he did before with fire and the sound of a rushing windstorm.  But first, the temple must be cleansed.   First, there must be repentance.

Repentance is the necessary step everyone must take before establishing a relationship with God, and it is a step we must all continue to take as we walk with Jesus.  The old man dies hard.  We want to make our own rules.  We want to go the way that seems right to us, even though we are warned it leads to destruction.

Don’t miss the story of the fig tree.   But I can’t finish this morning without looking at Jesus’ other story of the fig tree Jesus tells in Luke:

Luke 13:6-9   And he told this parable: “A man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard, and he came seeking fruit on it and found none.  And he said to the vinedresser, ‘Look, for three years now I have come seeking fruit on this fig tree, and I find none. Cut it down. Why should it use up the ground?’  And he answered him, ‘Sir, let it alone this year also, until I dig around it and put on manure.  Then if it should bear fruit next year, well and good; but if not, you can cut it down.’”

Why does this tree get a second chance when the other fig tree is condemned immediately? This Fig tree has been barren for years.  It is just taking up space in the vineyard.  How do we reconcile these two stories?   What is the difference?

This tree has an advocate—a vinedresser who intervenes and asks for mercy on its behalf. Someone who will show this tree more care and love in an effort to encourage it to produce fruit.  Thanks be to God that we have an advocate.

Romans 8:34. Christ Jesus is the one who died—more than that, who was raised—who is at the right hand of God, who indeed is interceding for us.

1 John 2:1  We have an advocate with the Father—Jesus Christ, the Righteous One.

We have a loving, merciful Father who remembers his children not for the day of their trouble, but the day of their salvation.  He remembers us not for our worst day but for our best day.

And Jesus and the Spirit within us are interceding for us.   And we can intercede for each other.  We can go before the Father asking God to be merciful just as this vinedresser interceded for this tree.  We can then, as the vinedresser did for the tree, show these people love and encourage them to produce more fruit.

Time is short.  Spend time in prayer before the Father on behalf of your friends and family.  And each day, seize the opportunity to produce fruit.

January 20, 27 A.D.  –  The Bad News First, then the Good —   The Year of the Lord’s Favor #68

Week 49 —Fruitless
Matthew 20:1-16, Luke 13:1-9 

Jesus is still teaching in the area east of the Jordan, and in our passage today, someone interrupted him to tell him some bad news.

Luke 13:1-6   There were some present at that very time who told him about the Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices.  And he answered them, “Do you think that these Galileans were worse sinners than all the other Galileans because they suffered in this way?   No, I tell you; but unless you repent, you will all likewise perish.   Or those eighteen on whom the tower in Siloam fell and killed them: do you think that they were worse offenders than all the others who lived in Jerusalem?   No, I tell you, but unless you repent, you will all likewise perish.”

Sometimes, you read something in the Bible and ask yourself, “Why is that in there?”

But you can’t get away from it — the news is full of stories of natural disasters of fire and flood or news of senseless beatings and horrible murders by evil people.  The people in Jesus’ day didn’t have to deal with our 24-hour news networks or a phone that interrupted their day with ‘breaking news.’  But bad news has always traveled fast.  In this passage, someone tells Jesus about Pontius Pilate ordering his soldiers to attack some Jews from Galilee.  

How do you react to bad news?  How does Jesus respond?

We don’t know precisely what the situation was about this slaughter of these people.  Apparently, Pilate ordered his soldiers to kill some people from Galilee while they were performing sacrifices, so this would have happened in the Temple courtyard.  We don’t have any other confirmation of this account, but the historian Josephus records several incidents in which Pilate put down potential rebellions with overwhelming force.  Let me tell you just a couple.  Jerusalem was growing in population and faced a water shortage.  Pilate had an aqueduct constructed to bring water into Jerusalem, but he took money from the temple treasury to build it.  Money that had been dedicated to God.  A large crowd of people gathered to protest the misappropriation of God’s money, and Pilate had his soldiers dress in Jewish clothing, blend in with the crowd, and, at his signal, begin beating them to death.  Josephus records a similar incident when Pilate brought Roman standards with the likeness of Caesar into Jerusalem, which the Jewish law did not allow.  Again, the people protested, and Pilate had many of them killed.  Pilate was finally removed from office by the emperor when he overreacted to another disturbance and slaughtered a group of Samaritans.  So, this account is certainly consistent with Pilate’s previous actions.  

But why did Luke include this story in his account of the gospel?

First, what was the person’s motive for bringing this account to Jesus?  How did they hope Jesus would react?  I can see the fellow now.  “Look, Jesus, Pilate killed all these people who were from where you grew up!  He slaughtered them while they were worshipping in the Temple!  Can you believe it?  He is so evil.”  He is certainly expecting Jesus to agree with him that Pilate is an evil man and deserves God’s wrath.  “See, the Roman Empire is evil.  Perhaps we should rebel.”

But how does Jesus reply? 

And he answered them, “Do you think that these Galileans were worse sinners than all the other Galileans because they suffered in this way?

Remember that people in Jesus’ day believed that misfortune was due to sin.  If bad things happen to you, then it is likely that you have some sin you need to confess.  Some people still believe that today.  Obviously, these people have not read the Book of Job.  When the disciples see a man who was born blind in John 9, they ask Jesus a question.

John 9:1-3   As he passed by, he saw a man blind from birth.  And his disciples asked him, “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?”  Jesus answered, “It was not that this man sinned, or his parents, but that the works of God might be displayed in him. 

Jesus refutes the idea that misfortune is due to sin.  And he says God didn’t allow these Galieans to be killed by Pilate because they were sinners.

And he answered them, “Do you think that these Galileans were worse sinners than all the other Galileans because they suffered in this way?   No, I tell you; but unless you repent, you will all likewise perish.

Then he gives them another example:

Or those eighteen on whom the tower in Siloam fell and killed them: do you think that they were worse offenders than all the others who lived in Jerusalem?   No, I tell you, but unless you repent, you will all likewise perish.”

This is not at all the expected response. Jesus contradicts the current idea that misfortune is due to sin. He ignores the perfect opportunity to talk about how evil Pilate is. Instead of condemning Pilate or the Roman Empire, he calls on everyone standing there with him to repent of their sins, or they will perish.

You can’t watch 30 minutes of news without being horrified.  Just this week, a gang member of MS-13 got a plea deal to avoid maximum punishment for killing at least seven people, including two teenage girls who were beaten with baseball bats and machetes.  When you hear news like this, how do you respond?    You want those people to be punished.  You are sickened by the magnitude of their sin.  So why doesn’t Jesus jump on the anti-Pilate bandwagon?

It is easy to join everyone else in condemning someone for an evil act. But Jesus doesn’t go there. He has more important things to discuss. He realizes that he only has 12 weeks left to teach everything he needs to, for in three months, he will be killed.  He can’t waste any time.

These people want him to condemn Pilate.  Jesus will talk to Pilate on the day he is crucified.  But Pilate is not here now.  But there are people in front of him now that he can teach.  There is no sense in wasting time fussing about Pilate.  That doesn’t help Pilate or these people.  But it is a chance to tell the people before him that they also need repentance.   Jesus is still preaching the same message he started with.  The same message John the Baptist preached.  “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”  

Then Jesus tells us this parable:

Luke 13:6-9   And he told this parable: “A man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard, and he came seeking fruit on it and found none.   And he said to the vinedresser, ‘Look, for three years now, I have come seeking fruit on this fig tree, and I find none.  Cut it down. Why should it use up the ground?’   And he answered him, ‘Sir, let it alone this year also until I dig around it and put on manure.   Then, if it should bear fruit next year, well and good; but if not, you can cut it down.’”

Wait a minute, what does this have to do with what we were talking about?

We have horrible news about an evil politician murdering innocents and an awful accident in which a building fell on people, and then Jesus tells us we need to repent or we will perish.  Then he jumps to a story about a fig tree not bearing fruit.    Are you having trouble following this conversation?

It makes sense if you realize that repentance and bearing fruit are closely related in Jesus’ mind.  Don’t miss this critical connection.   It goes back to John the Baptist.   John’s message became Jesus’ message: 

Matthew 3:1-2     In those days John the Baptist came preaching in the wilderness of Judea, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”

And the second part of John’s message:

Matthew 3:8   Bear fruit in keeping with repentance.

John said that the decision to repent was not enough.  You had to bring fruits worthy of repentance.  By this, he meant living in a way that demonstrates a change of heart and a decision to turn away from sin. It’s a way of showing that you have repented of your sins and are living a life consistent with that repentance.   This is an idea we see all through the prophets.  Repentance must be associated with a change in the way you live.  Repentance must be accompanied by fruit.

Jesus tells them to repent, which means they must bear fruit worthy of their repentance. Now, do you see why he tells this story?  The fig tree is not bearing fruit as it should. What do we do?  What should God do with these people who say they have repented but have not changed how they live?

In this parable, we see a debate between mercy and judgment.  Both are attributes of God’s character.  He is a God of justice and judgment.  He is also a God of mercy.  Here, those attributes meet.  

This fig tree should be bearing fruit, but it is not.  It is a waste of the owner’s resources.  But the vinedresser, who had planted and cared for the tree for these years, asks for mercy.   Mercy is granted, even to the point of showing the tree special care with fertilizer and soil preparation.  But note that mercy has a limit.  Justice must come.  Judgment must come.  In a year, if the tree is not fruitful, it will be taken away.   Jesus must convince these people before him that they have to repent and bear fruit worthy of repentance.  Their life must change.  God is granting them mercy, giving them another year to bear fruit, but mercy has a limit.

Now, I want to contrast that with another parable Jesus tells in John 15 about producing fruit.

John 15:1 “I am the true vine, and my Father is the vinedresser.  Every branch in me that does not bear fruit he takes away, and every branch that does bear fruit he prunes that it may bear more fruit.  Already you are clean because of the word that I have spoken to you.   Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself unless it abides in the vine, neither can you unless you abide in me.   I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me, you can do nothing.   If anyone does not abide in me, he is thrown away like a branch and withers, and the branches are gathered, thrown into the fire, and burned.   If you abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you.  By this, my Father is glorified, that you bear much fruit and so prove to be my disciples.  As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Abide in my love.   If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commandments and abide in his love.   These things I have spoken to you, that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full.”

You have heard this before.  But there are a whole lot of branches and fruit and abiding and not abiding there.   If you slow down, pay attention, and read the words, it may bother you a bit…..It bothered me a lot.  Let’s take a close look at this parable.  First, it is a stated allegory. Jesus is the vine, and the Father is the vinedresser, the gardener.1. People are the branches on the vine. Now that we know the players let’s see what happens to whom.

The branches represent people divided into two groups: those who abide in Jesus and those who do not.  To ‘abide’ means ‘to live in.’  If you abide in Jesus, He is your source of life; you get your life from him, so you stay connected to him.  You get 100% of your nourishment from him. If you tear off a branch from a plant, will it produce fruit?  If taken off the plant, the branch can never bear fruit; it will wither and die.  Remember, the branches are people who either remain in Jesus and live or who are cut off from Jesus and die.

So now, let’s examine the branches that stay, those who abide in Jesus and are not torn off.    

Some produce fruit, and some do not.  What does the Gardener (God the Father) do to those who produce fruit?  He prunes them.  He removes those things in them that make them less fruitful.

Do you have a garden?  If you grow tomato plants, you are familiar with the idea of suckers.  Tomato suckers are small shoots or leaves that grow from the junction of a tomato plant’s stem and branch.   Gardeners debate removing these.  But a plant has only so much energy to grow.  If you leave the suckers, they will grow into another branch, and you will have a bushier plant.  But the energy used to grow more branches will not be used to grow tomatoes, so you get a bushier plant with fewer tomatoes.  

Pruning is cutting off the parts of a plant that make it less productive, sometimes the old parts to stimulate new growth.  You always prune during the dormant season.  I will never forget when we hired someone to help with our yard.  There was a wonderful camellia bush that we loved, and this particular year, it had tons of buds on it… until our hired person decided it was time to prune it.  You never prune a plant in that stage.  He cut every bud off.  Not only were there no blooms that year, but it was several years until the bush recovered enough to produce them again.   When the plant is dormant and not doing anything, you prune it.  I think that applies to us also.  If we become dormant in our Christian walk, we need pruning and removal of those things that make us less fruitful…. but let’s move on.

So, there are two types of branches that abide in Jesus.  Those who do produce fruit and those who do not.  Those that bear fruit are pruned to produce more fruit.  What about those that do not produce fruit.?

John 15:2  Every branch in me [Jesus] that does not bear fruit he [The Father] takes away.

So let me put this on a flow chart for you:

Now you can see what bothers me about this parable.  Those who do abide in Christ but are not producing fruit get the same treatment as those who do not abide in Jesus.  They are both taken away.  That doesn’t seem to fit with the previous parable of the Fig tree.  The owner would have the tree dug up, but a grace period was given.  The tree would be shown extra care for a year.  If it then didn’t produce, then it would be removed.  There seems to be no grace or mercy in this vine parable.  If you see a fruitless branch, you take it away.  Are we missing something?

Let’s look at that verse more closely.  The “takes away” is translated from the Greek “airo”.   Strong’s Dictionary of the Bible has this entry for ‘airo’.  

142. airo, ah´-ee-ro; a primary root; to lift up; by implication, to take up or away; 

This Greek word is where we get the word “air,” which is also used in many English words, such as aerobatics, aerodynamics, and aeroplane (British spelling). All these words have the concept of “lifting up.”

So, the primary definition is to lift up.  The gardener ‘lifts up’ the unfruitful vine.  Does that make any sense to you?   Well, it didn’t to the translators, so instead of putting ‘lift up,’ they decided to use the secondary definition of ‘lift up and take away.’  These translators had never been to a small farm in the Middle East and saw how they grew grapes in Jesus’ day.

You know what modern vineyards look like. The vines are carefully set on elevated supports.   This makes them more fruitful and also easier to harvest. This is a grapevine from my trip to Jordan last year. Many farmers there still grow grapes as they did 2000 years ago, not on elevated trellises but on the ground.

There is one problem with growing grapes on the ground.  The vine tends to put down more roots where it touches the soil.  If the plant puts down roots, it is not spending its energy producing grapes but producing roots.  This makes the branch unproductive.  So when the gardener in Jordan sees this happening, he does exactly what they would have done in Jesus’ day.  They lift up the vine off the ground and put a rock under it.  Then, it will not produce roots but produce fruit.

John 15:2  Every branch in me that does not bear fruit he lifts up.

Remember, in the unfruitful fig tree parable, the owner would dig it up, but the vinedresser, who had cared for that plant for years, wanted to give it another chance.  He would show it special care and see if he can get it to produce.  There is grace.  There is mercy.  If we correctly translate the parable of the vine, we see the same care and mercy.  If the Father sees you are unfaithful, he doesn’t take you away; He lifts you up. 

This has implications for how we treat each other.  Someone leaves the fellowship; they stop coming to church and start putting down roots elsewhere.  The last thing we should do is cut them off or remove them.  We should lift them up.  Lift them up in prayer, lift them up with encouragement, and lift up their spirits with kindness and love.  When our friends stumble in their faith, we should lift them up.

God is looking for fruit.  John the Baptist said,  Repent and bring forth fruits worthy of repentance.  What are these fruits we should be producing?  The crowds before John the Baptist asked the same question.  

Luke 3:10-14   And the crowds asked him, “What then shall we do?” And he answered them, “Whoever has two tunics is to share with him who has none, and whoever has food is to do likewise.”  Tax collectors also came to be baptized and said to him, “Teacher, what shall we do?”   And he said to them, “Collect no more than you are authorized to do.”   Soldiers also asked him, “And we, what shall we do?” And he said to them, “Do not extort money from anyone by threats or by false accusation, and be content with your wages.”

Share from your abundance.  Do the right thing.  If you are a child of God, then act like it.  Imitate your father.  Paul gave us a list to go along with this:

Galatians 5:22-23   But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control;

Jesus wants us to produce fruit, and he will show us grace if we fail to do so.  But as in the fig tree parable, a limit is imposed.  The fig tree has one more year to produce fruit.  If it didn’t, then it would be dug up.

Believing in Jesus and trusting in him is the starting point, not the ending point. If the privilege of being God’s people does not lead to productivity, it leads to judgment. 

Jesus realizes his time is short. He will be crucified in 12 weeks. So, every moment, he finds ways to teach, encourage people, spread the word of the kingdom, and live his life producing as much fruit as he can. 

I want to close by leaving you with a quote from an excellent book by John Piper that had a significant impact on me.  The book is titled “Don’t Waste Your Life,” I first read it 30 years ago, but it is still timely.  Much like Jesus being told of Pilate’s horrible attack on the Galileans, John Piper tells of two women, both about 80 years old, who were serving as missionaries in Africa.  The brakes failed in their car, and they went over a cliff and died instantly.   Piper asked,  “Was that a tragedy?“  “No,” he says, 

“I will tell you what a tragedy is. I will show you how to waste your life. Consider a story from the February 1998 edition of Reader’s Digest, which tells about a couple who “took early retirement from their jobs in the Northeast five years ago when he was 59 and she was 51. Now they live in Punta Gorda, Florida, where they cruise on their 30 foot trawler, play softball and collect shells.” [Piper says,] At first, when I read it I thought it might be a joke. A spoof on the American Dream. But it wasn’t. Tragically, this was the dream: Come to the end of your life—your one and only precious, God-given life—and let the last great work of your life, before you give an account to your Creator, be this: playing softball and collecting shells. Picture them before Christ at the great day of judgment: “Look, Lord. See my shells.” That is a tragedy. And people today are spending billions of dollars to persuade you to embrace that tragic dream. Over against that, I put my protest: Don’t buy it. Don’t waste your life.”2

Jesus had only three months before his crucifixion. He couldn’t waste time complaining about politics or current events; he had fruit to produce.  None of us knows how much time we have left.   Every day is a chance to repent of yesterday’s mistakes and bring fruit worthy of that repentance. In a world filled with bad news, I have good news today.   This day, God has given us a gift.  He has granted us the grace and mercy of another day of life.   As Piper says, please don’t waste it.  Make this day fruitful, lifting up praise to Jesus, lifting up our friends, and lifting up the Kingdom of God.

  1. Not all parables are allegories.  An early church father, Origen of Alexandria, who lived around 200 AD, is called the “father of allegorical interpretation.”  He felt all parables were allegories and had secret allegorical meanings.  Augustine, who lived 200 years later, is also known for making almost every story in the Bible an allegory.  Augustine said the Samaritan in the story of the Good Samaritan is Jesus; the thieves are the devil, the priest and the Levite are the Old Testament, the inn is the church, the innkeeper is Paul, and the money he is given is Paul’s counsel of celibacy.   Sometimes, when viewing all of Jesus’ stories as allegories, we may lose Jesus’ intended meaning.  In this instance, the story loses the purpose Jesus told it for — to answer the question of, “Who is my neighbor?”
  2. Piper, John. Don’t Waste Your Life . 1994.  Crossway.  Location 546, Kindle Edition.