The Life of Jesus Christ - Chapter 5 - Jesus tells people the good news and cures people in *Galilee - Part 6
Previous article | Life of Jesus Christ Index | *Word List | Next article
An online Bible Study course by Barrie Wetherill about the life of Jesus. This book is in EasyEnglish Level B. Use the links below for other online Bible Study books and commentaries that will help you. Or go to the Word List, which explains words with a *star.
Easy English Bible homepage | Matthew (commentary) | Mark (commentary) | Luke (commentary) | John (commentary)
People now knew that Jesus was a great teacher. He could also do
*miracles. You might think that he would be very popular. He was not. Many
people opposed him, in particular the leaders of the religion. Also, some people
followed Jesus did not trust him completely. Jesus said some very difficult
things. People sometimes did not want to understand his words.
In Matthew 12 we read about a series of events with *Pharisees.
This shows us how much some *Pharisees opposed
Jesus.
The *Pharisees were careful students of the Jewish law. They
always wanted to obey the law. Perhaps they remembered what God had done, years
before. He had punished people who did not obey the law. He allowed their
enemies to defeat them. So the *Pharisees wanted to obey the agreement that God
had made with his people. They would even die for the law. They trusted God to
bring them to the *resurrection. Their religion was really about behaviour.
Their law had hundreds of rules about the way to live. The rules were very
strict.
For example, the *Pharisees were very strict about the way to
live on the Sabbath. [The Sabbath was Saturday, that is, the 7th day of the
week. When God made the world, he rested on the Sabbath.] God gave commands to
Moses, which we call the Commandments. The 4th commandment says that people
should not work on the Sabbath day, (Exodus 20:8-11). The *Pharisees wanted to
be very sure to obey this commandment. They made a list of 39 kinds of work that
people must not do on the Sabbath. People could not even prepare food on the
Sabbath!
They called such rules 'the traditions of the *elders'. They
wrote these rules down very carefully. The rules sometimes became more important
than God's law itself. As a result, they often did not understand what the Bible
really said. In Matthew 15:1-20, Jesus showed that, because of their traditions,
the *Pharisees were often not obeying the Bible. Jesus called these *Pharisees
‘blind guides’ (Matthew 23:16). This meant that these *Pharisees were like
guides. They told people how to live. But these *Pharisees were also like blind
men, who did not know the correct route for a journey. So, the Pharisees were
themselves doing the wrong things. And they were also teaching other people to
do wrong things.
In Matthew 12 we read about some discussions with the
*Pharisees.
One Sabbath day, the *disciples were walking through the fields.
They took some of the grain and cleaned it by hand. Then they ate it. The
*disciples were often poor and hungry. They had left their jobs to be with
Jesus. Matthew tells us that they were hungry on this day. The *Pharisees had
seen them. They protested that Jesus had allowed his *disciples to work on the
Sabbath day. They said that to pick the grain was to harvest it. If a man
cleaned the grain by hand, he was preparing it for food. They said that both
these actions were work. The *Pharisees were very jealous of Jesus. They argued
with him many times about the law of the Jews.
The law allowed what the *disciples did that day. It allowed
people to pick some grain as they passed through a field. It did not allow
people to harvest the grain.
Deuteronomy 23:25 If you enter your neighbour’s field
of corn, you may pick some with your hands. You must not cut his corn with a
knife.
The disciples had done nothing that was wrong. They had obeyed
God’s law. When Jesus replied to the *Pharisees, he said some very important
things.
·
When a person needs something very much, God's love might be more
important than his law.
Jesus reminded the *Pharisees about David. David and the men who
were with him were once very hungry. They went to the priest in the Tabernacle.
[The Tabernacle was a special tent where the Jews came to *worship God.]. David
and his men were very hungry. God had chosen David to be the next king. The
*priest had no food there except the 'bread of the presence'. [This bread was a
gift for God.] Only a priest should eat this bread. But the priest gave this
bread to David and his men. It was not wrong for them to eat it. They did not
obey the law about this bread. But God loved David. And God understood that
David needed food.
·
There are exceptions
Jesus also said that priests work hard on the Sabbath day. In
fact, it is one of their busiest days. Nobody says that they are wrong. There is
a different law for their work on the Sabbath day. We could call it a better
law.
·
Jesus reminded them what Hosea wrote
Hosea was a *prophet who spoke about God’s great love for his
people. Even when they did not obey God, God loved them. Jesus spoke some words
from Hosea 6:6. ‘I do not desire special gifts from you. I want you to forgive
one another and to love one another.’ The rules of the *Pharisees were
difficult and strict. They did not realise that God wants to forgive us. God
wants us to love, and not to live by strict rules.
In another discussion, Jesus said that there were two principles
in the law. This is what he said:
Matthew 22:37-40 ‘Love the Lord your God:
·
with all your heart
·
and with all your *soul
·
and with all your mind.’
This is the first and most important command. And the
second command is like it:
‘Love your neighbour as you love yourself.’
This is what the Law and the *Prophets really mean.
[By the Law, Jesus meant the laws that God gave to Moses.] Jesus
chose these words from the *Old Testament: Deuteronomy 6:5 and Leviticus 19:18.
In Matthew chapters 5-7, Jesus explained these things further.
The law is there to help us. It should help us to love God and other people.
©
2002-2005, Wycliffe Associates (UK)