|
Story 8
Jesus Preaches the Gospel
Lord’s Sermon on the Mount was finished. His lesson
for the day was now over. So Jesus and His disciples came
down from the mountain side, and went into the city of
Capernaum. Jesus had made His home there. As they entered
the city they were met by some of the rulers of the Children
of Israel, and they had a message for Jesus. There was a
Roman captain, called a centurion, who had a much loved
servant. This servant was very sick with the palsy. The
centurion had heard of Jesus. He believed that the Christ
could heal any sickness. So the centurion had sent word by
these men, begging the Savior to come and heal the servant.
The rulers of the Children of Israel were glad to do
something to help the centurion, because, although he was a
Roman, he had been very kind to them. He had built them a
synagogue. So they urged Jesus to go. The Christ said ...
“I will go and heal him.”
Jesus started off at once.
When He was not far from the house, Jesus was met by other
friends of the Roman captain. They had another message for
Jesus. It seems that the Roman captain had thought about it
and felt that perhaps he had asked too much of a favor of
Jesus. And so he sent the Lord this message ...
“Lord, trouble not yourself to come, for I am not worthy to
have you come into my house. Speak the word where you are,
and my servant will be well. For you can command disease to
go, and be obeyed, just as I tell my soldiers to go or come,
and am obeyed.”
Jesus was surprised that this Roman soldier trusted Him so
completely. The Savior said ...
“I have not seen such faith as this among the Jews.”
To the friends of the centurion Jesus said ...
“Go back to the house, for the servant is already well.”
The messengers went back and found the servant well, as
Jesus had said.
Early the next morning, while it was cool, Jesus started
out again in another direction. This time He went to Nain.
Nain was a city about twenty-five miles from Capernaum. The
disciples of Jesus went along. The crowds also followed.
When they reached the gate of the city they met a group of
very sad people. A woman of Nain, whose husband had died some
time before, had now lost her only son. Friends were carrying
her son’s body outside the city for burial. The boy was loved
very much, because a long procession followed him to the grave
site. Lots of people were weeping because the boy had been
taken away from them.
Jesus and His apostles joined the procession. Back then
everyone who met such a sad procession was expected to join,
out of respect for the sad family. This poor mother was very,
very sad. When Jesus saw her sorrow and tears, He said to
her ...
“Do not weep.”
Jesus then did something that surprised everybody. He went
up to the frame on which the young man was being carried,
touched it, and told those who were carrying it to stop.
They did as Jesus said, wondering what was going to happen
next. And what do you think happened next? Jesus said ...
“Young man, I say to you, Arise.”
The boy, even though he was dead, heard what the Lord said.
He sat up and began to talk. Jesus gave him back to his
mother. The Savior then left and went on His way.
The people who had seen what had happened were afraid and
began to tremble. They had seen Jesus cure every kind of
disease. But, now He brings a dead boy back to life! Only
the Christ could do such a thing! They thanked God for such
a Savior, and said ...
“A great prophet has come among us. Surely God has visited
his people.”
The story of what Jesus had done spread about throughout
Judea until some of the disciples of John the Baptist heard
it. John was still in prison. His friends were allowed to
visit him in prison. Some of them told John what they had
heard about the great preacher, Jesus. John sent his friends
to Jesus with this question ...
“Are you the Christ that was to come, or must we still look
for another?”
Instead of answering John’s friends in words, Jesus showed
them the kind of work He was doing. There were lame and blind
and sick people all around Jesus whom He cured and taught.
Then Jesus said to John’s friends ...
“Go back and tell your master what you have seen and heard:
how the blind see, the lame walk, the lepers are made well,
the deaf hear, the dead are raised to life. And tell him,
too, that the gospel is being preached to the poor.”
Gospel means 'good news.' John the Baptist had preached
the gospel as long as he was allowed to. Jesus was doing it
now! Jesus was doing as the prophets had said the Christ
would do!
After John’s friends had left, Jesus spoke to the people in
words of the highest praise of John the Baptist. Jesus said
that John was the greatest prophet the world had ever seen.
In the crowd, listening to Jesus, were some people who were
fond of John, and were very glad to hear Jesus speak so well
of him. But also in the crowd were some scribes and
Pharisees. Many of them did not like John and thought of him
as the rough preacher from the wilderness. In fact, some of
them were angry when Jesus called John the greatest prophet.
Jesus told those scribes and Pharisees who were angry that
their actions were like those of little children who would not
be pleased with anything. Those scribes and Pharisees found
fault with John. They said that he was not in his right
mind. Why did some of them say this? Because John the
Baptist lived in a different way and wore different clothes.
Because he would not go into their homes and would not live
among them. But they treated Jesus, the Son of God, the same
way. Even though when Jesus, the Son of God, came among them
He did live the way they did. Even though when Jesus, the
Son of God, came among them He also went into their homes
and ate with them. Still, many of the scribes and Pharisees
did not think that Jesus was right either. It seemed that
Jesus, like John the Baptist, could do nothing to please many
of the scribes and Pharisees.
That very day Jesus was invited to take dinner with one of
the Pharisees who could not quite make up his mind. This
Pharisee was called Simon and he could not make up his mind
whether this Rabbi, or Teacher was, in fact, a prophet.
If a friend comes to visit us, or if we go to visit a
friend, there are some things which we always do to be polite.
This is true in every country. But, the rules of politeness
are not always the same in every country. In Palestine they
were very different from ours. As soon as the guest arrived
at the house, he was expected to take off his shoes, or
sandals, and leave them at the door. Sandals could be taken
off very easily, because they were nothing but a sole with
one or two straps over the foot and one over the ankle.
After the guest had taken off his shoes, the friend was
received by the master of the house. The master of the house
then gave the friend a kiss of welcome. He then led him to
his place at the table. Then a servant brought water and
bathed his feet, which was very refreshing to the one who had
been traveling in that hot, dusty country. It was not hard
for the servant to wash the guest’s feet, because they did not
sit at the dinner table as we in America do. In Palestine,
they lay on couches which were placed at three sides of the
table. They rested on their left elbow and left their right
hand free to use. Their heads were toward the table. Their
feet were away from the table. In this way, the servant
could easily pass from one person to another, bathing the
tired feet. The Children of Israel were very fond of
bathing. Do you remember the wedding at Cana of Galilee?
Remember the six stone jars standing outside the door for
the use of the guests? These jars were filled with water to
be used in bathing.
After his feet had been washed, either the master of the
house or the servant poured sweet-smelling oil on the head and
beard of the guest. This was called 'anointing him.' Then
more water was brought for him to use in washing his hands.
This was one of the things in which the Children of Israel
were very particular. They always washed their hands before
every meal. It is always good to wash our hands before a
meal. But there was a special need for hands to be clean in
Palestine. Everyone took his bread in his fingers and
dipped it in a dish which was then passed to everyone else at
the table.
Jesus accepted Simon’s invitation to dinner. Jesus wanted
to be friendly with everyone and do what He could to please
them. The Savior took off His sandals at the door. Then He
went to His place at the table. Though he had invited the
greatest man that ever lived to visit him, Simon did nothing
to care for Jesus’ comfort. Jesus’ feet were not bathed.
Jesus received no kiss of welcome, and no water was brought
for His hands.
Jesus did not seem to notice that these things were not
done. The Savior took His place at the table with the others,
and said nothing. Things were going along as usual at dinner
when something happened that Simon had not planned. The door
was opened and a woman walked in. This woman was known in the
town as a wicked woman. She carried in her hand a box of
ointment, a sweet-smelling perfume which was very expensive.
It would not have seemed so strange if some man had walked
into the house that way. Do you remember that in Palestine
such a thing as that happened often? But to have a woman do
so was very strange. Back then, it was commonly accepted that
not even the women of the family were allowed at the table
when the men were eating.
This woman did not mind the staring and angry eyes that
were looking at her. She went straight to the feet of Jesus.
She had heard the great Teacher some time before this moment.
The teachings of Jesus had made her very ashamed of herself
and she had been living a different kind of life since that
time. When she heard that Jesus was at Simon’s house she
made up her mind to go there, too. She wanted to show that
she was thankful to the Savior for teaching her to be a
better woman.
She did not feel worthy to be His friend, but she could do
for Him the work of a servant. As she stood behind Him,
crying, her tears fell so fast that Jesus’ feet were wet
with them. She wiped her tears away from the Savior’s feet
with her long hair. Even though she was crying, she was very
happy to be so near her Savior. She showed her happiness and
love by tenderly kissing Jesus’ feet. Then she took some of
the sweet-smelling ointment from her box and rubbed His feet
with it.
All this time Simon looked on, wondering why Jesus did not
put a stop to what the woman was doing. Simon said to
himself ...
“If this man were the prophet they say he is, he would know
what kind of a woman this is, and would not allow her to
touch him.”
The Savior was looking at Simon. He knew what Simon was
thinking about. Jesus said ...
“Simon, I have something to say to you.”
Simon answered ...
“Master, say on.”
Then Jesus told him this story:
Two men owed another man some money, but neither of them
had anything with which to pay their debt. One of them oweda lot of money, but the other owed only a little. The man
they owed knew that neither of the men could pay him. So, he
forgave them both. In other words, neither had to pay
anything. Then Jesus asked ...
“Which do you suppose will love him the most?”
Simon answered ...
“The one who owed the most, I suppose.”
Jesus said ...
“You have answered right.”
It seemed as if Jesus had not noticed the woman before, but
now Jesus turns to her and, still talking to Simon, says ...
“Do you see this woman? I came to your house because you
invited me. You gave me no water for my feet, but she has
washed my feet with tears and wiped them with her hair.
You gave me no kiss, but this woman since I came in has not
stopped kissing my feet. You did not anoint my head, but she
has poured ointment on my feet. We all know that she has been
a very wicked woman, but she will never be so again. She has
done many wrong things, but they have all been forgiven, and
she is so thankful that her heart is full of love.”
Simon saw what the Lord’s story meant. It meant that both
he and the woman had done many wrong things, although the
woman had been more wicked than Simon. Neither of them could
pay God to forgive them. Yet, because God loved them He had
forgiven them both. The woman was full of love for Jesus,
because He had forgiven all her wicked ways. She loved the
Savior so much that she wanted to do all she could to show
it. But Simon had not even been polite to Jesus. When he
thought about what Jesus said, don’t you think Simon was
probably ashamed of himself?
Jesus then turned to the woman and said ...
“You are forgiven, your faith has saved you; go, now, and be
happy.”
The Pharisees were very angry because Jesus told the woman
that her sins were forgiven. They were not glad that Jesus
could make sick people well. And they were not glad that
Jesus could make wicked people good. Jesus did not teach
what the Pharisees wanted taught. Because of this, they would
not believe anything Jesus said. And they wanted to put a
stop to Jesus and His work.
Even though the Pharisees were unkind to Him, Jesus still
had many friends. The apostles were always with Jesus now.
And there were three or four women who helped them all
they could.
From early morning until late at night the crowds pressed
around Jesus. Many people followed the Savior because they
liked to hear Him talk. Many people followed Him because
they wanted the Lord to heal their bodies. Some followed the
Christ simply because of the crowd of people. Still other
people, like the Pharisees, followed Him because they were
jealous of the love which the crowds of people gave to
Jesus, and they wanted to find something in what Jesus
said or did that was against the law. If they once did
that, they could complain about Him to the rulers and in
that way put a stop to His teaching.
One day an insane man was brought to Jesus. Anyone with a
kind heart would have pitied or felt sorry for this man very
much, because, besides being insane, he could not see or talk.
But there was only one person who could help him. The man’s
friends knew that, too, and so they brought him to the Christ.
When the man left the Savior, he could see and he could talk
and he was no longer insane. The Christ had healed him.
The Pharisees could not do anything to make the people
believe that the insane man had not been cured. So they
tried to attack Jesus by saying ...
“To be sure this man can do great things, but he does not get
his power from God; he gets it from Satan.”
They wanted Jesus to show them a sign from heaven if it was
not so, but this Jesus would not do. He said that they had
seen signs enough to make them believe Him, if signs were to
be of any use. He also said that many other people had
believed and been forgiven after less teaching than they
had had.
As Jesus spoke these things a woman in the crowd called out
to Him ...
“Your mother is a happy woman to have such a son as you.”
Jesus said to her ...
“Happier still are those who hear the word of God, and
obey it.”
After this talk the people thought more of Jesus than
ever, and followed Him in great crowds. There was not a
day of rest for Jesus, and He could hardly find time to
eat His food.
|