Sunday, 15 May 2016
Luke 9:51-56 – Learning not to take offence
We are told in verse 51
that Jesus was resolutely heading for Jerusalem. As Christians, we know He was
obviously going there to advance the plot for why He came - His crucifixion, death
and resurrection. Luke was quick to point out the climax of it all - His
ascension. Since Samaria was between Galilee and Jerusalem (in Judea), He
originally wanted to go there. Jewish history tells us that the Jews and the
Samaritans were bitter enemies. Hence, they just hated each other intensely.
From the account Jesus had with the Samaritan woman in John's Gospel, we know
that Mount Gerizim was the place of worship for the Samaritans. Whereas, the
Jews had always worshipped in Jerusalem.
With that historical
backdrop in mind, we see why the messengers of Jesus were rejected by the
people from that village of the Samaritans. The Lord's intended destination to
Jerusalem was perceived as evidence that He sided with the Jews. Hence they did
not receive Him. The proposal by James and John to call down fire from heaven
to consume them underscores the deep animosity between the Jews and the
Samaritans. The two disciples’ reaction indicates to us that they didn't grasp
the mission of Jesus. They had totally forgotten His earlier instruction to
just dust the dirt off their sandals and move on when rejected. They were never
told to seek vengeance but to proclaim the message of the Kingdom. Their
hostile spirit and their lack of charity invited a rebuke from the Lord before
they left for another village. This account reminds us on how quickly we can drop our
Christian charity when offended. It also reveals how quickly we can forget His instruction,
and the mercy we have received from Him, when we feel unaccepted.
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