Introduction
Have your words or past actions ever come back to haunt you? Perhaps you once said, in your youth, “When I’m a parent, I will never (fill in the blank).” And now that you’re a parent you find yourself regularly doing that thing. There are really only two responses to such a moment of revelation: laugh at yourself or burn with vindictive anger.
The Text
Then came together unto him the Pharisees, and certain of the scribes, which came from Jerusalem. And when they saw some of his disciples eat bread with defiled, that is to say, with unwashen, hands, they found fault. For the Pharisees, and all the Jews, except they wash their hands oft, eat not, holding the tradition of the elders […]
Mar 7:1ff
Summary of the Text
A Jerusalem embassy of Pharisees, likely tasked with keeping tabs on Jesus (3:22) launch a fresh legal assault upon Jesus’ disciples (v1). The infraction is that the disciples are eating without washing their hands (v2,5). Mark provides a bit of insider baseball for his Greek audience. The Pharisees had taken the Levitical cleanliness codes and extrapolated them past the point of possible obedience; they taught that hands must be washed often, along with eating vessels, or else you will not only defile yourself but you’ll defile others (vv3-4). Jesus responds to their accusation with Isaiah’s rebuke (vv6-7, Cf. Isa 29:13), and explains that they are the epitome of replacing God’s clear command with man-made tradition (vv8-9). Jesus tightens the screws further on these accusers. He demonstrates that they’ve broken Moses’ command to honor father & mother by inventing a legal loophole to avoid financially supporting their parents while appearing to honor God (vv10-12). Their traditions have not resulted in fulfilling the Law; rather, they’ve undermined the very basis of their authority (v13).
Jesus then tells a joke to the crowd at the expense of the Pharisees. What goes in you doesn’t defile; what comes out the other end is what’s unclean (vv14-16). The disciples ask Jesus to explain the joke parable; and He reproaches them for needing the joke explained (vv17-20). Man thinks holiness resides in himself, but Jesus’ punchline is that our show holiness is just raw sewage. What’s in man? Nothing good (vv21-23).
Jesus now goes to a predominately Gentile area, and His presence once more can’t be hidden, the Word is getting out, even amongst the Gentiles (v24). A Syrophoenician woman comes to fall at His feet, and requests deliverance for her daughter from a devil (vv25-26). This will be the second to last demon Jesus encounters in Mark’s Gospel. Jesus responds with a quip: it isn’t right to take the children’s (Jews) bread (Him) and feed it to the little dogs (Gentiles) (v27). She replies with a faith-filled plea: even dogs get some scraps (v28). Jesus responds to her witty faith with an assurance that the devil will be expelled; the woman returns home and finds just that (vv29-30).
Mark whisks us back to where Jesus performed the exorcism of a legion of devils (v31). Some folks bring a deaf mute to Jesus for a healing touch (v32); Jesus takes him aside and Mark gives a more detailed description than usual of what Jesus does to heal the man. Jesus pokes his fingers into the man’s ears, spits and then touches the man’s tongue, looks to heaven, sighs/breathes heavily, and commands the closed ears and mouth to be opened (vv33-34). Mark (like he’d done with Jairus’ daughter) preserves the Aramaic word which Jesus spoke. Straightway the man’s ears are opened and his tongue loosed and he begins to speak; Jesus requests that they not spread the word but to no avail (vv35-36); instead, they lift songs of praise: He does all things well (v37).
Ears to Hear
Jesus has already shown that even touching the hem of His robe will bring healing. So why the seeming exaggeration involved with this healing? This healing is the first of a pair. Jesus will soon face off against the last demon recorded in Mark’s Gospel (Mk. 9:25), which causes a boy to be deaf & dumb. Jesus has been sowing the Word all throughout Israel. But many are still hard of hearing. Even His disciples grapple with His words and fail to comprehend. The Pharisees have, in a sense, stuffed the cotton of manmade tradition into their ears and seem entirely unable to hear the Word they claim to be the stewards of.
Jesus resorts to telling a parable, which is more like a joke. He accompanies that parable with a charge for Israel. This is a charge which is still necessary for us all: he who has ears to hear, let him hear. Man’s condition is fatal. Christ’s Word is a seed which brings about life. But we need our ears opened. How does Jesus open our ears? He wields piercing wit to shock us awake. Ironically, His piercing wit will get Him pierced.
Gentile Dogs
The disciples unwashed hands provide more than just cause for the Pharisees to squabble over. Mark has hinted in a certain direction, but from this cycle of his Gospel onward it will get clearer and clearer: the Gentiles will be blessed by the coming of the promised Seed of Abraham. If you didn’t wash your hands you defiled other Jews, so this had led the Pharisees to teach that to even enter a Gentile home would make you unclean. But Jesus says it isn’t what goes in you that defiles but what comes out of you.
The disciples, within a few years, will be breaking bread with Gentiles because both are washed in baptism. These unwashed hands are like the faint introduction of an instrument in the midst of a symphony. But in the rest of this chapter and especially the next it will swell and become too big to ignore. For example, Jesus goes to an area full of Gentiles; He playfully banters with the Syrophoenician woman; He agrees to let the dogs enjoy the crumbs; and He delivers the Gentile girl from a demon. Jesus has been driving out unclean spirits from Israel, but now, notice is served that the demons will not find safe haven outside of Israel. Jesus has come to take possession of the ends of the earth, filling it with His worshippers, feeding them with the bread of His body. Additionally, the healing of the deaf and dumb man is in a predominately Gentile area (the Decapolis), this healing is followed by Christ being praised among the nations (Mt. 15:31).
The Pharisees had hidden the Word, but Jesus is coming to fling the Word far and wide, opening even Gentile ears to hear this life-giving Word of His Salvation (Cf. Is. 29 & 35). And when they hear, they will also sing. The Word of Jesus’ universal reign is proclaimed, and the fitting response is always songs of praise (Ps. 72:16-19).
What’s in You?
What Jesus is doing is going to land Him on a cross. He is putting our sin on a billboard. He is mocking our foolish scruples. He is shaming our holiness. You think your holiness is found in taking your kids out of public schools, a good thing; but have you exploded with anger at them, neglected to train them in the Word, or been permissive in the entertainment you allow? You claim to be defenders of traditional marriage, but what’s in your browser history, where have you failed to submit to your husband or be loving to your wife? You despise the government printing money on demand, but is your work ethic outpaced by a moss covered sloth?
Jesus did not come to drive out a pagan oppressor from Israel. Jesus came to show us the sewage that comes out of the human heart. Jesus came to show us we are dogs. Jesus came to show us where we’ve voided God’s Word. But He also came to truly wash us by baptism into Him. He came so that dogs could become children. He came to open our ears so we could hear the joke and He came to loose our tongues so we could laugh at our folly.
Charge & Benediction
Sin is trying to pull a fast one on the all-seeing and all knowing God. Repentance, then, is a laughing matter. The self-righteous are the ones who take themselves too seriously. The humble are able to see the folly of their ways, laugh at themselves, and learn true wisdom from Christ the Ascended King.
The peace of God, which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds in the knowledge and love of God, and of His Son Jesus Christ our Lord; and the blessings of God Almighty, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, be upon, and remain with you always. Amen.
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