Chapter 42
Tradition
[This chapter is based on Matt. 15:1-20; Mark
7:1-23.]
The scribes and Pharisees, expecting to see Jesus at the Passover,
had laid a trap for Him. But Jesus, knowing their purpose, had absented
Himself from this gathering. "Then came together unto Him the
Pharisees, and certain of the scribes." As He did not go to them,
they came to Him. For a time it had seemed that the people of Galilee
would receive Jesus as the Messiah, and that the power of the hierarchy
in that region would be broken. The mission of the twelve, indicating
the extension of Christ's work, and bringing the disciples more directly
into conflict with the rabbis, had excited anew the jealousy of the
leaders at Jerusalem. The spies they sent to Capernaum in the early part
of His ministry, who had tried to fix on Him the charge of
Sabbathbreaking, had been put to confusion; but the rabbis were bent on
carrying out their purpose. Now another deputation was sent to watch His
movements, and find some accusation against Him.
As before, the ground of complaint was His disregard of the
traditional precepts that encumbered the law of God. These were
professedly designed to guard the observance of the law, but they were
regarded as more sacred than the law itself. When they came in collision
with the commandments given from Sinai, preference was given to the
rabbinical precepts.
Among the observances most strenuously enforced was that of
ceremonial purification. A neglect of the forms to be observed before
eating was accounted a heinous sin, to be punished both in this world
and in the next; and it was regarded as a virtue to destroy the
transgressor.
The rules in regard to purification were numberless. The period of a
lifetime was scarcely sufficient for one to learn them all. The life of
those who tried to observe the rabbinical requirements was one long
struggle against ceremonial defilement, an endless round of washings and
purifications. While the people were occupied with trifling
distinctions, and observances which God had not required, their
attention was turned away from the great principles of His law.
Christ and His disciples did not observe these ceremonial washings,
and the spies made this neglect the ground of their accusation. They did
not, however, make a direct attack on Christ, but came to Him with
criticism of His disciples. In the presence of the multitude they said,
"Why do Thy disciples transgress the tradition of the elders? for
they wash not their hands when they eat bread."
Whenever the message of truth comes home to souls with special power,
Satan stirs up his agents to start a dispute over some minor question.
Thus he seeks to attract attention from the real issue. Whenever a good
work is begun, there are cavilers ready to enter into dispute over forms
or technicalities, to draw minds away from the living realities. When it
appears that God is about to work in a special manner for His people,
let them not be enticed into a controversy that will work only ruin of
souls. The questions that most concern us are, Do I believe with saving
faith on the Son of God? Is my life in harmony with the divine law?
"He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that
believeth not the Son shall not see life." "And hereby we do
know that we know Him, if we keep His commandments." John 3:36; 1
John 2:3.
Jesus made no attempt to defend Himself or His disciples. He made no
reference to the charges against Him, but proceeded to show the spirit
that actuated these sticklers for human rites. He gave them an example
of what they were repeatedly doing, and had done just before coming in
search of Him. "Full well ye reject the commandment of God,"
He said, "that ye may keep your own tradition. For Moses said,
Honor thy father and thy mother; and, Whoso curseth father or mother,
let him die the death: but ye say, If a man shall say to his father or
mother, It is Corban, that is to say, a gift, by whatsoever thou
mightest be profited by me; he shall be free. And ye suffer him no more
to do aught for his father or his mother." They set aside the fifth
commandment as of no consequence, but were very exact in carrying out
the traditions of the elders. They taught the people that the devotion
of their property to the temple was a duty more sacred than even the
support of their parents; and that, however great the necessity, it was
sacrilege to impart to father or mother any part of what had been thus
consecrated. An undutiful child had only to pronounce the word "Corban"
over his property, thus devoting it to God, and he could retain it for
his own use during his lifetime, and after his death it was to be
appropriated to the temple service. Thus he was at liberty, both in life
and in death, to dishonor and defraud his parents, under cover of a
pretended devotion to God.
Never, by word or deed, did Jesus lessen man's obligation to present
gifts and offerings to God. It was Christ who gave all the directions of
the law in regard to tithes and offerings. When on earth He commended
the poor woman who gave her all to the temple treasury. But the apparent
zeal for God on the part of the priests and rabbis was a pretense to
cover their desire for self-aggrandizement. The people were deceived by
them. They were bearing heavy burdens which God had not imposed. Even
the disciples of Christ were not wholly free from the yoke that had been
bound upon them by inherited prejudice and rabbinical authority. Now, by
revealing the true spirit of the rabbis, Jesus sought to free from the
bondage of tradition all who were really desirous of serving God.
"Ye hypocrites," He said, addressing the wily spies,
"well did Esaias prophesy of you, saying, This people draweth nigh
unto Me with their mouth, and honoreth Me with their lips; but their
heart is far from Me. But in vain they do worship Me, teaching for
doctrines the commandments of men." The words of Christ were an
arraignment of the whole system of Pharisaism. He declared that by
placing their requirements above the divine precepts the rabbis were
setting themselves above God.
The deputies from Jerusalem were filled with rage. They could not
accuse Christ as a violator of the law given from Sinai, for He spoke as
its defender against their traditions. The great precepts of the law,
which He had presented, appeared in striking contrast to the petty rules
that men had devised.
To the multitude, and afterward more fully to His disciples, Jesus
explained that defilement comes not from without, but from within.
Purity and impurity pertain to the soul. It is the evil deed, the evil
word, the evil thought, the transgression of the law of God, not the
neglect of external, man-made ceremonies, that defiles a man.
The disciples noted the rage of the spies as their false teaching was
exposed. They saw the angry looks, and heard the half-muttered words of
dissatisfaction and revenge. Forgetting how often Christ had given
evidence that He read the heart as an open book, they told Him of the
effect of His words. Hoping that He might conciliate the enraged
officials, they said to Jesus, "Knowest Thou that the Pharisees
were offended, after they heard this saying?"
He answered, "Every plant, which My heavenly Father hath not
planted, shall be rooted up." The customs and traditions so highly
valued by the rabbis were of this world, not from heaven. However great
their authority with the people, they could not endure the testing of
God. Every human invention that has been substituted for the
commandments of God will be found worthless in that day when "God
shall bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing, whether
it be good, or whether it be evil." Eccl. 12:14.
The substitution of the precepts of men for the commandments of God
has not ceased. Even among Christians are found institutions and usages
that have no better foundation than the traditions of the fathers. Such
institutions, resting upon mere human authority, have supplanted those
of divine appointment. Men cling to their traditions, and revere their
customs, and cherish hatred against those who seek to show them their
error. In this day, when we are bidden to call attention to the
commandments of God and the faith of Jesus, we see the same enmity as
was manifested in the days of Christ. Of the remnant people of God it is
written, "The dragon was wroth with the woman, and went to make war
with the remnant of her seed, which keep the commandments of God, and
have the testimony of Jesus Christ." Rev. 12:17.
But "every plant, which My heavenly Father hath not planted,
shall be rooted up." In place of the authority of the so-called
fathers of the church, God bids us accept the word of the eternal
Father, the Lord of heaven and earth. Here alone is truth unmixed with
error. David said, "I have more understanding than all my teachers:
for Thy testimonies are my meditation. I understand more than the
ancients, because I keep Thy precepts." Ps. 119:99, 100. Let all
who accept human authority, the customs of the church, or the traditions
of the fathers, take heed to the warning conveyed in the words of
Christ, "In vain they do worship Me, teaching for doctrines the
commandments of men."
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