Chapter 44
The True Sign
[This chapter is based on Matt. 15:29-39; 16:1-12;
Mark 7:31-37; 8:1-21.]
"Again He went out from the borders of Tyre, and came through
Sidon unto the Sea of Galilee, through the midst of the borders of
Decapolis." Mark 7:31, R. V.
It was in the region of Decapolis that the demoniacs of Gergesa had
been healed. Here the people, alarmed at the destruction of the swine,
had constrained Jesus to depart from among them. But they had listened
to the messengers He left behind, and a desire was aroused to see Him.
As He came again into that region, a crowd gathered about Him, and a
deaf, stammering man was brought to Him. Jesus did not, according to His
custom, restore the man by a word only. Taking him apart from the
multitude, He put His fingers in his ears, and touched his tongue;
looking up to heaven, He sighed at thought of the ears that would not be
open to the truth, the tongues that refused to acknowledge the Redeemer.
At the word, "Be opened," the man's speech was restored, and,
disregarding the command to tell no man, he published abroad the story
of his cure.
Jesus went up into a mountain, and there the multitude flocked to
Him, bringing their sick and lame, and laying them at His feet. He
healed them all; and the people, heathen as they were, glorified the God
of Israel. For three days they continued to throng about the Saviour,
sleeping at night in the open air, and through the day pressing eagerly
to hear the words of Christ, and to see His works. At the end of three
days their food was spent. Jesus would not send them away hungry, and He
called upon His disciples to give them food. Again the disciples
revealed their unbelief. At Bethsaida they had seen how, with Christ's
blessing, their little store availed for the feeding of the multitude;
yet they did not now bring forward their all, trusting His power to
multiply it for the hungry crowds. Moreover, those whom He fed at
Bethsaida were Jews; these were Gentiles and heathen. Jewish prejudice
was still strong in the hearts of the disciples, and they answered
Jesus, "Whence can a man satisfy these men with bread here in the
wilderness?" But obedient to His word they brought Him what they
had,--seven loaves and two fishes. The multitude were fed, seven large
baskets of fragments remaining. Four thousand men, besides women and
children, were thus refreshed, and Jesus sent them away with glad and
grateful hearts.
Then taking a boat with His disciples, He crossed the lake to Magdala,
at the southern end of the plain of Gennesaret. In the border of Tyre
and Sidon His spirit had been refreshed by the confiding trust of the
Syrophoenician woman. The heathen people of Decapolis had received Him
with gladness. Now as He landed once more in Galilee, where His power
had been most strikingly manifested, where most of His works of mercy
had been performed, and His teaching given, He was met with contemptuous
unbelief.
A deputation of Pharisees had been joined by representatives from the
rich and lordly Sadducees, the party of the priests, the skeptics and
aristocracy of the nation. The two sects had been at bitter enmity. The
Sadducees courted the favor of the ruling power in order to maintain
their own position and authority. The Pharisees, on the other hand,
fostered the popular hatred against the Romans, longing for the time
when they could throw off the yoke of the conqueror. But Pharisee and
Sadducee now united against Christ. Like seeks like; and evil, wherever
it exists, leagues with evil for the destruction of the good.
Now the Pharisees and Sadducees came to Christ, asking for a sign
from heaven. When in the days of Joshua Israel went out to battle with
the Canaanites at Bethhoron, the sun had stood still at the leader's
command until victory was gained; and many similar wonders had been
manifest in their history. Some such sign was demanded of Jesus. But
these signs were not what the Jews needed. No mere external evidence
could benefit them. What they needed was not intellectual enlightenment,
but spiritual renovation.
"O ye hypocrites," said Jesus, "ye can discern the
face of the sky,"--by studying the sky they could foretell the
weather,--"but can ye not discern the signs of the times?"
Christ's own words, spoken with the power of the Holy Spirit that
convicted them of sin, were the sign that God had given for their
salvation. And signs direct from heaven had been given to attest the
mission of Christ. The song of the angels to the shepherds, the star
that guided the wise men, the dove and the voice from heaven at His
baptism, were witnesses for Him.
"And He sighed deeply in His spirit, and saith, Why doth this
generation seek after a sign?" "There shall no sign be given
unto it, but the sign of the prophet Jonas." As Jonah was three
days and three nights in the belly of the whale, Christ was to be the
same time "in the heart of the earth." And as the preaching of
Jonah was a sign to the Ninevites, so Christ's preaching was a sign to
His generation. But what a contrast in the reception of the word! The
people of the great heathen city trembled as they heard the warning from
God. Kings and nobles humbled themselves; the high and the lowly
together cried to the God of heaven, and His mercy was granted unto
them. "The men of Nineveh shall rise in judgment with this
generation," Christ had said, "and shall condemn it: because
they repented at the preaching of Jonas; and, behold, a greater than
Jonas is here." Matt. 12:40, 41.
Every miracle that Christ performed was a sign of His divinity. He
was doing the very work that had been foretold of the Messiah; but to
the Pharisees these works of mercy were a positive offense. The Jewish
leaders looked with heartless indifference on human suffering. In many
cases their selfishness and oppression had caused the affliction that
Christ relieved. Thus His miracles were to them a reproach.
That which led the Jews to reject the Saviour's work was the highest
evidence of His divine character. The greatest significance of His
miracles is seen in the fact that they were for the blessing of
humanity.
The highest evidence that He came from God is that His life revealed
the character of God. He did the works and spoke the words of God. Such
a life is the greatest of all miracles.
When the message of truth is presented in our day, there are many
who, like the Jews, cry, Show us a sign. Work us a miracle. Christ
wrought no miracle at the demand of the Pharisees. He wrought no miracle
in the wilderness in answer to Satan's insinuations. He does not impart
to us power to vindicate ourselves or to satisfy the demands of unbelief
and pride. But the gospel is not without a sign of its divine origin. Is
it not a miracle that we can break from the bondage of Satan? Enmity
against Satan is not natural to the human heart; it is implanted by the
grace of God. When one who has been controlled by a stubborn, wayward
will is set free, and yields himself wholeheartedly to the drawing of
God's heavenly agencies, a miracle is wrought; so also when a man who
has been under strong delusion comes to understand moral truth. Every
time a soul is converted, and learns to love God and keep His
commandments, the promise of God is fulfilled, "A new heart also
will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you." Ezek.
36:26. The change in human hearts, the transformation of human
characters, is a miracle that reveals an ever-living Saviour, working to
rescue souls. A consistent life in Christ is a great miracle. In the
preaching of the word of God, the sign that should be manifest now and
always is the presence of the Holy Spirit, to make the word a
regenerating power to those that hear. This is God's witness before the
world to the divine mission of His Son.
Those who desired a sign from Jesus had so hardened their hearts in
unbelief that they did not discern in His character the likeness of God.
They would not see that His mission was in fulfillment of the
Scriptures. In the parable of the rich man and Lazarus, Jesus said to
the Pharisees, "If they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither
will they be persuaded, though one rose from the dead." Luke 16:31.
No sign that could be given in heaven or earth would benefit them.
Jesus "sighed deeply in His spirit," and, turning from the
group of cavilers, re-entered the boat with His disciples. In sorrowful
silence they again crossed the lake. They did not, however, return to
the place they had left, but directed their course toward Bethsaida,
near where the five thousand had been fed. Upon reaching the farther
side, Jesus said, "Take heed and beware of the leaven of the
Pharisees and of the Sadducees." The Jews had been accustomed since
the days of Moses to put away leaven from their houses at the Passover
season, and they had thus been taught to regard it as a type of sin. Yet
the disciples failed to understand Jesus. In their sudden departure from
Magdala they had forgotten to take bread, and they had with them only
one loaf. To this circumstance they understood Christ to refer, warning
them not to buy bread of a Pharisee or a Sadducee. Their lack of faith
and spiritual insight had often led them to similar misconception of His
words. Now Jesus reproved them for thinking that He who had fed
thousands with a few fishes and barley loaves could in that solemn
warning have referred merely to temporal food. There was danger that the
crafty reasoning of the Pharisees and the Sadducees would leaven His
disciples with unbelief, causing them to think lightly of the works of
Christ.
The disciples were inclined to think that their Master should have
granted the demand for a sign in the heavens. They believed that He was
fully able to do this, and that such a sign would put His enemies to
silence. They did not discern the hypocrisy of these cavilers.
Months afterward, "when there were gathered together an
innumerable multitude of people, insomuch that they trode one upon
another," Jesus repeated the same teaching. "He began to say
unto His disciples first of all, Beware ye of the leaven of the
Pharisees, which is hypocrisy." Luke 12:1.
The leaven placed in the meal works imperceptibly, changing the whole
mass to its own nature. So if hypocrisy is allowed to exist in the
heart, it permeates the character and the life. A striking example of
the hypocrisy of the Pharisees, Christ had already rebuked in denouncing
the practice of "Corban," by which a neglect of filial duty
was concealed under a pretense of liberality to the temple. The scribes
and Pharisees were insinuating deceptive principles. They concealed the
real tendency of their doctrines, and improved every occasion to instill
them artfully into the minds of their hearers. These false principles,
when once accepted, worked like leaven in the meal, permeating and
transforming the character. It was this deceptive teaching that made it
so hard for the people to receive the words of Christ.
The same influences are working today through those who try to
explain the law of God in such a way as to make it conform to their
practices. This class do not attack the law openly, but put forward
speculative theories that undermine its principles. They explain it so
as to destroy its force.
The hypocrisy of the Pharisees was the product of self-seeking. The
glorification of themselves was the object of their lives. It was this
that led them to pervert and misapply the Scriptures, and blinded them
to the purpose of Christ's mission. This subtle evil even the disciples
of Christ were in danger of cherishing. Those who classed themselves
with the followers of Jesus, but who had not left all in order to become
His disciples, were influenced in a great degree by the reasoning of the
Pharisees. They were often vacillating between faith and unbelief, and
they did not discern the treasures of wisdom hidden in Christ. Even the
disciples, though outwardly they had left all for Jesus' sake, had not
in heart ceased to seek great things for themselves. It was this spirit
that prompted the strife as to who should be greatest. It was this that
came between them and Christ, making them so little in sympathy with His
mission of self-sacrifice, so slow to comprehend the mystery of
redemption. As leaven, if left to complete its work, will cause
corruption and decay, so does the self-seeking spirit, cherished, work
the defilement and ruin of the soul.
Among the followers of our Lord today, as of old, how widespread is
this subtle, deceptive sin! How often our service to Christ, our
communion with one another, is marred by the secret desire to exalt
self! How ready the thought of self-gratulation, and the longing for
human approval! It is the love of self, the desire for an easier way
than God has appointed that leads to the substitution of human theories
and traditions for the divine precepts. To His own disciples the warning
words of Christ are spoken, "Take heed and beware of the leaven of
the Pharisees."
The religion of Christ is sincerity itself. Zeal for God's glory is
the motive implanted by the Holy Spirit; and only the effectual working
of the Spirit can implant this motive. Only the power of God can banish
self-seeking and hypocrisy. This change is the sign of His working. When
the faith we accept destroys selfishness and pretense, when it leads us
to seek God's glory and not our own, we may know that it is of the right
order. "Father, glorify Thy name" (John 12:28), was the
keynote of Christ's life, and if we follow Him, this will be the keynote
of our life. He commands us to "walk, even as He walked;" and
"hereby we do know that we know Him, if we keep His
commandments."1 John 2:6, 3.
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