Episode 154: Sukkot and the Mystery of the Eighth Day

What do the Parable of the Wicked Tenants, the eighth day, the pilgrimage festivals, and the Fruit of the Spirit all have in common? Everything.

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He began to speak to them in parables: “A man planted a vineyard, put a fence around it, dug out a pit for a winepress, and built a watchtower. Then he leased it to tenant farmers and went away. At harvest time he sent a servant to the farmers to collect some of the fruit of the vineyard from them. But they took him, beat him, and sent him away empty-handed. Again he sent another servant to them, and they hit him on the head and treated him shamefully. Then he sent another, and they killed that one. He also sent many others; some they beat, and others they killed. He still had one to send, a beloved son. Finally, he sent him to them, saying, ‘They will respect my son.’ But those tenant farmers said to one another, ‘This is the heir. Come, let’s kill him, and the inheritance will be ours.’ So they seized him, killed him, and threw him out of the vineyard. What then will the owner of the vineyard do? He will come and kill the farmers and give the vineyard to others. Haven’t you read this Scripture: The stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone. This came about from the Lord and is wonderful in our eyes?” They were looking for a way to arrest him but feared the crowd because they knew he had spoken this parable against them. So, they left him and went away. (Mark 12:1-12, CSB)

Hi, I am Tyler Dawn Rosenquist and welcome to Character in Context, where I teach the historical and ancient sociological context of Scripture with an eye to developing the character of the Messiah. If you prefer written material, I have many years’ worth of blog at theancientbridge.com as well as my six books available on amazon—including a four-volume curriculum series dedicated to teaching Scriptural context in a way that even kids can understand it, called Context for Kids (affiliate link)and I have two video channels on YouTube with free Bible teachings for both adults and kids. You can find the link for those on my website. Past broadcasts of this program can be found at characterincontext.podbean.com and transcripts can be had for most broadcasts at theancientbridge.com. If you have kids, I also have a weekly broadcast where I teach them Bible context in a way that shows them why they can trust God and how He wants to have a relationship with them through the Messiah. All Scripture this week is from the Christian Standard Bible.

So, why on earth would I associate Sukkot with this parable? Because it occurs at harvest time and that is the focus of this next week’s celebrations—beginning tonight for me and perhaps at another time for you based on your calendar and I am going to give you a heads up here; I don’t even remotely care what day you do this on. I just don’t. Been there, done that, played calendar and name police and it never bore anything in me except horrible, prideful, elitist fruit. So, I care about IF you keep it and not WHEN. And even with that, I care about the reasons WHY you are or aren’t keeping it. I never did until the Lord spoke to me about it—and I don’t place human voices on par with His so just because I am saying something and teaching something, just doesn’t rise to the same level as God placing it in someone’s heart. I will never forget the time I was kicked out of a congregation because I had the audacity to wish people “Chag Sameach” on, *gasp*, the wrong day. Got an earful publicly and privately from the leader of the congregation and the people who were commenting on my post were treated deplorably. I got blocked by him and his wife and I never went back. And so, what was gained, folks? Nothing. What was lost? Unity over the big stuff. And with that, I will segue into the whole point of having a harvest festival—the presentation of the best of our fruit to Yahweh.

Each of the three pilgrimage festivals involve the presentation of or celebration of the harvest to honor Yahweh. During the Passover week, on the day after the weekly Sabbath, the first sheaf of barley was presented at the Temple by the priests from their own fields. This occurred on the first day of the week—or it could also be seen as the eighth day aka shemini atzeret. Shavuot, or Pentecost, celebrates the wheat harvest but was also a day when the firstfruits of the wheat harvest, along with the Bikkurim, which was a presentation of the best of the early harvest in baskets, to the priests at the Temple. This also occurred on the first day of the week, or the eighth day. In the Fall, after all of the harvest was in and the tithes presented, the seven-day festival of Sukkot was celebrated—also called the Festival of the Ingathering at the beginning of the agricultural year. This festival was followed by an additional day called, you guessed it, Shemini Atzeret, or the Eighth Day.

The harvest festivals always feature either a prominent (or hidden) eighth day—symbolizing New Creation, new life, new beginnings, and resurrection. It is the presentation of what belongs to Yahweh, being given over to Yahweh. The eighth day was the day of Yeshua’s/Jesus’s resurrection, the falling of the Holy Spirit upon the gathered followers of Yeshua on Shavuot, and the very day when Yeshua cried out, “On the last and most important day of the festival, Jesus stood up and cried out, “If anyone is thirsty, let him come to me and drink. The one who believes in me, as the Scripture has said, will have streams of living water flow from deep within him.”  He said this about the Spirit. Those who believed in Jesus were going to receive the Spirit, for the Spirit had not yet been given because Jesus had not yet been glorified” (John 7:37-39, CSB). Luke tells us that the Transfiguration occurred on the eighth day. The initial priesthood was inaugurated on the eighth day and the fire came down from heaven, consumed the sacrifice on the altar, and the glory of God rested on the Holy of Holies in the Tabernacle. Solomon built the Temple in seven years but it was completed in the eighth month. John tells us that the eighth day is the most important day of Sukkot. And with the Scriptural focus on the historical and spiritual events of the eighth day, now we know why. The eighth day of a male child’s life was the day of circumcision—which was a pointer to the promise of a coming Messiah from the seed of Abraham, through a woman. Which might seem odd but we know from ancient writings that it was believed that a woman’s uterus was considered to be a field and that the man’s sperm was a “baby seed” that needed nothing except a fertile field to grow in. It wasn’t until the 1660’s that they figured out that wasn’t true and that women produced eggs that were a needful part of the process. And that it was a man’s contribution, and not women, who determined gender. If I was to keep going, we could just talk about the importance of the eighth day all through the Bible. But I want to talk about the harvest.

In the Parable of the Wicked Tenants, Yeshua hearkens back to what was just an unapologetic, in your face parable based on Isaiah 5:1-7: “I will sing about the one I love, a song about my loved one’s vineyard: The one I love had a vineyard on a very fertile hill. He broke up the soil, cleared it of stones, and planted it with the finest vines. He built a tower in the middle of it and even dug out a winepress there. He expected it to yield good grapes, but it yielded worthless grapes. So now, residents of Jerusalem and men of Judah, please judge between me and my vineyard. What more could I have done for my vineyard than I did? Why, when I expected a yield of good grapes, did it yield worthless grapes? Now I will tell you what I am about to do to my vineyard: I will remove its hedge, and it will be consumed; I will tear down its wall, and it will be trampled. I will make it a wasteland. It will not be pruned or weeded; thorns and briers will grow up. I will also give orders to the clouds that rain should not fall on it. For the vineyard of the Lord of Armies is the house of Israel, and the men of Judah, the plant he delighted in. He expected justice but saw injustice; he expected righteousness but heard cries of despair.”

This was rich in meaning to any agricultural society—to work hard all year and to be rewarded with a bad or insufficient harvest. To plant hedges in order to keep out foxes and walls to keep out thieves and wandering livestock. This is a vineyard that was given every advantage—from the vinestock to the excellent soil to the care it was provided. But the grapes were worthless and were to be left vulnerable. In context, this was spoken to a people who were not only idolatrous, which is bad enough, but also oppressive. The vulnerable were crying out because the powerful were exploiting them, enslaving them, and robbing them. They were misusing the bounty that the Lord had provided and were trampling on “the least of these.” They cried out, and Yahweh heard their cries and decided to act. And of course, the wealthy ended up slaughtered and exiled while the poor were allowed to remain in the Land when the Babylonians destroyed Jerusalem and the Temple, both of which had been defiled and violated through idolatry, oppression, treachery, and the shedding of innocent blood. The Jews of the first century decried these terrible sins and felt that due to their Torah observance, that they were nothing like that generation. They were wrong. You can legalistically keep Torah and still act corruptly—all you need are loopholes and creative arguments and proof-texting and cherry-picking of Scripture. You know, like we still do now when we want to get out of Yeshua’s really difficult commands in the Sermon on the Mount and we want to overrule Him. Or ditch Paul when he echoes that we shouldn’t act like jerks?

Now, this was a well-known parable from Isaiah and Yeshua is going to build His own, counting on His audience having heard it before and especially the literate elites. If you remember from my series on Mark, Yeshua spoke in parables when He (a) didn’t want the hardhearted to understand what He was teaching, and (b) when He wanted to be clear enough to be understood yet obscure enough that the subjects of His parables wouldn’t be able to say anything for fear of admitting it was about them. This is both.

He began to speak to them in parables: “A man planted a vineyard, put a fence around it, dug out a pit for a winepress, and built a watchtower. Then he leased it to tenant farmers and went away.

This was very common during those days, for an absentee landowner to be nowhere near their land in Judea and Galilee or to even be foreigners. Oftentimes, tenant farmers were actually the former owners of the Land who had lost it due to the severe taxation they experienced from Rome, the Temple elites and Herod’s corrupt tax collectors. It was sadly normal to work your own land, for someone else, to whom you owe a large portion of the harvest. Right off, the crowd would have felt hostility toward the nasty colonizing landowner profiting off their oppression. They are not thinking about Yahweh as the owner yet.

At harvest time he sent a servant to the farmers to collect some of the fruit of the vineyard from them. But they took him, beat him, and sent him away empty-handed.

There was doubtless a collective smirk and nodding in approval from the gathered audience. “Yeah, that’s how you treat those danged Romans!” What they couldn’t say was “those danged chief priests” who had grown incredibly wealthy from owning and taxing the businesses around and even on the Temple Mount. They were buying up the land of people who couldn’t burden the tithe and the taxation together. They are totally thinking about Romans taking advantage of their poverty by demanding produce, the Temple elites doing the same, and taxation at this point. Social banditry was on the rise (think if Robin Hood was Jewish) and these bandits were very popular because of the revenge they took on the wealthy.

Again, he sent another servant to them, and they hit him on the head and treated him shamefully. Then he sent another, and they killed that one. He also sent many others; some they beat, and others they killed.

Of course, in retrospect, we see the treatment of the prophets in pre-exilic Israel and Judea—the audience is just enjoying the vicarious violence that they could never get away with perpetrating against the villains among them.

He still had one to send, a beloved son. Finally, he sent him to them, saying, ‘They will respect my son.’ But those tenant farmers said to one another, ‘This is the heir. Come, let’s kill him, and the inheritance will be ours.’ So, they seized him, killed him, and threw him out of the vineyard.

This wasn’t as strange as it sounds to our modern ears. You’ve heard the expression, “Possession is nine tenths of the law” right? An owner from far away might not have the means to send soldiers and with so many dead servants to show for all this—if he hasn’t sent them yet, he probably can’t. And if he gives up on getting anything from the land, he may give up. But they had to be thinking, “What a colossal idiot this guy is, sending his son when they killed all the servants.” Unless the son was a Roman citizen, even the government wouldn’t much care. Unless they got a really big bribe or something.

What then will the owner of the vineyard do? He will come and kill the farmers and give the vineyard to others.

Okay, it just stopped being fun and subversive, darnit. That fire sure got doused in a hurry. Yeshua has stopped being entertaining and now He has shocked them back into reality. There will be consequences. No gain. He isn’t talking about a revolution where they all take back their land. The tenants would have been better off just parting with the harvest due their landlord instead of leaving their wives and children widowed and orphaned. The fairy tale is over and Yeshua has just totally doused all of the crowd’s hopes that He would be leading such a revolt against the powers that be. Their collective hopes are dashed. He is not the revolutionary Messiah they are looking for. And if it had ended there, that’s how everyone might have perceived it. Except Yeshua buried the lede and is now going to change the entire meaning:

Haven’t you read this Scripture: The stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone. This came about from the Lord and is wonderful in our eyes?” They were looking for a way to arrest him but feared the crowd because they knew he had spoken this parable against them. So, they left him and went away.

Oh yeah, He went there. First, He talked about reading that Scripture so He isn’t talking to the overwhelmingly illiterate crowd. He’s talking to the educated Temple elites. Most everyone else had only heard that Scripture. We have to be really attentive when reading the Bible because it was (all of it) given to a culture that transmitted and received information orally. Writing and reading was rarely needed and not being able to read or write wasn’t a disadvantage until quite recently—after the development of the printing press, really. Authority was vested in the original speaker and not in the written word (I am talking about this a lot in the study series that I will continue with next week). So pay attention when the word writing is used, make sure it isn’t a mistranslation of simply something that is being communicated—because we consider the written text to be best but they knew that the words were only truly authoritative because without the proper tone applied to them, they could be completely twisted. Just like on Facebook when people see something they disagree with and assume that the tone is hostile. Yeshua, for example, being the logos is the spoken word of God. It wasn’t just what He said but how He said it.

Anyway, the landlord is suddenly Yahweh, the servants are the prophets, and even someone called “the Son” isn’t safe. Yeshua is quoting Psalm 118:22 and hinting at Isaiah 28:16, where what the people have rejected was the most important thing of all. And they all know it now—but the reference to reading wouldn’t apply to more than a few of them. They wouldn’t have missed it. It would be like if I said something to a crowd like, “Well, when YOU voted that person into office,” and anyone who wasn’t a citizen or too young, or a convicted felon would perceive that comment differently than someone who could legally vote. What we hear is different depending on what is normative for us. When we hear read or write, it doesn’t register because it is normative and assumed that everyone can.

But what does all this have to do with Sukkot? It has everything to do with Sukkot. Getting back to the beginning, each pilgrimage festival was about presenting Yahweh’s portion of the harvest to His representatives. He is that landlord in a faraway land. We are the tenants—just as they were. We have an obligation to recognize and honor His right to the fruit of our harvest and so we must labor for good and bountiful fruit to present Him with the best of it, with what He deserves. We are still an agricultural people, spiritually, even if we live in high-rise apartments in cities and can’t even see the ground, much less grow anything in it. Our harvest comes in the form of good spiritual fruit that is nothing if it is only “spiritualized”. Becoming meek, peaceable, humble, loving, joyful, patient, generous, gentle, self-controlled, considering others as more worthy than we are, merciful, trustworthy, just, and serving the least of these as though they were Yeshua Himself—it isn’t optional, it is a condition of truly following the Lamb wherever He goes.

We cannot go where He goes if all we produce is the fruit of the flesh– sexual immorality, moral impurity, promiscuity, idolatry, sorcery, hatreds, strife, jealousy, outbursts of anger, selfish ambitions, dissensions, factions, envy, drunkenness, carousing, and anything similar (Gal 5:19-21, CSB). Let me tell you what these things look like out there now in the “Torah observant” community. Widowed and divorced people promoting the idea that abstinence is only for virgins so that they can have sex while they are dating—I had to unfriend a guy who was pushing that, in private, to women he was interested in. A guy who, get this, was saying that eating the wrong cut of beef was a worse sin than idolatry. Teaching lies after you know it is in error because you don’t want to lose the audience and money you built off it. Idolatry nowadays mostly comes down to greed, sex, and Christian Nationalism—where the state is promoted and politicians are worshiped and the nation is seen as a savior, which requires turning a blind eye to oppression and historical evils. Hatred is rampant over the smallest of disagreements (which goes back to idolatry). Fighting, manipulation, divisiveness, undermining of others in order to build personal kingdoms in service of personal ambition. Porn use, a desire for multiple wives (sex partners), more and more cheap stuff supplied through domestic and overseas slave labor, dependence on military power, alcohol abuse, etc.

Are we presenting rancid fruit, or are we withholding it altogether? Do we have wealth but refuse to share it with the vulnerable? Do we have skills that we refuse to use for the good of the Kingdom? Do we have power and influence but refuse to help the oppressed? There are a great many ways to deny our Lord His harvest. We need to be very mindful of how we handle our own share of it.

Oh look, Yeshua isn’t the only one who can bury the lede…




Episode 76: Mark Part 21–The Mustard Seed and the Galatians Sandwich

This week we have two more growth parables about Kingdom growth which I am going to supplement with one of my favorite teachings–the very uncomfortable “Galatians sandwich.” This is our second to last week in Mark chapter four and it only took us twenty-one weeks to get here!

Transcript below

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Part 21—The Mustard Seed and the Grain of Wheat

26 And he said, “The kingdom of God is as if a man should scatter seed on the ground. 27 He sleeps and rises night and day, and the seed sprouts and grows; he knows not how. 28 The earth produces by itself, first the blade, then the ear, then the full grain in the ear. 29 But when the grain is ripe, at once he puts in the sickle, because the harvest has come.” 30 And he said, “With what can we compare the kingdom of God, or what parable shall we use for it? 31 It is like a grain of mustard seed, which, when sown on the ground, is the smallest of all the seeds on earth, 32 yet when it is sown it grows up and becomes larger than all the garden plants and puts out large branches, so that the birds of the air can make nests in its shade.” 33 With many such parables he spoke the word to them, as they were able to hear it. 34 He did not speak to them without a parable, but privately to his own disciples he explained everything.

Today we are going to talk about the second and third growth parable. The Parable of the Sower was the first. These parables all have as their theme some kind of Kingdom-related growth. The first covered our growth or lack of growth based upon how we respond to the Word of God and particularly the Word of the Gospel sowed through Yeshua/Jesus. But, despite this being another two parables concerning seeds, neither will have the seed functioning as the Word of God again. Instead, these are “Kingdom of God” parables that start out with some variant of “The Kingdom of God is like” or “What is the Kingdom of God like?” Remember that parables are extended metaphors or similes comparing one thing to another, but a metaphor is never an absolute. Your eyes might be like the sea before a storm, but that doesn’t mean Buttercup is going to get struck by lightning or swept overboard if she sticks around. Parables are “like” a situation or thing but they are also “not like” the situation or thing. If we get bogged down too much in trying to force the analogies into equivalencies, where everything perfectly matches up, we will stretch and ruin the message of the Word. Believe me, there is more than enough there as it is and we don’t need to go beyond Yeshua’s beautiful Kingdom messages here.

Hi, I am Tyler Dawn Rosenquist and welcome to Character in Context, where I teach the historical and ancient sociological context of Scripture with an eye to developing the character of the Messiah. If you prefer written material, I have five years’ worth of blog at theancientbridge.com as well as my six books available on amazon—including a four-volume curriculum series dedicated to teaching Scriptural context in a way that even kids can understand it, called Context for Kids—and I have two video channels on YouTube with free Bible teachings for both adults and kids. You can find the link for those on my website. Past broadcasts of this program can be found at characterincontext.podbean.com and transcripts can be had for most broadcasts at theancientbridge.com

All Scripture this week comes courtesy of the ESV, the English Standard Version but you can follow along with whatever Bible you want. A list of my resources can be found attached to the transcript for Part two of this series at theancientbridge.com.

26 And he said, “The kingdom of God is as if a man should scatter seed on the ground.

Right away, “The Kingdom of God is as if” and so we know that Yeshua is going to share a “mystery” about how the Kingdom works. In this case, the picture is incredibly familiar. A man scatters seed on the ground and so far, it sounds very much like the parable of the sower, but it isn’t. We really have to push away that desire of needing to use the one to interpret the other. This, by the way, is also called a similitude. Oh boy, you didn’t think you were going to have an English lesson today, right? A similitude is when one thing closely resembles another. So, we pull back away from the Parable of the Sower and we just allow the word picture to form in our heads because this is what Yeshua’s audience would have done. Picture it, a man scatters seed on the ground.

 27 He sleeps and rises night and day, and the seed sprouts and grows; he knows not how. 

First, I want you to notice that it says nothing at all about the soil or wasted or fruitless seed. The man has scattered seed and then he sleeps and rises, night and day, as Jewish/Biblical days are reckoned as beginning and ending at sundown. I imagine most of you know this. As the man does nothing, the seed sprouts and grows. Agriculture in ancient Israel was wholly dependent on rainfall. If it did not rain, the crops died and there would be famine. No sprinkler systems, no diverting water from the Nile like in the movie King of Dreams, okay? They were 100% dependent upon God supplying the rains. We just can’t even come close to imagining what it was like to live under those conditions because we have a lot of amazing tech. I live in the high desert here in Idaho where we divert water from the Snake River into canals but not in first-century Israel.

I personally imagine this as the sowing of the barley right after the Festival of Sukkot/Tabernacles at the time of the early rains. And I know that may jar your sensibilities but the agricultural year in Israel began in the seventh month, not the first and so they had the early rains in the fall after the festival and the late rains in the Spring after the barley harvest and Passover. We know this from the Gezer calendar, which I did a teaching about for Yom Teruah/ Rosh Hashanah/Feast of Trumpets last year. They would work hard to get that barley seed scattered and then they would plow it into the ground and then they would pray for adequate rainfall over the winter to grow and sustain the barley. This was the time of year when the wadis would go from dry mini canyons to deadly rushing rivers in a matter of minutes as the rain from the high country flowed in and swept away everything in its path.

And so, there is nothing else to do. He has completed his agricultural sowing for the season, until the spring and he cannot do anything to help the seeds live or grow. But, without his assistance, the seeds do sprout, and they do grow, but he has no idea how it is happening. Science is fun and all those little videos about the seed sprouting under the ground and all the biological processes and we know all that stuff and about their genetic coding telling them to do it, but all this man knows is that it works, right? It’s going to end up feeding his family. Nothing else is really important.

The key here that Yeshua is communicating is that the growth of the seed is a mystery but grow it does. If a seed is placed in soil and if there is adequate rainfall, it will always grow. It is an incontrovertible fact of life. Just as the seed emerges from the soil and becomes a mature plant, the Kingdom was coming in a way that could not be foreseen until it suddenly erupted and began growing out of control after Pentecost.

28 The earth produces by itself, first the blade, then the ear, then the full grain in the ear. 

All the sower did was scatter the seed and plow it in. The “earth” does the rest with no help from the sower, who proverbially sleeps all winter long. But the growth is not out of order or erratic—one thing at a time, in logical order. This is not an unnatural thing but a sane and ordered occurrence. Growth is always like that—no one except Mithras springs to life full-grown from a rock. You see the growth, step by step, even if you don’t quite understand why it is happening. It was predictable only in that it would happen—not in the why or how it occurred.

29 But when the grain is ripe, at once he puts in the sickle, because the harvest has come.”

Here’s the farmer back again, who was away from the grain all winter just praying for rain at the right times. He returns at the harvest and puts His sickle to the grain. I want you to notice the word translated “grain” here. It is karpas, meaning fruit.  This isn’t the word for wheat, sitos, or barley, krithinos, but the word for fruit. And you probably know where I am going with this because yes, it is the same Greek word used for the fruit of the Spirit. Let’s see where else this word karpos pops up because it will be important:

Bear fruit in keeping with repentance. And do not presume to say to yourselves, ‘We have Abraham as our father,’ for I tell you, God is able from these stones to raise up children for Abraham.  Even now the axe is laid to the root of the trees. Every tree therefore that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. (Matt 3:8-10, John the Baptist)

“Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing but inwardly are ravenous wolves.  You will recognize them by their fruits. Are grapes gathered from thornbushes, or figs from thistles?  So, every healthy tree bears good fruit, but the diseased tree bears bad fruit. A healthy tree cannot bear bad fruit, nor can a diseased tree bear good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. Thus you will recognize them by their fruits. (Matt 7:15-18)

But those that were sown on the good soil are the ones who hear the word and accept it and bear fruit, thirtyfold and sixtyfold and a hundredfold.” (Mark 4:20, Parable of the Sower)

And he told this parable: “A man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard, and he came seeking fruit on it and found none. And he said to the vinedresser, ‘Look, for three years now I have come seeking fruit on this fig tree, and I find none. Cut it down. Why should it use up the ground?’ And he answered him, ‘Sir, let it alone this year also, until I dig around it and put on manure. Then if it should bear fruit next year, well and good; but if not, you can cut it down.’” (Luke 13:6-9)

“I am the true vine, and my Father is the vinedresser. Every branch in me that does not bear fruit he takes away, and every branch that does bear fruit he prunes, that it may bear more fruit. Already you are clean because of the word that I have spoken to you. Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me. I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing. If anyone does not abide in me he is thrown away like a branch and withers; and the branches are gathered, thrown into the fire, and burned.  If you abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you. By this my Father is glorified, that you bear much fruit and so prove to be my disciples. (John 15:1-8)

What do we have over and over again here? God’s expectations for the growth of not only fruit but good fruit among His people. There is good fruit and bad fruit but the parable we are talking about today, the sower does not return until the fruit in the field is mature. Not a few stalks of grain here and there and the rest gets harvested unripe, He waits for the field to be mature—one way or the other. What does mature fruit look like? Galatians 5:22-23

But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control; against such things there is no law.

What does bad fruit look like? Gal 5:19-21 gives us an ugly window into that and I call this the Galatians sandwich because believers enjoy reading most of these and judging the people who do these things. But if the sower is returning for mature fruit, we need to really take a hard look at what bad fruit looks like when it has matured. Because, yes, bad fruit can be ripe and ready to be harvested just like good fruit. Just the outcome is not as positive.

“Now the works of the flesh are evident: sexual immorality, impurity, sensuality, idolatry, sorcery, (yeah. that’s right–death to the perverts, idolaters and drug addicts, ha! those rebellious losers!) enmity, strife, jealousy, fits of anger, rivalries, dissensions, divisions, envy (um… my Spidey senses are tingling, must be the enemy trying to steal my peace, time to move on) drunkenness, orgies, and things like these. (yeah, drunken orgy-goers!) I warn you, as I warned you before, that those who do such things will not inherit the kingdom of God.” (that’s right–those sex-crazed crazed, drunken idol worshipers aren’t inheriting the Kingdom!)

So, we have here what I call the Galatians 5 sandwich, or “the other guy” sandwich. We sure do enjoy calling out the first five and the last two of these–and why? Well, because they are grotesquely obvious sins that only blatant sinners commit, at least in the open, right? No challenge there–and no one feels bad about themselves (not unless they start looking at other, more socially acceptable addictions or questioning themselves about whether watching sex scenes in movies counts as sexual immorality). But we aren’t here to talk about those. We’re here to talk about the works of the flesh that people pass off as righteous zeal or don’t give much thought to at all. Zeal–remember that word, as it will be important later.

Enmity–the state or feeling of being actively opposed or hostile to someone or something. For example: “enmity between Protestants and Catholics”

Whoa there, Nelly! If there is one thing that I see in too many of the people around me, it is open hostility to people and/or things. I see people who hate Catholics so much that they would rather die horrible deaths than give Catholics credit for the good works they do – and those poor fools who do dare to give Catholics credit get called papists or worse. I actually did get called a Jesuit spy once upon a time for something silly—oh yeah, I debunked a lie against the last Pope. I don’t like it when people lie about other folks, no matter who they are. I see people hostile beyond logic towards Jews and Protestants as well – to the point where everything and anything about them has to be mindlessly attacked and discredited – even if good, or at worst, harmless. That’s enmity, living your life in hostility–it is not a Kingdom principle, and more than that, it compromises our ability to love and grow good fruit. And yes, I am sure that, despite the Scriptural warning, the reason why you are personally doing it is entirely justified. (That, boys and girls, was sarcasm. In fact, my eyes rolled so far out of my head when I said it that I had to call my kids to go look for them)

Strife–angry or bitter disagreement over fundamental issues; conflict. For example: “strife within the community”

Disagreement over fundamental issues is not the problem here, you see, but when it becomes angry and bitter–oh yes, big problem. This is when we see the insults and cheap shots brought to the table instead of just sticking respectfully and honorably to the facts at hand. Of course, we don’t limit our anger and bitterness to the fundamental issues, we get angry over the tiny ones as well, our pet doctrines. Of course, our pet doctrines are never small–in fact, there are no small issues in Scripture, and failure to recognize that means that someone isn’t really believing the entire Bible. Right? Right? Maybe not. Strife is founded on and rooted in control issues and fear, which are both contrary to the fruit of peace and self-control. There are things to stand our ground on, but not with bitterness; stands to take in passion, but hateful anger? Very few issues actually warrant anger, and when that anger morphs into hatred among believers? Except for our issues, because they are the most important, and we always have the discernment and maturity to hate wisely, don’t we? After all, our track record has been spotless so far. (Yes, more sarcasm)

Jealousy–I am going to risk making you really irritated and point out that the word translated as jealousy is zelos–yeah, it looks exactly like the word zealous for a reason. In fact, half the time this is translated, it is rendered “zealous.” Zeal is probably one of the most self-deceiving forces on earth and there is a big difference between the Jews coming to Yeshua in Acts 21:20, who were zealous for the law that they had grown up with and knew inside and out, and when James and Paul combined that same exact word with selfish ambition (James 3.14) and strife (I Col 3:3). Problem with zeal is that I never met a single person who didn’t think their brand of zeal was the righteous kind–you know, like Paul when he was arresting and persecuting believers and holding the coats of those who were stoning Stephen?

Jealousy, the other way to translate this word, is an ugly thing, it is a blinding thing. Twice in my time as a believer, I have had jealous wives after me – the first time because a choir director became strangely fascinated with me (I know, I mean like look at me, right? What gives? Who knew that albino Oompa Loompas were so alluring?) and the second because – honestly, that was nuts because, to me, the guy was just needy and constantly whining and I don’t think that any woman (other than herself) would be attracted to that. I certainly never saw him as anything other than annoying. But jealousy is not a logical thing, it doesn’t look at the evidence, it is suspicion and paranoia driven. It happens in personal relationships, yes, and also in any situation where people feel threatened.

Fits of anger–this is the one that applies to me more than any other on the list, boy howdy. Just ask my kids. I am one of those people who just BAM! EXPLOSION. As much as I would like to wage a sarcastic defense of this one, it strikes WAY to close to home for me to even joke about. It isn’t funny because I hurt people with it. None of the works of the flesh are funny, and this one gets unleashed against kids, and innocent bystanders on social media way too often, when we launch into knee-jerk accusations and insults over very little, when even a lot should never move us into this area.

Rivalries–competition for the same objective or for superiority in the same field. For example: “commercial rivalry”

This should never even begin to happen in the faith world, but it sure does. I have seen people in ministry go to great lengths to halt the popularity of others, sometimes over disagreements in doctrine but sometimes simply over audience share. The problem with rivalry in religion is that it is never above board–we shouldn’t be competing against each other but cooperating. Rivalry in ministry leads to one thing and one thing only – the creation of personal Kingdoms and Empires. We can’t build the Kingdom of Heaven by destroying its Living Stones.

Dissensions–disagreement that leads to discord. This goes beyond just being disagreeable in your disagreement (which is shameful enough); it morphs ruthlessly into a form of disagreement that ruptures relationships. Honestly, when I look at the relationships being torn apart by flat earth/spherical earth, it definitely qualifies. And for that matter, by archaeologically unsupported stories about Nimrod being responsible for Christmas, leading us to accuse our loved ones of gross idolatry based on theories and “just so” stories that no archaeologist or ancient Near Eastern historian or Bible scholar has been able to substantiate. People who actually agree that the Word became flesh, worked miracles, was crucified, buried, and rose from the dead, and ascended to the Father–the very idea that they are going to be driven apart by a piddly little nothing of a debate about what shape the earth is, it boggles the mind. Shame on us if we can agree on the craziest (and truest) story ever told, without a doubt in our minds, and we are daring to call such brain candy salvational. There is a reason that Paul said, “For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ and him crucified” (I Cor 2:2).

Divisions – this is what happens when dissensions go too far, and generally is coupled with strife and rivalries. We divide up into little groups that are now created in our own image, which each side firmly believes to actually be God’s image. Got idolatry? Yes, most divisions are entirely pride-based, although we tell ourselves differently. We can’t bear to sit and listen to something we disagree with, not even when we are wrong (not that WE are the wrong ones, oh no, surely not! They are wrong, and probably because of rebellion and on purpose, to boot; we are just defending orthodoxy). Oh man, the stupid things that divide us when we agree about so much.

Envy–a feeling of discontented or resentful longing aroused by someone else’s possessions, qualities, or luck. Since coming into the ministry seven years ago, I see this a lot more than I used to. People in the body unashamedly announcing their envy of other believer’s money, following, children, health, etc. I admit that I myself, being barren, am prone to ugly fits of envy when X is pregnant AGAIN, and when people with healthy, physically sound kids are complaining about things that seem stupid to me as a special needs mom, or when such and such is complaining about the burdens of being pregnant when I got my kids the hard way, through a very messy adoption that cost us just about everything. Did you see what I did there? I vocalized what is usually only in my thoughts, and I did it to show what envy looks like. Should I be mad that some people don’t know the heartache of being barren? Do I want them to be barren? Of course not! Do I want other people’s kids to be disabled so they can get a taste of my life? Heavens no! And the last one, good grief, no one should have to endure that. I wish I was the only member of that club. You see, envy isn’t just about what they have, it’s about unconsciously wishing that someone else was privy to our pain. Envy is entirely selfish and often rooted in ingratitude and pain, and yes, it is a work of the flesh because our pain is no excuse.

These aren’t on a different list from “the biggies”–they are included as equals on the same exact list. And the people who do them will not inherit the Kingdom of God–you see why I push character over knowledge?

Each of these despicable heart conditions are sandwiched in between the outward, obvious works of the flesh–the sins everyone can see. Coincidence? No way. This is the sandwich Paul described when he talked about how flawless he was in his Torah observance, while inside being a murderer. Paul kept the Feasts, he kept the Sabbath, he tithed, he ate clean, he threw coins at beggars in his gate–and he was a murderous wretch on the inside. No one cared because he was keeping the letter of the Law in the strictest sense on the outside. Paul knew what he was talking about, and what he was doing when he wrote this. At least Paul wasn’t making excuses for himself anymore, so when are we going to stop rewriting the works of our flesh as somehow being virtuous and justified acts of righteousness? I tell you the truth, we have to want to see ourselves as villains before the Spirit can even begin to get a word in edgewise. Until then, we are just fakers keeping a set of rules and patting ourselves on the back for being so obedient–but image-bearers? No, that requires integrity inside and out, that requires picking up our Cross and carrying it. It requires pain, and suffering, to be like the very image of the unseen God.

You need to know that, if after reading all that, your response isn’t introspective but a “yeah but what about…” then you have completely missed the point that we are all included in this list, and that this sort of list is meant to offend our flesh. It’s our choice, however, whether we give voice to that flesh or simply tell it to shut up for once and stop making excuses.

Let’s get back to the text and finish up with the very famous Parable of the Mustard Seed.

30 And he said, “With what can we compare the kingdom of God, or what parable shall we use for it? 31 It is like a grain of mustard seed, which, when sown on the ground, is the smallest of all the seeds on earth, 32 yet when it is sown it grows up and becomes larger than all the garden plants and puts out large branches, so that the birds of the air can make nests in its shade.”

Did you know that in medieval times, mustard seed was called “eye of newt”? I mean, come on, you didn’t think witches were going around gathering newts and removing their eyes, did you? Talk about time consuming! No, that was the common household name for mustard seed. I suggest grossing out your kids with that bit of information. “Hey mom, what’s this tangy taste in my sandwich?” “It’s eye of newt crushed and mixed with vinegar, dear.” Mwahahahahahaha.

Mustard seed is proverbially small. There are about 750 seeds to a gram, but that is still much larger than the orchid seeds they knew about and used. Orchid seeds, get this, which are grown for their tubers which are eaten in that part of the world—if you wanted to have enough to equal the size of an aspirin tablet, it would take half a million. But, in the ancient world and particularly in Judaism at that time, the size of the mustard seed was often used for this type of comparison. So, this isn’t an error in the text, it is a proverb using a well-known idiom. Remember that the Bible is about communicating God’s message to His people, it is not a science book. If it was a science book, we would never have any chance of understanding it because our idea of science compared to what God knows is like tinker toys and I say this as a degreed chemist, okay? I mean, what we think we know we really don’t even know compared to what there is to know out there. Yeshua is communicating a principle, not giving a Horticultural lecture.

Pliny had some interesting observations about the mustard plant. He was a contemporary of Yeshua, meaning they lived at the same time. He was quite the Renaissance man when it came to studying out and recording naturalistic facts and such. He could be called the inventor of the modern Encyclopedia and it wouldn’t be too far out of line to say so.

With its pungent taste and fiery effect, mustard is extremely beneficial for the health. It grows entirely wild, though it is improved by being transplanted: but on the other hand, when it has once been sown, it is scarcely possible to get the place free of it, as the seed when it falls germinates at once. (Pliny, “Natural History” 19.170-171; Rackham et al. 5.528-529)

In other words, mustard made life better, but it was a colossal pain in the butt to get rid of once it had taken root. Right now, I am trying to eliminate a morning glory infestation of my yard. You can’t pull it because if you do the roots will go even deeper and the problem is worse. You have to kill the roots all the way down and there is no pretty or easy way to do it. If you have morning glory weeds, you know exactly what I am talking about. Under the right conditions, the above-ground parts can grow up to a foot or more (or a lot more) every day. Their seeds can lay dormant for up to fifty years. I am sorry, but that is just EVIL. But the frustration I have with morning glory is the frustration that the Romans and the Communists and so many other governments over the past two thousand years have had with the seed of the Gospel. It gets planted and it’s going to infect someone. Maybe not everyone but someone and once it does then it’s there in the midst of society and it can’t hardly be gotten rid of. Not to say that there haven’t been successful extermination campaigns in some areas, but that generally just makes the “problem” worse because when unbelievers see the faith and hope and difference in believers as they die, they are profoundly affected by it. This is why it is such a tragedy when believers absolutely bristle and howl and pitch a fit over being opposed. It’s bad fruit. Very bad fruit. I say this often, if we aren’t different from the world then we are no different from the world. You can avoid immorality all you want, but if you lash out when opposed then you are no different than the world. We have to learn to take the blows to the cheek and turn the other one, not hit back. Our egos are irrelevant.

You know, I used morning glories as a modern equivalent but maybe a virus is a better partial modern picture. One that just infiltrates everything and is so hard to get rid of (pre-antibiotics, anyway). Just a thought. Remember, parables are this is “like” this in some way, not this is “exactly” like this in all ways.

33 With many such parables he spoke the word to them, as they were able to hear it. 34 He did not speak to them without a parable, but privately to his own disciples he explained everything.

Again, we have the insider/outsiders language and pay attention to the fact (as we have seen over the last four weeks) that no one was doomed to be an outsider. An outsider could become an insider. Stick around, stick close, and press in deeper, ask the questions. If they stuck around, Yeshua would teach them and they would become disciples. Not the Twelve, but disciples. We know of at least seventy-two more disciples beside the Twelve.

Next week, we start a new series where Yeshua is no longer dealing with opposition from humans but goes back to battling the cosmic forces of nature, demons, and death as the powerful Yahweh-Warrior of the prophets.

 

 




Episode 41: The Fruit of the Spirit in Real Life

I was gone in North Carolina at the Founded in Truth Hannukah Conference all week and so I decided to record on one of my favorite subjects–but don’t worry, next week we will get back to Isaiah and the Messiah–King Cyrus is up next and we will explore how he foreshadows the later deliverance through the Messiah and the Greater Exodus.




Context for Kids Volume 4 Now Available!

Context for Kids Volume 4 is now available at Amazon.com so I am giving you a sneak peak at the first two chapters. This book is, from start to finish, one big lesson on how we are to be true image-bearers of God through following His Messiah, Yeshua/Jesus. The first half of the book talks about our original function, how that was corrupted by the sin of Adam and Eve, and how God directed the rest of the history towards the New Creation on the Cross and what that means in our lives. The last half of the book is an exploration of what the Fruit of the Spirit should look like in our lives based on the life of our Master.

From the back cover: Do you know why Jesus had to come in human form and die a terrible death at the hands of the Roman Empire? We all know the easy answers, but are they too easy? What do the life, death, burial, and resurrection of the Son of God have to do with humankind’s original mission in the Garden? Was Jesus plan B, or was He always the only plan? What does the Law given at Sinai have to do with the ongoing story of redemption? What happened to mankind when idolatry entered the picture, and how did Jesus reverse that damage? Finally, what exactly is this New Creation referred to by Paul in his second epistle to the Corinthians, and why is it one of the central, while least understood, themes of Scripture? New Creation studies is one of the hottest topics among scholars today—one that is radically transforming our concept of what it means to be a disciple of Christ. Arming kids with this knowledge will equip them to live out their faith as adults. Join me as we discover exactly why Jesus had to die by crucifixion—and why that death and resurrection took the polytheistic world by storm. Learn God’s plan for humanity as it existed from the beginning, how humankind corrupted their status as image-bearers, and how the New Creation – inaugurated on the Cross – literally changed everything.

Order here <————

LESSON 1

God Is Not Like Us

For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, declares the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.” (Isaiah 55:8–9, ESV)

What was God telling the prophet Isaiah when He inspired him to write this Scripture? The children of Israel were in terrible trouble; they were divided into two different countries: Israel in the north and Judah in the south. These were the descendants of those who, seven hundred years earlier, were united around the base of Mt Sinai, received the commandments and heard the voice of God speaking from the Mountain, and were sprinkled with the blood of the Covenant. Their children had gone their own ways, and, under bad leadership, were falling into more and more idol worship and cruelty. Isaiah, and all the Bible prophets, called out to Israel and Judah to persuade them to return to God with all their heart, mind, and strength. Sometimes a good king would rise up and lead the kingdom of Judah into more righteous living for a while; but all too often, as soon as he died, a wicked king would take his place and make things even worse.

So, what happened? Well, what always happens — people decide for themselves what God wants and believes instead of listening to what He says He wants and believes. When we do that, we are treating our own thoughts and ways with more respect than His. We are saying that our thoughts are actually the same as, or better than, His thoughts; we are insisting that our ways are the same as, or better than, His ways.

Throughout our lives, people will tell us that the Bible was written by men who were just giving us their opinions; they might even say that those men made up God entirely! Why do they say such things? Well, the Bible presents an incredibly challenging way of life; it tells us to love God first and to love our neighbors in some very self-sacrificing ways. The Scriptures command us to care for the widowed, poor, orphaned, hungry and oppressed. That deprives us of our time and money. We are commanded to kindness and compassion — to honor others more highly than ourselves. God’s Word teaches us which things are abominable — completely unacceptable — to Him. But if those things appeal to us, personally, we might convince ourselves that they really are acceptable to God. In some cases, we may not want to do forbidden things, but because other people do, we might feel so guilty or embarrassed about what the Bible says that we ignore or discount it.

He says, “For I the Lord, do not change.” (Malachi 3:6a, ESV)

Unfortunately, we try to change Him whenever He tells us something that we don’t want to hear. We also try to change Him when we claim that He is like us. Have you ever heard anyone say, “Jesus was a Conservative”? A Republican? A Liberal? How about a Democrat? There are even books on the market claiming such things, but that is a big mistake. What Jesus was, and is, is the very image of the Living God. We will discuss what that means in later lessons. In a nutshell, it is saying that the only entity Jesus is like is God the Father. Sometimes Conservatives and Liberals, Republicans and Democrats, get something right, but it isn’t because Jesus is like them; it’s because they decided to act like Jesus. That’s a HUGE difference. Our job is to become like Jesus because He is like God; He is the only flesh and blood perfect example that we have. Jesus’s example, referred to throughout this book, is going to teach us the differences between true worship and idolatry, true images and false images, and good fruit and bad fruit. Jesus is going to teach us about why He died — and that is to make each of us into a New Creation.

HOMEWORK

This is a really short lesson because I have given you a lot to think about in one day. Did you know that many people, especially adults, go through their entire lives without it ever occurring to them that God disagrees with them on anything? Can you think of an instance where the Bible says one thing but people claim that the opposite is true? Do God’s churches always agree with Him and His Word? Read Isaiah 55:8–9 again, and then read what King Solomon wrote:
What has been is what will be, and what has been done is what will be done, and there is nothing new under the sun.” (Ecc 1:9, ESV)

Do you think we are any different than the people in the Bible, or do we need to be careful not to fall into the same exact traps?

LESSON 2

Made in His Image

There is a weird and mysterious verse in the first chapter of Genesis that tells us God’s intentions in making humans: “Then God said, “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over the livestock and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.” So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them.” (Gen 1.26–27 ESV)

People often ask, “What does that mean? Does it mean that God has a body as we do? Is God a human that looks like us, or is He male and female at the same time?” Well, to answer those questions we need to look at what the word “image” means throughout the Bible.

There are two main kinds of images in the Scriptures — true images and false images. Let’s talk about false images first so we can get a better idea what a true image might be.

We don’t really see it in our modern world, but in Bible days the world was full of false images or idols. Idols were carved or molded figurines of imaginary gods; people would set small ones up in their homes, and priests would set large ones up in temples. Now, contrary to what a lot of people believe, no one thought that these were the gods themselves. They believed that an idol served as an intermediary.

Intermediary — a person or thing that acts as a link between a person and their God/god; a type of mediator.

In the case of idolatry, the idols themselves were just regular clay, wood, or metal — although sometimes they would make them from special “sacred” wood or of metal that “fell from heaven” (a meteorite). What made every idol special in the eyes of the worshiper was the mouth opening ceremony. To make an idol functional, the idol maker or the priest would chant a special incantation and touch a sacred dagger (or some other item) to the mouth of the idol. This was done to fill the idol with the life essence of the god — temporarily or permanently.

Now, why would they do that? Were they trying to trap the god in that idol? Nope.

You see, their gods were nothing like the One True God of the Bible. Their gods needed to eat, sleep, and take baths! It may seem funny, but they really believed that — and still do in some religions even today. They didn’t have one God who created and ran the entire universe single-handedly; they had a whole bunch of gods in charge of specific things. They had a god in charge of the sun and another in charge of the moon, and it was obvious to them that the same god couldn’t do both of those things! They had a god of storms, a god of agriculture, a god of fertility, and…well, they had gods for everything! Their gods weren’t good at multitasking; they could only handle one job!

So what does that mean? Well, it means that each god had a vitally important cosmic function.

Cosmic Function: a heathen god’s area of responsibility, e.g. the sun, agriculture, fertility, etc.

Now here is where this became stressful for ancient idol worshipers: they believed their gods had very important jobs but that they also had to eat, sleep and bathe. If the gods were expected to find food for themselves or take care of their own needs, they might get distracted. Distracted gods weren’t going to do their jobs well: the sun might not come up, the rain might not fall, and the crops might die. Not only that, but the people believed that distracted gods got angry and sometimes meddled with humans just for fun. That was almost never a good thing. People wanted their gods to stay as far away from them as possible — doing their jobs and not making trouble!

So, what to do? Well, they made an idol to represent the god, performed a ceremony to put the life spirit of that god into the idol, and then cared for it. They “fed” the idol, clothed the idol, bathed it, oiled and perfumed it, and put it to bed at night (or during the day). What does that sound like to you? To me, it sounds an awful lot like they were treating the idol as a king or queen, and that is exactly what they were doing. Heathen priests were very much like a palace staff, and ancient temples were palaces for gods. As the palace staff cares for the king or queen so that they can do the hard work of running the kingdom and protecting the people, idols were similarly cared for in order to keep the world functioning properly.

You might be wondering how they fed the idol when an idol obviously cannot eat. Well, they would prepare the best food they could find and set it before the idol. The god would then “spiritually” eat the food while leaving the food itself behind. The priests got to eat the leftovers, of course, but feeding the god through an idol was the only way the people believed the god would not starve to death. They really didn’t think very highly of their gods in a lot of ways.

HOMEWORK/ART PROJECT

This week, I want you to think about false images. We are going to spend the entire curriculum talking about the second commandment and what it means in our everyday lives. In fact, I would like for you to make a poster of Exodus 20:4–6, and throughout the lessons I am going to encourage you to memorize it. It is a verse that a lot of people misunderstand (or don’t fully understand), but by the end of these lessons, you won’t be one of those people!