Mark2:23-28
Picking Grain On the Sabbath
The Sabbath also commemorated the covenant He established with Abraham and, by extension, the nation of Israel. Once He gave His covenant people the Promised Land, Friday at sundown became a time for feasting and singing, a time when families delighted in their God of provision and protection and set aside work to bond with one another. Then, after the armies of Babylon destroyed the temple in 586 BC and carried the Jews away from their land, the Sabbath became something different in the eyes of the Jews. Having been stripped of so much of their distinct Hebrew culture, they clung to the Law of Moses to maintain their identity and to unite them. During this period of exile, the party of the Pharisees rose to prominence, touting a religious system that made legalism king in Israel. And with it, grace began to fade from Jewish faith.
By the time of Jesus, the Pharisees had transformed the Sabbath into something very different from what God had ordained. To the simple command “rest,” the Pharisees added a long list of specific prohibitions that, ironically, turned this day of rest into a terrible religious burden. They established thirty-nine categories that constituted “work,” all forbidden on the Sabbath: carrying, burning, extinguishing, finishing, writing, erasing, cooking, washing, sewing, tearing, knotting, untying, shaping, plowing, planting, reaping, harvesting, threshing, winnowing, selecting, sifting, grinding, kneading, combing, spinning, dyeing, chain stitching, warping, weaving, unraveling, building, demolishing, trapping, shearing, slaughtering, skinning, tanning, smoothing, and marking.
On this particular Sabbath, Jesus’ disciples gleaned grain as they passed through a field (cf. Deut. 23:24–25), but Pharisaic custom identified such activity as work: “Plucking wheat from its stem is reaping, rubbing the wheat heads between one’s palms is threshing, and blowing away the chaff is winnowing