Freedom from Pharisaical Fasting
Bible Reading:
Introduction
1. The Question
at least three other types of fasts. One type was fasts that lamented national tragedies, such as the destruction of the temple by Nebuchadnezzar (Zech 7:3–4; 8:19); another was fasts in times of crises, such as war, plague, drought, and famine; and a third type was self-imposed fasts for any number of personal reasons (2 Sam 12:16; Ps 35:13).
2. The Answer
There was actually a Rabbinic ruling which said, ‘All in attendance on the bridegroom are relieved of all religious observances which would lessen their joy.’ The wedding guests were actually exempt from all fasting.
in the OT Israel’s husband and lover is not the Messiah but God (Isa 5:1; 54:5–6; 62:4–5; Ezek 16:6–8; Hos 2:19).
3. The Illustrations
3. The Illustrations
3.1 Unshrunk Cloth to Patch
3.2 New Wine into Old Wineskins
3.3 Implications
“Both parables are about the relation of Jesus, of Christianity indeed, to traditional Judaism.” The parables illustrate the radical posture and presumption of Jesus. Jesus is the new patch and the new wine. He is not an attachment, addition, or appendage to the status quo. He cannot be integrated into or contained by preexisting structures, even Judaism, Torah, and the synagogue. He is, of course, neither ascetic nor anarchist, and thus he participates as a human being in human structures.