HG106-107 Luke 11:14–54
2. The first charge: religionists are ceremonially clean, but inwardly unclean (vv. 39–41).
3. The second charge: religionists obey God in tithing, but ignore justice and love (v. 42).
4. The third charge: religionists crave prominence and honor (v. 43).
5. The fourth charge: religionists mislead others to become unclean and corrupt (v. 44).
6. The fifth charge: religionists burden men with rules and regulations (vv. 45–46).
7. The sixth charge: religionists honor the true prophets of God—as long as they are dead (vv. 47–51).
8. The seventh charge: religionists have taken away the key to the truth about God (v. 52).
it is imperative that our thoughts, our desires, our actions have roots in the faith we confess with our lips.
For example, it was taught that on the Sabbath a man may not carry a burden in his right hand or left hand, in his bosom or on his shoulder. But, he may carry it on the back of his hand or with his foot, or with his mouth, or with his elbow, or in his ear, or in his hair, or in his wallet, if it is carried mouth-downward or between his wallet and shirt or in the hem of his shirt or in his shoe or sandal.
it was an even greater offense to offend against the scribal interpretations that made everything so clear (M. Sanhedrin 11:3)! Thus life had become impossible for the average Israelite in Jesus’ day. Oppressive religion took the spring from his footsteps.
Jesus’ initial woe to the experts in the Law echoes tellingly down through the corridors of the last twenty centuries and rightly falls on us today. We must beware of all expressions of Christianity that place tradition on an equal footing with the Scriptures
Jesus’ contemporaries comprised the most privileged of all generations in Israel’s history. They possessed the accumulated witness of all the prophets. God had sent them the greatest prophet ever—John the Baptist. And then he sent the Messiah himself—the Word of God preaching the Word! Along with him came the Christian apostles who lived out the exhortation to “Preach the Word” (2 Timothy 4:2). The apostolic preaching of the cross was a more glorious statement of the gospel than any previous generation had ever heard. And when Jesus’ generation rejected it, they demonstrated that they were partners with their forefathers in killing the prophets. Indeed, they were far more guilty than their ancestors because they rejected the Word preached by greater prophets and apostles.