2017-01-22 Luke 20:1-8 Who Gave Jesus The Right?
Notes
Transcript
WHO GAVE JESUS THE RIGHT?
(Luke 20:1-8)
January 22, 2017
Read Lu 20:1-8 The issue in this parable is, who is Jesus? With all the
evidence from Jesus’ life of His divine authority, people stand in judgment of
Him at great risk. Bob Hope had a great one-liner in 1984 after Walter
Mondale lost his presidential bid to Ronald Reagan. Mondale had objected to
Xn’s support for Reagan. Hope said, “Remember? Mondale said God had no
place in politics. Apparently God feels the same way about Mondale.”
Well, in this passage Jesus encounters Israel’s national leaders who thought
Jesus had no place in their religious or political life. Perhaps you are one of
many who have taken the same position – that Jesus has no place in your life!
Then this is for you. It is a fascinating account that plays out in four stages
that will help us understand the danger and folly of sitting in judgment of
Jesus. Those who reject Him will find that God has no time for them either.
I.
An Iniquitous Inquiry
This is probably Tuesday of the last week before Jesus’ death. He cleansed the
temple yesterday, restoring it to its rightful teaching purpose for a couple of
days. He will be interrupted by various groups of brilliant but unbelieving men
desperate to trap Him into saying something wrong so the fawning crowds
will turn against Him. But never will He be more brilliant than He is on this
day or two in turning every effort back on those who make these attempts.
First to come -- “the chief priests and the scribes with the elders.” This
designation almost certainly means that this was an official delegation
representing the leadership of Israel – the Sanhedrin. The Sanhedrin was a
council of 71 men from elite background consisting of chief priests – high
ranking priests – scribes – highly educated Pharisees who were expert at the
tangled web of tradition they’d built up around Moses’ Law – and elders,
political leaders of local tribes who had been assigned to leadership in
Jerusalem. Jesus, by His unprecedented entry to the city and cleansing of their
domain, the temple, represented a national threat to these men. They’ve now
sent their best and brightest to undermine Jesus’ popularity. “Came up” is an
aggressive word indicating harmful intent. They’re after Jesus.
To do that, they’ve devised a clever question. It is not intended to solicit
information; it is intended to subtly embarrass and denounce Jesus without
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confronting Him head-on which would have angered the crowd. “Tell us by
what authority you do these things?” “These things” certainly includes the
cleansing of the temple, but because it is plural, it extends backward to His
spectacular entry into the city which they had tried to denounce at the time (Lu
19:39), and to all of His previous offenses – forgiving sin, healing on the
Sabbath, calling them out as hypocrites. They’ve come up with a relatively
polite way to say, “Who in the world do you think you are?!”
The question is intended to sound reasonable. “Who is it that gave you this
authority?” They, and everyone in the crowd, knows Jesus is operating in their
domain. They call the shots in the temple. But with a still adoring crowd
around Him, they are reluctant to challenge Him head-on, so they say, “By the
way, Jesus, who exactly was it that gave you authority to take the law into
your own hands?” Gentle on the outside – hostile on the inside.
They thought they had Him boxed in. He couldn’t say He had their authority;
everyone knew He didn’t. If He said He had no authority, He would be
discredited with the crowd. But their fondest expectation was that He would
do as usual – claim that His authority came from God who was uniquely His
Father. Then they could accuse Him of blasphemy. Furthermore, if He actually
claimed to be Messiah, they could make the case with the Romans that He
represented a threat toward them (after all, that’s why the crowd was so
persistent, hoping He would lead a revolt). They had created a question to
which there was no right answer. Jesus would be discredited no matter what.
But they drastically underestimated Jesus. They would never accept His
identity as God in the flesh. Anytime you assign Jesus to a lesser category than
who He really is, you are in denial of reality. That can only end in disaster.
You can deny the law of gravity and step off the Empire State Building. But
you will shortly find your denial did not change reality. And that’s what Jesus
enemies are about to find out. Their denial of His divine authority did not
negate His divine authority. Reality always wins in the end.
II.
A Cutting Comeback
In this case, Jesus quickly turns the tables. He answers a question with a
question to uncover the hostile, hypocritical intent of His enemies. Brilliant!
“3 He answered them, “I also will ask you a question. Now tell me, 4 was the
baptism of John from heaven or from man?” You talk about a zinger from left
field, here it is. John the Baptist was long ago and far away by this time – dead
for 2 years. A defense attorney would have quickly objected, “Relevance?”
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But, in fact, Jesus’ question is exceedingly relevant and the whole crowd knew
it. Why? Because Jesus and John were tied at the hip. Jesus was baptized by
John at the beginning of His ministry. John consistently pointed forward to
Jesus, identifying Him in Jn 1:29 as “the lamb of God who takes away the sin
of the world.” They preached the same message: “Repent, for the kingdom of
God is at hand.” Jesus had identified John as the greatest of the OT prophets
and said in Matt 11:14 that John would have been the fulfillment of Mal 4:5
predicting a return of Elijah – if the people had been willing to accept it. If
John’s authority was from heaven, Jesus’ authority is from God as well.
Jesus is pressing life’s most critical question: what do you think of Jesus
Christ? He’s basically saying, “Guys, every word I’ve spoken and every
miracle I’ve performed exhibits my authority. My record speaks for itself.
I’m not here to be judged by you. But you are here to confront the decision
that will save or haunt you for all eternity. What do you think of Jesus
Christ? Is he the God of heaven or merely a man of earth? How say you?”
This is the foremost question for every life. And you’ve got to go against a lot
of evidence to get it wrong. Here’s a man who lived like God, talked like God,
healed like God, cast out demons like God, raised the dead like God and still
people question: “Was He really God?” Reminds me of Dizzy Dean before the
1934 baseball season predicting he and his brother Paul would win at least 45
games for the Cardinals. When a reporter accused him of bragging, Diz said,
“It ain’t braggin’ if you can do it.” He got the last laugh when he won 30
games and Paul won 19 on the way to a world championship. Similarly Jesus’
claims were validated in full sight of thousands of witness, Beloved. His claim
to be God was no idle claim, and that puts all of us in debt to Him.
C. S. Lewis said concerning Jesus’ ministry: “These claims in a mere man
would be egoism carried to Imperial megalomania. The discrepancy
between the depth and sanity, and (let me add) shrewdness, of his moral
teaching and the rampant megalomania which must lie behind his
theological teaching unless He is indeed God, has never been satisfactorily
got over.” He’s right. You can have Jesus as God from heaven, or you can
have a madman suitable for institutionalization. But you can’t have great man.
He just didn’t leave that option open. Is He God or is He not? That’s the
question that now faces Jesus’ accusers. And it creates problems for them.
III.
A Desperate Dilemma
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Keep in mind, these men thought they had backed Jesus into a corner. “By
what authority do you do these things?” But instead He turned the tables on
them: “Was the baptism of John from heaven or from man?” I wish I could
have seen their faces when He said that. They thought they had Him right in
their crosshairs and suddenly they’re the ones sweating bullets. His question
put them on the horns of a desperate dilemma. 5 And they discussed it with one
another, saying, “If we say, ‘From heaven,’ he will say, ‘Why did you not
believe him?’ 6 But if we say, ‘From man,’ all the people will stone us to death,
for they are convinced that John was a prophet.” Suddenly they are the ones
who have no right answer. What a dilemma! If they say what they really
think, the people will turn on them. But the other alternative which would give
credibility to Jesus is unthinkable. So, what to do? They are caught.
Of course, there should have been no dilemma. As official leaders it was their
job to answer questions like these. If John had truly been a prophet ordained
by God, they should have followed him and encouraged others to do so as
well. If he was not, they should have explained the reasons they were rejecting
him, taught the people that and taken their stand. But at heart they were
exactly the hypocrites Jesus constantly suggested they were. Face with life’s
most fateful question – who is Jesus? -- they were fearful of the crowd;
rejecting clear evidence; in denial of reality, trusting their own instincts and
going up in smoke. Quite a dilemma. The question of Jesus often puts people
in that kind of dilemma. These men, unfortunately, did what many do when it
comes to Jesus. They took the easy way out. They said, “We don’t know.”
IV.
A Damning Denial
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So they answered that they did not know where it came from.” “We don’t
know.” No more damning denial exists. We don’t know. Beloved, that is the
one thing you must not say concerning Jesus. “I don’t know?!” Then you owe
it to yourself, to your family, to your friends – to your eternal destiny to find
out. “I don’t know,” doesn’t work. I mean, think about it. Are you really
prepared to stand before God one day and say, “Well, I just didn’t know”?
That was apparently Ben Franklin’s approach. Despite being friends with and
hearing often the great evangelist, Geo Whitfield, and even writing a highly
evangelical epitaph for himself, a few weeks before he died Franklin was
asked by Yale president Ezra Stiles about his faith. Franklin replied, “As to
Jesus of Nazareth … I have … some doubts as to his Divinity, tho’ it is a
question I do not dogmatize upon, having never studied it, and think it
needless to busy myself with it now, when I expect soon an opportunity of
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knowing the truth with less trouble.” That answer sends chills down my
spine. Unbelievers will surely find out with less trouble than examining Jesus’
claims now, but unfortunately eternal consequences attach to rejecting Him in
this life. And “I don’t know” is the same as rejecting. It is a condemning
comment.
You’ve heard about the guy caught in a flood who, when his house was
floating away, climbed up onto the roof to await help. Fortunately a boat came
by and asked if he needed help. He replied that he did not, because he was
praying and believing the Lord to save him. Next a fellow on a surfboard
came by and offered to share it, but again he expressed his faith in the Lord to
save him. Finally a helicopter came by and all but ordered him aboard, but he
refused, steadfast in his faith that the Lord would save him. Shortly after, he
was knocked off his perch and drowned. Arriving in heaven, he found the
Lord and asked, “Lord, I believed that you were going to save me. What
happened?” “Well,” the Lord replied, “I sent a board, a surfer and a
helicopter. What more could I do?”
I hesitated to tell that story because it makes light of such a critical issue. But
it well illustrates the point. Tell God you didn’t know who Jesus was and you
are in essence saying, “God, it’s your fault. You didn’t give me sufficient
information.” And the response is going to be, “Wait a minute. I gave you all
of Creation to speak of my greatness.” Rom 1:20 For his invisible attributes,
namely, his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly perceived, ever
since the creation of the world, in the things that have been made. So they are
without excuse. 21 For although they knew God, they did not honor him as
God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking, and their
foolish hearts were darkened.” The problem wasn’t lack of information; it was
the heart that you foolishly hardened against my truth.
“Furthermore, I spent 1500 years sending my apostles and prophets to
reveal my Person and will in writing, and then I preserved that precious
record against all attempts to destroy it. So you had the Word of God in 5
versions sitting around your house gathering dust. Had you bothered to look
you would have seen Rom 10:17, “Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the
Word of Christ.” You just never took time to look. You didn’t want to know.
“Furthermore, I sent you my ultimate witness. I sent Jesus to you. With
every miracle, He demonstrated that His authority was divine. With every
word, He spoke truth and reality. With His own death He took your sin on
Himself if you would accept it. And with His resurrection I gave evidence to
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the whole world that His message was mine and His authority was mine.”
Heb 1:1-3: “Long ago, at many times and in many ways, [I] spoke to your
fathers by the prophets, 2 but in these last days [I] have spoken to [you] by
[My] Son. . . 3 He is the radiance of the [my glory] and the exact imprint of
[My] nature.” That’s what I did! And you sloughed it all off as unimportant
– to be examined later. Sorry -- that answer will not do. You didn’t lack
information. You lacked the will to know the truth.” Talk about a dilemma.
But it will be too late. Your denial will damn you just as the denial of these
men condemned them. Which it did because note: 8) And Jesus said to them,
“Neither will I tell you by what authority I do these things.” “You deny Me;
you leave Me no choice but to deny you.”
Conc
“By whose authority do you do these things?” It was, of course, by the
authority of God. Any attempt to explain the life of Christ apart from that fails
completely. Here were intelligent men who, in the face of all the evidence to
the contrary, rejected the Lord of Glory right to His face – fearing the crowd
more than they feared the Lord. How could they have missed Him?
Do you really want to know by whose authority Jesus lived? He makes an
amazing statement in Jn 7:16: “My teaching is not mine, but his who sent me.
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If anyone’s will is to do God’s will, he will know whether the teaching is
from God or whether I am speaking on my own authority.” What He’s saying
is if you really want to know whether Jesus was true or false, you can. But the
moral condition is, you must be ready to not only believe but obey. That’s the
issue that really keeps people from Christ. Perhaps it’s the issue that is keeping
you from Christ.
A young man, new to London, came to see John Stott. He said he had given up
going to church; he could not say the Apostle’s Creed without feeling himself
a hypocrite. He no longer believed it. Stott said, “If I were to answer all your
intellectual issues, would you be willing to change the way you live?” The
young man was caught. He smiled and answered, “No.” So it is with all who
reject Jesus. The problem is moral, not intellectual. The atheist Thomas Nagel
was at least honest when he said, “I don’t want there to be a God.” But what
if there is. And what if He really did die for your sins to reconcile you to
Himself? You can be sure if you have no place for Him, He will have no place
for you. He’s earned His place in every life! Don’t judge Jesus; embrace Him.
Let’s pray.
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