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Teachings in the Temple: No Holding Back
Mark 12:41-44
Mark 12:41-44 (ESV) 41 And he sat down opposite the treasury and watched the people putting money into the offering box.
Many rich people put in large sums.
42 And a poor widow came and put in two small copper coins, which make a penny.
43 And he called his disciples to him and said to them, “Truly, I say to you, this poor widow has put in more than all those who are contributing to the offering box.
44 For they all contributed out of their abundance, but she out of her poverty has put in everything she had, all she had to live on.”
What would you do with your last penny?
What would you do if the small copper coin I just put in your hand was all the money you have to feed yourself and your family?
And what if it was Sunday, the Lord’s day, the day the people of God bring to God the offerings of thanksgivings for His blessings?
Would you give your last and only penny to the Lord or would you feed your family, trusting God to understand why you’re making your family your immediate priority?
This is dilemma Jesus witnesses and points out to His disciples in the Temple that day.
Most of us, I believe, would hold on to our meager assets and trust God to understand.
Most of us, if we’re honest, would feed our families first and see if there is anything left over for giving to God.
We would see our poverty and remind God of all the rich people who give to Him out of their abundance.
Most of us would rationalize and justify keeping what little we have for ourselves since God already owns everything . . .
else.
Jesus disciples His disciple’s hearts.
Jesus uses this woman’s sacrificial gift of limited personal resources to illustrate not a way of thinking about money or giving but more importantly to uncover our heart attitude toward God Himself.
The truth about God that we embrace most deeply, with our hearts, shows up in our actions.
We express the truth we hold in our priorities, in our values, and in our personal pursuits.
In this example, you can tell a great deal about how a person knows and loves God from how they handle a personal financial crisis.
Jesus does not criticize those faithful people who give out of their abundant wealth.
Their motives and opportunities in this moment are not the point of the comparison Jesus draws.
All He says is that they give out of their abundance.
They have it, they give it freely, they give generously, and well they should, so let’s move on.
It is the widow and her offering upon which Jesus draws our focus.
The Widow Commended by Jesus
A wife in ancient Israel was the responsibility of her husband.
A faithful husband was to be her lifelong provider and caregiver.
He was to love her and supply her needs.
He was to do good to her and for her as best he could with the strength and opportunity he had.
His care for her was to be a living example of God’s love and care for His people, Israel.
If the husband died, the family was obligated by God’s Law to care for her.
They were to return to her the love and nurture which she had invested in them throughout their lives.
But, if the husband died and she had no family, or her faithless family refused to help, she was on her own in a world of closed, locked doors.
She was at the mercy of strangers and the faithfulness of the community in which she lived, whatever that might look like.
This woman’s husband had died.
We don’t know anything more about her context or circumstances except that Jesus recognized the two tiny coins that added up to a penny were all that she had.
The others that day gave out of abundance.
She gave her all.
Abundance.
All.
Jesus, preparing His disciples for life in the kingdom of God, specifically commends those who give their all.
Now, let’s truly understand Jesus here.
He is not commending the amount of one offering over another.
He is not commending the fact of one offering over another.
He is not commending the substance of one offering over another.
Jesus commends the heart attitude of one kind over all the other commendable attitudes visible that day.
Jesus commends the heart of faith that trusts God with their very life and death.
Jesus says, “Look!
See that faith, that attitude, that sacrifice?
That’s not dumb.
That’s not foolish.
That’s not impractical.
That right there is a kingdom kind of heart!”
It is that “all-in-and-up-to-God” love for God that trusts Him implicitly that Jesus commends.
It is the heart of faith that utterly relies on the providence and provision of God for daily bread or dying grace that gains Christ’s attention.
It is the heart of faith willing to lose its life, willing to give up everything in love for God’s glory, the heart of faith counting God worthy of worship and obedience, worthy of our greatest, dearest sacrifice that Jesus points His disciples to and says, “This!
This is how we roll in the kingdom.”
I think there are at least two reasons Jesus points out this woman’s sacrificial love to His disciples.
Two reasons why He makes her attitude and actions an example of what their’s ought to be.
First, in giving her all in love for God she demonstrates God’s own character.
Romans 8:32 (ESV) He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, how will he not also with him graciously give us all things?
Paul points to God as the ultimate example of a sacrificial heart of love!
Out of love, God gave Christ up for us.
He gave the best He had for our redemption!
He did not hold back.
He could have given out of His abundance but He gave His one and only Son.
Jesus did not come on His own, He came because the Father sent Him, the Father gave Him, the Father sacrificed Him as an act of love.
We know that love as a motivating factor for the Father.
Listen to Paul’s inspired, inerrant, infallible description of God’s motivation in giving Christ as the sacrifice for our sin:
Romans 5:8 (ESV) but God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.
And, not only does the life and death of Christ demonstrate God’s love for sinners, it comes with the promise that He Who gave His Son on our behalf will also “with Him, graciously give us all things!”
Do you see that?
God gives His Son, God sacrifices His Son, AND God gives to those who put their trust on Christ, “all things!”
God holds nothing back from those He loves.
He even pours out grace upon grace for His enemies and those who reject Him.
In Matthew 5:45 Jesus declares, “For he makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust.”
Paul, speaking to the people of Athens, says of God, “In Him we live and move and have our being.”
Everyone owes the very gift and continuation of life to God!
Peter tells us that God has given us all things necessary for life and godliness, Paul tells us that God has given us every spiritual blessing in Christ.
It is the nature of God to give generously, lovingly, and sacrificially.
This woman’s heart in her gift reflects the very nature of God Himself making her a prime example for the disciples of Jesus to follow.
But there is another reason, I think, that Jesus uses this woman to disciple His disciples.
In giving all she had to the glory of God this woman reflected the heart and love of Jesus Himself.
Look at Philippians 2:5-11.
5 Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, 6 who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, 7 but emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men.
8 And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross.
9 Therefore God has highly exalted him and bestowed on him the name that is above every name, 10 so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, 11 and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.
This ancient hymn from the early church lays out the heart attitude of Jesus.
He was equal to God, in the form of God, and He let it go.
He gave it up, took on the form of a servant, was born in the likeness of fallen, sinful humanity.
He humbled Himself, He gave Himself to obedience to the will of God.
He gave His life to death on a cross.
In love for God and in love for us, He held nothing back, even though giving cost Him His life.
He held nothing back from accomplishing the salvation of man and the glory of God.
It is to this willingness of faith and love and obedience that Jesus points His disciples.
We don’t know what giving her last penny cost the widow that day.
We do know what giving up the glory of heaven to dwell among us cost Jesus.
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