Sunday, June 7, 2015

Year 5, Day 158: Mark 11

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Authority

  • Authority: Our calling.  This comes from God as king.  Because He calls us as His representatives, He gives us authority to go and do His will.

Authority is a great concept to look at in Mark 10.  We open up this chapter with Jesus telling His disciples to go and find a colt so that He can enter into Jerusalem according to the tradition of Zechariah 9:9.  Jesus is acting on the authority of the Father through the Father’s word.

Then Jesus clears the temple.  This is one of the few acts of righteous anger that we ever see Jesus do.  Because there are so few, this act becomes the iconic reference to defend the actions of people who act violently in the name of God.  But we need to understand this passage in proper perspective.  Jesus does this righteously because God has genuinely called Him to do it.  It isn’t righteous because God is the subject.  It is righteous because God is the origin of the act.  Jesus is righteous because He is acting out of the authority of the Father, not because He is protecting the Father.  God does not need our protection.  God needs our humble submission and willingness to do His will in His authority.

Then Jesus curses the fig tree.  Again we see the authority that the Father has given to Jesus.  Jesus has authority over even nature.  Jesus can wither the natural world, cursing it when it lives apart from God’s will.

Finally, we come to the place of Jesus’ challenge.  I find that this passage is the great capstone to a chapter where authority is at the core.  The religious leaders come before Jesus and ask where He gets His authority.  In turn, Jesus asks them where John the Baptizer’s authority came.  The religious leaders know that they are trapped.  If they say from God in order to please the opinion of the crowd, then Jesus will ask why they didn’t listen and obey.  But if the religious leaders say that John acted out of his own will, they will offend the crowd.  Because the religious leaders care about the authority and the power given to them by the crowd at least as much if not more than the power and authority given to them by God, the religious leaders stumble.  The key here when looking at authority is to make sure that our authority and power come from God.  As Jesus says elsewhere, we cannot serve two masters.  If we aren’t serving God wholly, we probably aren’t actually serving Him at all.

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