CHAPTER VI. THE YEAR OF OPPOSITION, PART A.
116. FOR a whole year Jesus pursued His work in Galilee with incessant
energy, moving among the pitiable crowds that solicited His miraculous
help, and seizing every opportunity of pouring His words of grace and
truth into the ears of the multitude or of the solitary anxious inquirer.
In hundreds of homes, to whose inmates He had restored health and joy,
His name must have become a household word; in thousands of minds, whose
depths His preaching had stirred, He must have been cherished with gratitude
and love. Wider and wider rang the echoes of His fame. For a time it seemed
as if all Galilee were to become His disciples, and as if the movement
so set agoing might easily roll southward, overbearing all opposition
and enveloping the whole land in an enthusiasm of love for the Healer
and of obedience to the Teacher.
Jesus by the Sea of Galilee.
117. But the twelve months had scarcely passed when it became sadly evident
that this was not to be. The Galilean mind turned out to be stony ground,
where the seed of the kingdom rushed quickly up, but just as quickly withered
away. The change was sudden and complete, and at once altered all the
features of the life of Jesus. He lingered in Galilee for six months longer;
but these months were very unlike the first twelve. The voices that rose
around Him were no longer the ringing shouts of gratitude and applause,
but voices of opposition, bitter and blasphemous. He was no longer to
be seen moving from one populous place to another in the heart of the
country, welcomed everywhere by those who waited to experience or to see
His miracles, and followed by thousands eager not to lose a word of His
discourses. He was a fugitive, seeking the most distant and outlandish
places and accompanied only by a handful of followers. At the six months'
end He left Galilee for ever, but not, as might at one time have been
anticipated, borne aloft on the wave of public acknowledgment, to make
an easy conquest of the hearts of the southern part of the country and
take victorious possession of a Jerusalem unable to resist the unanimous
voice of the people. He did, indeed, labor for six months more in the
southern part of the land--in Judea and Perea; nor were there awanting,
where His miracles were seen for the first time, the same signs of public
enthusiasm as had greeted Him in the first months of joy in Galilee; but
the most which He effected was to add a few to the company of His faithful
disciples. He did, indeed, from the day He left Galilee, set His face
steadfastly towards Jerusalem; and the six months He spent in Perea and
Judea may be regarded as occupied with a slow journey thither; but the
journey was begun in the full assurance, which He openly expressed to
the disciples, that in the capital He was to receive no triumph over enthusiastic
hearts and minds convinced, but to meet with a final national rejection
and be killed instead of crowned.
118. We must trace the causes and the progress of this change in the
sentiment of the Galileans, and this sad turn in the career of Jesus.
119. From the very first the learned and influential classes had taken
up an attitude of opposition to Him. The more worldly sections of them,
indeed--the Sadducees and Herodians--for a long time paid little attention
to Him. They had their own affairs to mind--their wealth, their court
influence, their amusements. They cared little for a religious movement
going on among the lower orders. The public rumor that one professing
to be the Messiah had appeared did not excite their interest, for they
did not share the popular expectations on the subject. They said to each
other that this was only one more of the pretenders whom the peculiar
ideas of the populace were sure to raise up from time to time. It was
only when the movement seemed to them to be threatening to lead to a political
revolt, which would bring down the iron hand of their Roman masters on
the country, afford the procurator an excuse for new extortions, and imperil
their property and comforts, that they roused themselves to pay any attention
to Him.
120. Very different was it, however, with the more religious sections
of the upper class--the Pharisees and scribes. They took the deepest interest
in all ecclesiastical and religious phenomena. A movement of a religious
kind among the populace excited their eager attention, for they themselves
aimed at popular influence. A new voice with the ring of prophecy in it,
or the promulgation of any new doctrine or tenet, caught their ear at
once. But, above all, anyone putting himself forward as the Messiah produced
the utmost ferment among them; for they ardently cherished Messianic hopes
and were at the time smarting keenly under the foreign domination. In
relation to the rest of the community, they corresponded to our clergy
and leading religious laymen, and probably formed about the same proportion
of the population, and exercised at least as great an influence as these
do among us. It has been estimated that they may have numbered about six
thousand. They passed for the best persons in the country, the conservators
of respectability and orthodoxy; and the masses looked up to them as those
who had the right to judge and determine in all religious matters.
121. They cannot be accused of having neglected Jesus. They turned their
earnest attention to Him from the first. They followed Him step by step.
They discussed His doctrines and His claims, and made up their minds.
Their decision was adverse, and they followed it up with acts, never becoming
remiss in their activity for an hour.
122. This is perhaps the most solemn and appalling circumstance in the
whole tragedy of the life of Christ, that the men who rejected, hunted
down and murdered Him were those reputed the best in the nation, its teachers
and examples, the zealous conservators of the Bible and the traditions
of the past--men who were eagerly waiting for the Messiah, who judged
Jesus, as they believed, according to the Scriptures, and thought they
were obeying the dictates of conscience and doing God service when they
treated Him as they did. There cannot fail sometimes to sweep across the
mind of a reader of the Gospels, a strong feeling of pity for them, and
a kind of sympathy with them. Jesus was so unlike the Messiah whom they
were looking for and their fathers had taught them to expect! He so completely
traversed their prejudices and maxims, and dishonored so many things which
they had been taught to regard as sacred! They may surely be pitied; there
never was a crime like their crime, and there was never punishment like
their punishment. There is the same sadness about the fate of those who
are thrown upon any great crisis of the world's history and, not understanding
the signs of the times, make fatal mistakes; as those did, for example,
who at the Reformation were unable to go forth and join the march of Providence.
123. Yet, at bottom, what was their case? It was just this, that they
were so blinded with sin that they could not discern the light. Their
views of the Messiah had been distorted by centuries of worldliness and
unspirituality, of which they were the like-minded heirs. They thought
Jesus a sinner, because He did not conform to ordinances which they and
their fathers had profanely added to those of God's Word, and because
their conception of a good man, to which He did not answer, was utterly
false. Jesus supplied them with evidence enough, but He could not give
them eyes to see it. There is a something at the bottom of hearts that
are honest and true which, however long and deeply it may have been buried
under prejudice and sin, leaps up with joy and desire to embrace what
is true, what is reverend, what is pure and great, when it draws near.
But nothing of the kind was found in them; their hearts were seared, hardened
and dead. They brought their stock rules and arbitrary standards to judge
Him by, and were never shaken by His greatness from the fatal attitude
of criticism. He brought truth near them, but they had not the truth-loving
ear to recognize the enchanting sound. He brought the whitest purity,
such as archangels would have veiled their faces at, near them, but they
were not overawed. He brought near them the very face of mercy and heavenly
love, but their dim eyes made no response. We may indeed pity the conduct
of such men as an appalling misfortune, but it is better to fear and tremble
at it as appalling guilt. The more utterly wicked men become, the more
inevitable it is that they should sin; the vaster the mass of a nation's
sin becomes, as it rolls down through the centuries, the more inevitable
is it that it will end in some awful national crime. But when the inevitable
takes place, it is an object not for pity only, but also for holy and
jealous wrath.
124. One thing about Jesus which from the first excited their opposition
to Him was the humbleness of His origin. Their eyes were dazzled with
the ordinary prejudices of the rich and the learned, and could not discern
the grandeur of the soul apart from the accidents of position and culture.
He was a son of the people; He had been a carpenter; they believed He
had been born in rude and wicked Galilee; He had not passed through the
schools of Jerusalem or drunk at the acknowledged wells of wisdom there.
They thought that a prophet, and above all the Messiah, should have been
born in Judea, reared at Jerusalem in the centre of culture and religion,
and allied with all that was distinguished and influential in the nation.
125. For the same reason they were offended with the followers. He chose
and the company He kept. His chosen organs were not selected from among
themselves, the wise and high-born, but were uneducated laymen, poor fishermen.
Nay, one of them was a publican. Nothing that Jesus did, perhaps, gave
greater offence than the choice of Matthew, the tax-gatherer, to be an
apostle. The tax-gatherers, as servants of the alien power, were hated
by all who were patriotic and respectable, at once for their trade, their
extortions and their character. How could Jesus hope that respectable
and learned men should enter a circle such as that which He had formed
about Himself? Besides, He mingled freely with the lowest class of the
population--with publicans, harlots and sinners. In Christian times we
have learned to love Him for this more than anything else. We easily see
that, if He really was the Savior from sin, He could not have been found
in more suitable company than among those who needed salvation most. We
know now how He could believe that many of the lost were more the victims
of circumstances than sinners by choice, and that, if He drew the magnet
across the top of the rubbish, it would attract to itself many a piece
of precious metal. The purest-minded and highest-born have since learned
to follow His footsteps down into the purlieus of squalor and vice to
seek and save the lost. But no such sentiment had up till His time been
born into the world. The mass of sinners outside the pale of respectability
were despised and hated as the enemies of society, and no efforts were
made to save them. On the contrary, all who aimed at religious distinction
avoided their very touch as a defilement. Simon the Pharisee, when he
was entertaining Jesus, never doubted that, if He had been a prophet and
known who the woman was who was touching Him, He would have driven her
off. Such was the sentiment of the time. Yet, when Jesus brought into
the world the new sentiment, and showed them the divine face of mercy,
they ought to have recognized it. If their hearts had not been utterly
hard and cruel, they would have leapt up to welcome this revelation of
a diviner humanity. The sight of sinners forsaking their evil ways, of
wicked women sobbing for their lost lives, and extortioners like Zaccheus
becoming earnest and generous, ought to have delighted them. But it did
not, and they only hated Jesus for His compassion, calling Him a friend
of publicans and sinners.
126. A third and very serious ground of their opposition was, that He
did not Himself practice, nor encourage His disciples to practice, many
ritual observances, such as fasts, punctilious washing of the hands before
meals, and so forth, which were then considered the marks of a saintly
man. It has been already explained how these practices arose. They had
been invented in an earnest but mechanical age in order to emphasize the
peculiarities of Jewish character and keep up the separation of the Jews
from other nations. The original intention was good, but the result was
deplorable. It was soon forgotten that they were merely human inventions;
they were supposed to be binding by divine sanction; and they were multiplied,
till they regulated every hour of the day and every action of life. They
were made the substitutes for real piety and morality by the majority;
and to tender consciences they were an intolerable burden, for it was
scarcely possible to move a step or lift a finger without the danger of
sinning against one or other of them. But no one doubted their authority,
and the careful observance of them was reputed the badge of a godly life.
Jesus regarded them as the great evil of the time. He therefore neglected
them and encouraged others to do so; not, however, without at the same
time leading them back to the great principles of judgment, mercy and
faith, and making them feel the majesty of the conscience and the depth
and spirituality of the law. But the result was, that He was looked upon
as both an ungodly man Himself and a deceiver of the people.
127. It was especially in regard to the Sabbath that this difference
between Him and the religious teachers came out. On this field their inventions
of restrictions and arbitrary rules had run into the most portentous extravagance,
till they had changed the day of rest, joy and blessing into an intolerable
burden. He was in the habit of performing His cures on the Sabbath. They
thought such work a breach of the command. He exposed the wrongness of
their objections again and again, by explaining the nature of the institution
itself as 'made for man,' by reference to the practice of ancient saints,
and even by the analogy of some of their own practices on the holy day.
But they were not convinced; and, as He continued His practice in spite
of their objections, this remained a standing and bitter ground of their
hatred.
128. It will be easily understood that, having arrived at these conclusions
on such low grounds, they were utterly disinclined to listen to Him when
He put forward His higher claims--when He announced Himself as the Messiah,
professed to forgive sins, and threw out intimations of His high relation
to God. Having concluded that He was an impostor and deceiver, they regarded
such assertions as hideous blasphemies, and could not help wish-ing to
stop the mouth which uttered them.
129. It may cause surprise, that they were not convinced by His miracles.
If He really performed the numerous and stupendous miracles which are
recorded of Him, how could they resist such evidence of His divine mission?
The debate held with the authorities by the tough reasoner whom Jesus
cured of blindness, and whose case is recorded in the ninth chapter of
John, shows how sorely they may sometimes have been pressed with such
reasoning. But they had satisfied themselves with an audacious reply to
it. It is to be remembered that among the Jews miracles had never been
looked upon as conclusive proofs of a divine mission. They might be wrought
by false as well as true prophets. They might be traceable to diabolical
instead of divine agency. Whether they were so or not, was to be determined
on other grounds. On these other grounds they had come to the conclusion
that He had not been sent from God; and so they attributed His miracles
to an alliance with the powers of darkness. Jesus met this blasphemous
construction with the utmost force of holy indignation and conclusive
argument; but it is easy to see that it was a position in which minds
like those of His opponents might entrench themselves with the sense of
much security.
130. Very early they had formed their adverse judgment of Him, and they
never changed it. Even during His first year in Judea they had pretty
well decided against Him. When the news of His success in Galilee spread,
it filled them with consternation, and they sent deputations from Jerusalem
to act in concert with their local adherents in opposing Him. Even during
His year of joy He clashed with them again and again. At first He treated
them with consideration and appealed to their reason and heart. But He
soon saw that this was hopeless and accepted their opposition as inevitable.
He exposed the hollowness of their pretensions to His audiences and warned
His disciples against them. Meanwhile they did everything to poison the
public mind against Him; and they succeeded only too well. When, at the
year's end, the tide of His popularity began to recede, they pressed their
advantage, assailing Him more and more boldly.
131. They even succeeded thus early in arousing the cold minds of the
Sadducees and Herodians against Him, no doubt by persuading them that
He was fomenting a popular revolt, which would endanger the throne of
their master Herod, who reigned over Galilee. That mean and characterless
prince himself also became His persecutor. He had other reasons to dread
Him besides those suggested by his courtiers. About this very time he
had murdered John the Baptist. It was one of the meanest and foulest crimes
recorded in history, an awful instance of the way in which sin leads to
sin, and of the malicious perse-verance with which a wicked woman will
compass her revenge. Soon after it was committed, his courtiers came to
tell him of the supposed political designs of Jesus. But, when he heard
of the new prophet, an awful thought flashed through his guilty conscience.
'It is John the Baptist,' he cried, 'whom I beheaded; he is risen from
the dead.' Yet he desired to see Him, his curiosity getting the better
of his terror. It was the desire of the lion to see the lamb. Jesus never
responded to his invitation. But just on that account Herod may have been
the more willing to listen to the suggestions of his courtiers, that he
should arrest Him as a dangerous person. It was not long before he was
seeking to kill Him. Jesus had to keep out of his way, and no doubt this
helped, along with more important things, to change the character of His
life in Galilee during the last six months of His stay there.
132. It had seemed for a time as if His hold on the mind and the heart
of the common people might become so strong as to carry irresistibly a
national recognition. Many a movement, frowned upon at first by authorities
and dignitaries, has, by committing itself to the lower classes and securing
their enthusiastic acknowledgment, risen to take possession of the upper
classes and carry the centers of influence. There is a certain point of
national consent at which any movement which reaches it becomes like a
flood, which no amount of prejudice or official dislike can successfully
oppose. Jesus gave Himself to the common people in Galilee, and they gave
Him in return their love and admiration. Instead of hating Him like the
Pharisees and scribes, and calling Him a glutton and a wine-bibber, they
believed Him to be a prophet; they compared Him with the very greatest
figures of the past, and many, according as they were more struck with
the sublime or with the melting side of His teaching, said He was Isaiah
or Jeremiah risen from the dead. It was a common idea of the time that
the coming of the Messiah was to be preceded by the rising again of some
prophet. The one most commonly thought of was Elijah. Accordingly some
took Jesus for Elijah. But it was only a precursor of the Messiah they
supposed Him to be, not the Messiah Himself. He was not at all like their
conception of the coming Deliverer, which was of the most grossly material
kind. Now and then, indeed, after He had wrought some unusually striking
miracle, there might be raised a single voice or a few voices, suggesting,
Is this not He? But, wonderful as were His deeds and His words, yet the
whole aspect of His life was so unlike their preconceptions, that the
truth failed to suggest itself forcibly and universally to their minds.
133. At last, however, the decisive hour seemed to have arrived. It was
just at that great turning-point to which allusion has frequently been
made--the end of the twelve months in Galilee. Jesus had heard of the
Baptist's death, and immediately hurried away into a desert place with
His disciples, to brood and talk over the tragic event. He sailed to the
eastern side of the lake and, landing on the grassy plain of Bethsaida,
ascended a hill with the Twelve. But soon at its foot there gathered an
immense multitude to hear and see Him. They had found out where He was,
and gathered to Him from every quarter. Ever ready to sacrifice Himself
for others, He descended to address and heal them. The evening came on,
as His discourse prolonged itself, when, moved with a great access of
compassion for the helpless multitude, He wrought the stupendous miracle
of feeding the five thousand. Its effect was overwhelming. They became
instantaneously convinced that This was none other than the Messiah, and,
having only one conception of what this meant, they endeavored to take
Him by force and make Him a king; that is, to force Him to become the
leader of a Messianic revolt, by which they might wrest the throne from
Caesar and the princelings he had set up over the different provinces.
134. It seemed the crowning hour of success. But to Jesus Himself it
was an hour of sad and bitter shame. This was all that His year's work
had come to. This was the conception they yet had of Him. And they were
to determine the course of His future action, instead of humbly asking
what He would have them to do. He accepted it as the decisive indication
of the effect of His work in Galilee. He saw how shallow were its results.
Galilee had judged itself unworthy of being the centre from which His
kingdom might extend itself to the rest of the land. He fled from their
carnal desires, and the very next day, meeting them again at Capernaum,
He told them how much they had been mistaken in Him: they were looking
for a Bread-king, who would give them idleness and plenty, mountains of
loaves, rivers of milk, every comfort without labor. What He had to give
was the bread of eternal life.
135. This discourse was like a stream of cold water directed upon the
fiery enthusiasm of the crowd. From that hour His cause in Galilee was
doomed; 'many of His disciples went back and walked no more with Him.'
It was what He intended. It was Himself who struck the fatal blow at His
popularity. He resolved to devote Himself thenceforward to the few who
really understood Him and were capable of being the adherents of a spiritual
enterprise.
Chapter 5 Part C
Chapter 6 Part B
This text is from James Stalker's Life of Christ. New York, London, Edinburgh, etc.: Fleming H. Revell Co., 1909. Transcribed by David Ash. Used by permission of David Ash, 2 March 2005. David Ash, pastor of Shiloh
Baptist Church, has placed several worthwhile texts online. View his list here. Images are from the CHI archives.