Monday, April 14, 2014 ~~The Lesson of the Fig Tree
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Zee48
Posts: 789 Member
Lord, please help me NOT to be the fruitless fig tree. Help me Lord in my daily walk with you, help me to be the light that you want me to be in my home, family, work and cyberspace activities.
In Jesus' name I pray,
Amen
Zephra
The Lesson of the Fig Tree
Luke 13:6-9
When Jesus entered Jerusalem, the hosannas and citywide profession of His messiahship were loud and enthusiastic. It must have seemed a stunning triumph.
But Jesus realized that outward appearances don't necessarily indicate universal or even authentic agreement. At the time of the cheering, in fact, He was en route to the temple, where money changers were evidence of that very truth. And so our Savior had wept as He neared the city, because the people "did not recognize the time of [their] visitation" (Luke 19:44) or the way to avoid what was now inescapable judgment.
The gospel writers then inserted a rather curious anecdote about Jesus approaching a distant fig tree in leaf, since He was hungry. Mark 11:13-14 tells us, "He found nothing but leaves, for it was not the season for figs. He said to it, 'May no one ever eat fruit from you again!'"
Why would Jesus, the Creator of fig trees, curse one for not bearing fruit out of season? The question seems baffling—that is, except to those familiar with Middle East fruit crops. They would realize small edible knobs, or taqsh in Arabic, appear with the leaves and fall off before the actual fruit develops. Scholar F. F. Bruce (Are The New Testament Documents Reliable?) explains, "If the leaves appear unaccompanied by taqsh, there will be no figs that year. So it was evident to our Lord . . . [that] for all its fair foliage, it was a fruitless and a hopeless tree."
Then Mark added a significant detail: "And His disciples were listening" (v. 14). Jesus' cursing of the fig tree wasn't some whimsical or annoyed outburst, as some suppose. It was an object lesson on the fruit born of genuine faith, in contrast to the worthlessness of empty religion, which they'd just witnessed in the temple.
This was a crucial teaching for the first-century disciples, whose Teacher would be present just a short while longer. It's also crucial for 21st-century disciples. Our fruitfulness matters greatly to God, but only when it's the genuine article—the fruit of His Spirit, produced as we abide in the vine, Jesus Christ (John 15:5; Gal. 5:22-23). No matter how impressive, works achieved solely through human effort have zero value in our Father's eyes.
What if the Lord checked you and me for spiritual fruit? Would He discover something nourishing, even though we might consider it inconsequential? Or would He find a breathtaking display of leaves that proves to be but a glorious façade?
–Sandy Feit
Copyright 2013 In Touch Ministries, Inc. All rights reserved. www.intouch.org. In Touch grants permission to print for personal use only.
In Jesus' name I pray,
Amen
Zephra
The Lesson of the Fig Tree
Luke 13:6-9
When Jesus entered Jerusalem, the hosannas and citywide profession of His messiahship were loud and enthusiastic. It must have seemed a stunning triumph.
But Jesus realized that outward appearances don't necessarily indicate universal or even authentic agreement. At the time of the cheering, in fact, He was en route to the temple, where money changers were evidence of that very truth. And so our Savior had wept as He neared the city, because the people "did not recognize the time of [their] visitation" (Luke 19:44) or the way to avoid what was now inescapable judgment.
The gospel writers then inserted a rather curious anecdote about Jesus approaching a distant fig tree in leaf, since He was hungry. Mark 11:13-14 tells us, "He found nothing but leaves, for it was not the season for figs. He said to it, 'May no one ever eat fruit from you again!'"
Why would Jesus, the Creator of fig trees, curse one for not bearing fruit out of season? The question seems baffling—that is, except to those familiar with Middle East fruit crops. They would realize small edible knobs, or taqsh in Arabic, appear with the leaves and fall off before the actual fruit develops. Scholar F. F. Bruce (Are The New Testament Documents Reliable?) explains, "If the leaves appear unaccompanied by taqsh, there will be no figs that year. So it was evident to our Lord . . . [that] for all its fair foliage, it was a fruitless and a hopeless tree."
Then Mark added a significant detail: "And His disciples were listening" (v. 14). Jesus' cursing of the fig tree wasn't some whimsical or annoyed outburst, as some suppose. It was an object lesson on the fruit born of genuine faith, in contrast to the worthlessness of empty religion, which they'd just witnessed in the temple.
This was a crucial teaching for the first-century disciples, whose Teacher would be present just a short while longer. It's also crucial for 21st-century disciples. Our fruitfulness matters greatly to God, but only when it's the genuine article—the fruit of His Spirit, produced as we abide in the vine, Jesus Christ (John 15:5; Gal. 5:22-23). No matter how impressive, works achieved solely through human effort have zero value in our Father's eyes.
What if the Lord checked you and me for spiritual fruit? Would He discover something nourishing, even though we might consider it inconsequential? Or would He find a breathtaking display of leaves that proves to be but a glorious façade?
–Sandy Feit
Copyright 2013 In Touch Ministries, Inc. All rights reserved. www.intouch.org. In Touch grants permission to print for personal use only.
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