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A
Lesson About Old and New
By J
Michael Feazell
Now
John’s disciples and the Pharisees were fasting. Some people came
and asked Jesus, “How is it that John’s disciples and the
disciples of the Pharisees are fasting, but yours are not?” Jesus
answered, “How can the guests of the bridegroom fast while he is
with them? They cannot, so long as they have him with them. But the
time will come when the bridegroom will be taken from them, and on
that day they will fast.
“No one sews a patch of unshrunk cloth on an
old garment. If he does, the new piece will pull away from the old,
making the tear worse. And no one pours new wine into old wineskins.
If he does, the wine will burst the skins, and both the wine and the
wineskins will be ruined. No, he pours new wine into new wineskins”
(Mark 2:18-22). The primary fast of the Jews was the Day of Atonement,
one of the seven annual solemn assemblies of the Law of Moses. The
Pharisees also fasted on the second and fourth days of every week.
Apparently, the disciples of John were doing something similar. (The
Pharisees didn’t have disciples in the same sense as John or Jesus.
The term “disciples of the Pharisees” might refer to anyone who
followed the example of the Pharisees.)
Although such fasting
was not part of the Law of Moses, by Jesus’ day it had become an
important expression of the Pharisees’ meticulous devotion to the
ceremonial law. To the Pharisees, if Jesus’ disciples were not
fasting, then it called into question their piety, sincerity and
devotion toward the ceremonial law. Further, it called into question
Jesus’ attitude toward the ceremonial law. Jesus had already healed
on the Sabbath, and his disciples had already been noticed picking
grain on the Sabbath and eating without the prescribed ceremonial
washing. Add to that the lack of fasting, and the Pharisees must have
found this upstart rabbi increasingly troubling.
Incompatible
After Jesus was gone,
fasting would have a place in the Christian community. It would remind
believers of their dependence on God, of their need for God’s mercy,
and of the power of God for the salvation of those who believe the
gospel. Until then, Jesus’ disciples had no reason to fast. In the
Bible, fasting is a sign of disaster, or a voluntary abasement during
times of great stress or trial. But the presence of the Son of God on
earth with his disciples was a time of joy, not of sorrow. The time
for sorrow would come later, when Jesus was murdered and taken away.
In any case, fasting in
the manner of the Pharisees, as a sign of their devotion to the
ceremonial law, was incompatible with the new covenant Jesus was
inaugurating. For Jesus’ disciples, fasting while Jesus was with
them would have been like sewing a new piece of cloth on an old
garment—it would have been incompatible. Jesus’ point was that the
old has gone, the new has come. The two are not compatible. To put new
wine in old skins ruins both the skins and the wine. New wine requires
new skins.
Today, it’s still easy
to try to pour the new wine of the gospel into the old wineskins of
the Law. Grace doesn’t come easily to us. We like to have a way of
measuring where we stand with God. The gospel tells us simply to trust
God that he loves us and has forgiven all our sins for the sake of
Christ. But we often want something more tangible than that. We want
something we can sink our teeth into.
So we run back to the
Law. The Law provides a way of measuring where we stand with God. If
we avoid sexual sin, for example, and lying, and stealing, and murder,
then we can have a firmer basis for feeling that God isn’t mad at
us. If we don’t use crude language, if we don’t watch
entertainment that has sex and violence in it, if we help others, if
we don’t miss church, and so on, then we can rest easier about our
relationship with God. Of course, these are good behavior patterns,
part of the way we naturally desire to live when we have fellowship
with God.
But even when we’re
successful in behaving well on the outside, a deeper problem remains.
Doing good things doesn’t solve the problem of our alienation from
God. Our pride, our selfishness, the sin in our heart of hearts, is
still there. And every once in a while, when our guard is down, what
we really are inside squirts out to remind us that we’re still
sinners. Then we can either pretend we’re not really that bad, or we
can admit to ourselves what we’re really like.
Not
based on the Law
Fellowship with God is
not based on the Law. It is based on God’s faithfulness to his word
of grace. God told Israel: “I the Lord do not change. So you, O
descendants of Jacob, are not destroyed” (Malachi 3:6; compare
Deuteronomy 4:31). God’s free determination to do as he pleases is
what gives us a positive relationship with him. He tells us through
the words of Jesus in John 3:17: “For God did not send his Son into
the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.”
John wrote, “God is
love” (1 John 4:8). He did not write, “God is justice.” If God
were after justice, none of us would survive. But God has determined
to dispense grace rather than condemnation. We are told, “Mercy
triumphs over judgment” (James 2:13). How grateful we can be that
God is the way he has chosen to be! God’s devotion to us is the
basis of our fellowship with him, devotion that God has demonstrated
through Jesus Christ.
Rest
When we’re really
honest with ourselves, we know that despite constant trying, we still
sin. Where does that leave us? We can either work harder and harder to
keep up the whitewashed façade of personal righteousness, or we can
turn it over to God and trust him to forgive us and make us righteous.
If we take God at his word, then we can rely on him to do in us and
for us what he says he has.
Faith gives us rest. It
transforms godly living from a duty, from a way of proving ourselves,
to a joy, to a way of taking part in the good life we can have with
God in Christ (referring not to physical abundance, but to spiritual
contentment, to the inner peace only God can provide, which is worth
more than physical riches).
Most of us can use a
good rest.
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