Tuesday, July 31, 2018
Why Was Jesus So Angry?
Only once, in all of Scripture, is Jesus portrayed as passionately, actively angry. Matthew 21:12-13, Mark 11:15-17, Luke 19:45-46 and John 2:12-17, all record how Jesus entered the temple in Jerusalem, saw the buying, selling, cheating and utter chaos that was going on, took a whip and drove out all those who were selling. I used to wonder at this. Why did He get so angry at the moneychangers and sellers of sacrificial animals in the Temple? Shouldn’t He be more angry about the injustice to people He saw every day -- slavery, treatment of lepers, shunning of children, disbelief, corruption of the religious leaders? But His righteous anger at the Temple points to a truth that I have only recently discovered.
Jesus did not come to earth primarily for us, as we like to believe and are often taught. Yes, He came to earth to show us God, to teach us how to live and to die for our sins, thus purchasing salvation for all those who would believe. But his primary reason for coming to earth was to bring glory to God. “I glorified You on the earth, having accomplished the work which You have given Me to do.’ And what was the work? ‘I manifested Your name to the men You gave me out of the world” (John 17:4, 6)
Jesus’ main concern was that His Father in Heaven might be worshipped fully and completely by those He had created. God is the creator of all things. He is so incredibly holy, mighty, just, beautiful...truly beyond words. He made us and sustains us and deserves all our thankfulness, praise, wonder and worship. Jesus recognized that more than any other human being on earth and He was jealous for His Father’s glory and worship.
When He entered the Temple that day, whose actual building was directed by God “to establish His name there for His dwelling” (Deut. 12:2-14), His anger was roused by what He saw. In the Court of the Gentiles, the place set apart for non-Jews to encounter, worship, pray to and find relationship with God, He found noisy, smelly, deceiving distractions to this relationship, prayer and worship. How could people encounter God, pray to and worship Him amidst the buying and selling of animals and the hundreds of pilgrims yelling and arguing with money changers who were doing their best to make a profit and cheat country folks out of their meager earnings?
The fact that all this money changing and selling of animals was being done in the Court of the Gentiles showed the lack of concern and love that the Jewish leadership had for non-Jews. Time and again Jesus had seen their lack of concern for the Gentiles surrounding them. Like Jonah, they hoarded their “privileged” status as followers of God and were not eager to see Gentiles coming to faith in the one, true God. This, of course, did not reflect the mentality of all Jews but it certainly seemed to be the mentality of the Jewish Temple leadership who would allow such a cacophony of noise and corruption in the very place set aside by God for the prayers and worship of foreigners. This angered Jesus! How dare they prevent people from coming and worshipping the Lord? The Lord deserves all praise and glory and anything that hindered that, and hindered the salvation of Gentiles, needed to be destroyed.
I believe that all those who were there knew, in their hearts, that what was going on in the Court of the Gentiles was wrong, even before Jesus so publicly pointed it out. The reason for my belief...no one challenged what He had done; no one tried to stop Him. He was justified in His anger and His actions and they knew it! God deserved every bit of praise and worship and all people deserved an opportunity to meet Him, fall in love with Him and worship Him.
I wonder what Jesus would do today if He stepped into some of our churches? Would He find congregations totally focused on prayer and the worship of Him; congregations that welcome all who would seek Him, causing no hindrances to the worship of Him? Or, would He find churches eager to show off their wealth, eager to sell the worship goer the latest best-selling Christian novel, eager to entertain the congregation and the visitor rather than challenge them to serve God more whole-heartedly. Would He find red-hot worship of God, people whose primary goal in life is to glorify the Lord and find total satisfaction in Him or would He find luke-warm, self-serving, self-focused weekly gatherings of a bunch of people who call themselves Christians but who are living lives no different from the world around them?
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