Luke 19:45-48
Then Jesus entered the Temple and began to drive
out the people selling animals for sacrifices. 46 He said to them, “The
Scriptures declare, ‘My Temple will be a house of prayer,’ but you have turned
it into a den of thieves.” 47 After that, he taught daily in the Temple, but
the leading priests, the teachers of religious law, and the other leaders of
the people began planning how to kill him. 48 But they could think of nothing,
because all the people hung on every word he said.
Revelation 10:8-10
Then the voice from heaven spoke to me again: “Go
and take the open scroll from the hand of the angel who is standing on the sea
and on the land.” 9 So I went to the angel and told him to give me the small
scroll. “Yes, take it and eat it,” he said. “It will be sweet as honey in your
mouth, but it will turn sour in your stomach!” 10 So I took the small scroll
from the hand of the angel, and I ate it! It was sweet in my mouth, but when I
swallowed it, it turned sour in my stomach..”
Food for thought
Did you notice how twice John is told to take the
roll? It is not handed to him; even when he asks the angel to give it to him,
the answer is that he must take it himself. The meaning is that God's word is
never forced on any man; he must take it. It is a personal decision; God does not
force himself on us. If we wish, we can take God's message into our very life
and being.
In the Gospel Jesus goes into the Temple to pray,
but what he finds in there is all but sweet; the Temple had turned into a den
of thieves, full of business dealings. This is the irony in the Reading from
Revelation: what is supposed to be sweet has turned into something else; what
is supposed to be house of prayer is now house of business; what is supposed to
be holy place is now profane place; what is supposed to be a peaceful family is
now a warring family; what is supposed to be a lovely person is now terrible;
what is supposed to be happy is now sad…!
There is something almost incredibly audacious in
the action of Jesus in teaching in the Temple courts when there was a price on
his head. This was sheer defiance. At the moment the authorities could not
arrest him, for the people hung upon his every word. But every time he spoke he
took his life in his hands and he knew well that it was only a matter of time until
the end should come.
The courage of the Christian should match the
courage of his Lord. He left us an example that we should never be ashamed to
show whose we are and whom we serve. As we know, the world’s best work, or at
least the work of many of the world’s great men, has been done in the midst of
opposition, in the very teeth of criticism, in spite of discouragement.
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