Luke 8:19-21
Jesus' mother and brothers
came to him, but were unable to join him because of the crowd. Someone said to
Jesus, “Your mother and brothers are standing outside and want to see
you.” Jesus said to them all, “My mother and brothers are those who hear
the word of God and obey it.”
Food for thought!
It is not difficult to see
that, at least during his lifetime, Jesus' family were not always forthcoming
with him. Mk.3:21 tells us how his kinsmen came and tried to restrain him
because they believed him to be mad. In Matt.10:36 Jesus warns his followers
that a man's foes may well be those of his own household. Well, he was speaking
out of hard and bitter experience.
Whether we want to admit it
ir not, we are dependent on our families for our well-being. However, those we
know best and those who know us best, like our families, can be our greatest
challenge. This was the case with Jesus. His mother and brethren came and stood
outside desiring to speak to him when they should have
been standing inside, desiring to listen to him. They were
literally saying to Jesus, "Stop it, and come out; stop talking and come
to listen to us".
Obviously this attitude was
just too much for Jesus, and he had to confront it head on: "Who is my
mother? and who are my brethren?" He asked. And he answered: “My
mother and brothers are those who hear the word of God and obey it.” Jesus
wanted and wants to teach us a lesson. Obedience to God is more
important than obedience to men, even when these men are our relations. (Acts
5:29).
Another lesson is
that many times, our greatest distraction in doing God's will, and in
embracing new opportunities are our relations and friends. The tendency not to
upset our dearest people many times make us forsake God-sent opportunities.
This is why the burden of what we know always limits us in embracing new
opportunities. The old is the enemy of the new. THE TIES THAT BIND US ARE THE
TIES THAT BLIND US. (Andrew Hargadon).
There is in this passage a
great and practical truth. It may very well be that we find ourselves closer to
people who are not related to us than we do to our own family and relatives.
The deepest relationship of life is not always a blood relationship; it is the
relationship of mind to mind and heart to heart (like husband and wife). It is
when people have common aims, common principles, common interests, a common
goal that they become really and truly kin. That is why Jesus said what he
said: “My mother and brothers are those who hear the word of God and
obey it.”
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