Cancelling God.

Reading Time: 3 minutes

“Some Pharisees and teachers of religious law now arrived from Jerusalem to see Jesus. They asked him, “Why do your disciples disobey our age-old tradition? For they ignore our tradition of ceremonial hand washing before they eat.” ‭‭Matthew‬ ‭15‬:‭1‬-‭2‬ ‭NLT‬‬

Calling a spade a spade or the pot calling the kettle metal! Jesus calls out the misplaced attention to traditional detail, while the more weighty moral issues are dismissed as unnecessary.

First of all, EWE! Were the disciples not washing their hands before meals? 😂😂😂. No, that’s not what the religious leaders were calling out.

The disciples were not going through the rigorous rituals of purification that were mostly performative, instead of a duty to simple cleanliness. Jesus, using one of his own parable illustrations, doesn’t focus on the splinter in the disciple’s eyes, he wants to point out the log in the Pharisee’s eyes. It’s not the first time that religion is criticized for being overly critical of nonessential behaviors!

Jesus does not waste one second on answering the question. Jesus cross examines one of the most egregious offenses to the law itself. Number five on the big ten list, and the first in priority of our horizontal relationships. The religious ask about clean hands, Jesus asks about unclean hearts. Jesus quickly describes the Pharisees workaround to “legally” avoid honoring their own fathers and mothers. It was such a common, but nasty practice that no one would dare talk about it out in the open, especially in some public conversation. I’ll bet the teachers of the law wished they had never ask Jesus about hand washing.

Their sidestepping of God’s law, intent on honoring their parents, was super complicated but effective. As parents age, their ability to continue to work for money becomes increasingly more difficult. This is still true today. As such, the parents become more dependent on their children to care for them as they enter this elderly stage of their life. Sometimes, things did not go well for them in their senior years and they would become destitute and possibly lose their home and even their means to eat. The part of “honoring” parents meant that the children would step up and make sure their own parents wouldn’t be thrown out on the streets, begging for food and money.

Leave it the religious lawyers to scheme their way out of that responsibility. The Pharisees had it all worked out to skirt this God-honoring system. Just before their parents would become destitute, they would make a formal vow to donate much of their excess money to the temple. That vow was legally binding, but the money was placed in a discretionary fund that was only accessible to those working in the temple system. It was similar to using a “tax-sheltered” method to avoid giving it to the IRS. Except, in this case, they were avoiding the financial care of their own parents! The money was technically “unavailable,” so they could claim deep apologies to their parents for the lack of support. Pretty evil, right?

It was Jesus words in addressing this “attention to wrong priorities” that gets me. Jesus said, “In this way, you say they don’t need to honor their parents. And so you cancel the word of God for the sake of your own tradition” (vs. 6). Religion and religious practices can often get so entangled in the wrong priorities and give attention to the wrong details that we lose perspective! And when that happens, we are all in danger of nullifying or CANCELLING God!

And in my selfish ignorance, I may choose to judge someone else’s petty sin in complete ignorance of my own major sin. I would end up cancelling God AND judging others in the process! This is another reason it is dangerous to step into the arena of judging others, we lose perspective on our own wrongdoing.

Prayer

Dad,
The nerve of religiosity attempting to cancel you! It’s clearly our own whacky desires that would lead us to not just prefer our own agendas and priorities, but then to formalize them into rules that we would hold over others and judge them as well. Who in the world do we think we are…God ourselves? Oh, that’s the real point, isn’t it? We want to BE our own gods, behaving in some skewed image of ourselves rather than reflecting who you are. We were created in YOUR image, not the other way around. Help us, forgive us Oh Lord.