We started the day at the City of David, which was formerly
Jebus. From Joshua to David, Israel conquered all the cities within the
Promised Land except Jebus, because it was a well-fortified city on a hill. The
Jebusites were arrogant about their stronghold, so much so that they taunted
David.
“And the king and his men went to Jerusalem against the
Jebusites, the inhabitants of the land, who said to David, ‘You will not come
in here, but the blind and the lame will ward you off’—thinking, ‘David cannot
come in here.’” – 2 Samuel 5:6
David found a way into the sewer to conquer the Jebusites,
and he took the city for himself. Later, he donated this city, Jerusalem, to
become the capital of Judah. Jesus’s two recorded miracles in Jerusalem – healing
a blind man, then a lame man – would have furthered His case in people’s mind
that He was the Son of David.
We then went to Hezekiah’s Tunnel, which is the ¾ mile
tunnel that connects the underground spring outside of Jerusalem into the city
at the Pool of Siloam. Hezekiah’s men built this tunnel (2 Kings 20:20) and
buried it before the Assyrians attacked to make sure the Israelites had a
protected water supply.
Though it was a miracle that the two sides of digging met to
connect the tunnel, it appears that God had already protected the Israelites.
As Sennacherib of Assyria was encamped around Jerusalem, God struck down over
half of the Assyrian army in one night. Then, Sennacherib fled back to Assyria.
We spent the rest of our day next to the Temple Mount, which
is the site of the original Temple to God on Mt. Moriah. This is also a holy
site for Muslims, because Mohammed is said to have taken a “night flight” to
heaven from this spot. This area is in constant religious and political turmoil
between Jews, Muslims, and Christians.
When God called the Hebrews to Israel, Solomon built a
Temple to God, which God’s glory lived in until the Babylonians conquered it in
563 BC. The Israelites spent 70 years in Babylon, and then some were allowed to
return to Israel. Under Zerubabel, Ezra and Nehemiah rebuilt the Temple at the
same location.
Fifty years before Jesus was born, the Temple had been
expanded by Herod the Great to include a “mount” so that Mt. Moriah would be
“flattened” and more people could worship in the Temple courts. All of the
original Temple Mount stones were cut by priests at a quarry off-site, because
they did not want to disrespect God with the sound of hammers.
Every stone was cut to fit an exact spot, and these stones
were huge. The lower stones weighed as much as 24 tons. This was an incredible
feat of construction, and to this day no one knows how they were able to carve
with such precision and move such large stones this far.
Shavuot (“Weeks”) is the Jewish celebration of Moses
receiving the 10 Commandments on Mt. Sinai. Every year, the Israelites would
read passages from Exodus, Habakkuk, and Ezekiel about how God’s presence is
symbolized by fire, wind, and thunder. Then, the book of Ruth would be read to
illustrate that God presence is shown by His people in how they care about the
poor.
Not coincidentally, God chose Shavuot (Greek: “Pentecost”)
to be the day He gave His Holy Spirit to followers of Jesus. There was a sound
of thunder, and wind filled the Temple (called the “House” in Luke 24:53), then
tongues of fire came on the heads of the disciples. This must have been an
impressive picture of God’s presence to those standing nearby.
Further, the number of the church was added to everyday
because Jesus’s followers cared for each other’s practical needs. This was
always the mission of God’s people, and caring for the weak, poor, and
oppressed is a sign of God’s presence.
“They devoted themselves to the apostles' teaching and the
fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers … all who believed were
together and had all things in common. 45 And they were selling their
possessions and belongings and distributing the proceeds to all, as any had
need. 46 And day by day, attending the Temple together … they received their
food with glad and generous hearts, 47 praising God and having favor with all
the people. And the Lord added to their number day by day those who were being
saved.” – Acts 2:42-47
RVL pointed out that God has chosen the main Jewish
festivals as landmark events for His people, and especially Jesus. Jesus was
killed on Passover (Israel’s redemption from slavery), buried on the Festival
of Unleavened Bread (people prayed for bread from Heaven), and raised on the
Festival of the First Fruits (dedicate first of the harvest). Jesus was
(likely) born on Festival of Tabernacles (remember the 40 years in Israel where
people lived in tents).
It is said that Jesus will probably return again on the
Festival of Trumpets (celebrate the creation of Adam and Eve and the new year).
In this case, He will judge the world on the Day of Atonement (judgment day).
It is amazing to think that God’s sovereignty can set up time in this way so far
in advance.
We then looked at the Sadducees, our last of the Jewish
groups during the time of Jesus. When the Israelites came back from the
Babylonian captivity, Tzadok of Aaron’s lineage was chosen as high priest. For
the next 500 years, Tzadok’s line were high priests of Israel (plural
Tzadokim). An English transliteration of this word is “Sadducee”, so we call
this group the Sadducees.
By the time of Jesus, the Romans owned the Sadducees. Every
year the high priest position was up for bribes, and seven Tzadok families
controlled the high priesthood during Roman period in Israel (63 BC to 67 AD).
They were known as mafia families and made their money by corrupt Temple
merchant practices.
Jesus’s first action when entering Jerusalem was to turn
over the tables of these corrupt merchants. He also would have (likely) lightly
hit their faces with his tzitzit (called “cords” in Luke) as was the typical
rabbinic practice to say that God will no longer protect you on account of your
corruption.
Jesus threatened their corrupt economy, so the Sadducees had
to get rid of Him. They (illegally) arrested Him and had a fake tribunal on a
trumped up charge of Jesus being a zealot. We saw what was (likely) the high
priest Anus’s house – where Jesus was arrested and brought to – and the house
was extremely lavish for that era.
We saw the (likely) spot where Peter denied Jesus and Jesus
and Peter’s eyes met. Peter was scared that identifying with Jesus would get
him killed so he denied that he knew Jesus. The Sadducees were scared that
Jesus would destroy their wealth, so they were trying to kill Jesus.
Jesus said: “It is easier for a camel to go through the eye
of a needle than for a rich person to enter the kingdom of heaven” – Matthew
19:24. The kingdom of heaven is doing God’s mission here on earth, and because
the Sadducees were consumed with living a “good life” they didn’t have time,
nor did they care to, join that mission.
This moment really hit home for everyone. We live in the
same Hellenistic world that attracted the Sadducees. We chase money, pleasure,
power, and fame. How much of our lives are we living for what our “eyes” want
(like Adam and Eve did) rather than what our ears hear (God’s word)?
We talked during this trip about fulfilling God’s mission of
bringing Shalom to the Chaos of this world. But bringing Shalom to an evil
world will have a cost to anyone who wants to join God’s mission. This is why
Jesus asked people to count the cost of discipleship. Are we willing to join
God’s mission in spite of resistance from evil?
We concluded out trip by having a communion together to
answer the previous question. When Jesus told the disciples (Luke 22:20), “This
is a covenant poured out in my blood,” they probably would have looked at him
astonished. This was the same language a man would use to ask his potential
wife to marry him.
Jesus was inviting his disciples – and every future
generation of His followers – into a marriage covenantal relationship with him.
This is the same marriage covenant that God invited the people of Israel to
join on Mt. Sinai. Are we willing to follow God at any cost? Many in the
audience answered “yes” to this question by publicly making a renewed
commitment to God and drinking a shared cup of wine.
In the evening, we went out for our first dinner together at
a restaurant since we have been in Israel at an Arab restaurant. We got to
share our “Top 10” lists with each other, which were hilarious. Then we went
back to the hotel to share our highlights of the trip. Being with RVL and this
group for 14 days has been life changing. I believe that many of us will never
be the same.