Desolate House
Before his final departure from the Temple, Jesus fielded challenges from the “Scribes and Pharisees,” confrontations that set the stage for his arrest and trial, as well as his execution by the Roman authorities. As he left the building, he pronounced its impending judgment and destruction. From start to finish, priests, Scribes, Herodians, Sadducees, and especially Pharisees resisted him, and some of the Temple authorities became complicit in the plot to put him to death.
[Photo by Yoal Desurmont on Unsplash] |
The Gospel of Matthew presents a lengthy denunciation by Jesus of the “Scribes and Pharisees” that culminates in a judicial pronouncement on the Temple. It includes literary links to his subsequent teachings on the Mount of Olives, and to Daniel’s prophecy of the “Abomination that Desolates.”
- (Matthew 23:36-38) – “Verily, I say to you, all these things will come upon this generation. Jerusalem! Jerusalem! that slays the prophets and stones them that have been sent to her, how often would I have gathered your children like a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, and you would not! Behold, your house is left to you desolate.”
Outwardly,
the Pharisees appeared righteous but “within they were full of hypocrisy and
lawlessness.” Their practices rendered them ritually unclean. They adorned
the tombs of the prophets, claiming that if they had been alive in the “days
of our fathers” they would not have slain them. But their very boast affirmed
their descent from the men who murdered Yahweh’s prophets.
The
Nazarene then warned the nation’s religious leaders to “fill up the measure
of your fathers.” This pronouncement alludes to the prophecy of the “Seventy
Weeks” in the Book of Daniel that “consummated transgression and summed
up sin.” And so, in the plot to murder the Messiah of Israel, the sins of
the nation reached their peak, and its destruction became inevitable – (Daniel
9:24).
The Mosaic
Law warned that “DESOLATION” would result if the nation broke its
covenant. Yahweh would “desolate” its sanctuaries and land because “they
despised my judgments and abhorred my statutes.” In the Greek Septuagint
translation of Leviticus, these warnings include the Greek verb erémoō
for “desolate” - (Leviticus 26:22-35 [“your ways will become DESOLATE”]).
In the Nazarene’s pronouncement, “desolation” translates the same Greek term used by him on the Mount of Olives for the “Abomination of DESOLATION” or erémōsis. It is related to the Greek verb erémoō, meaning, “to desolate.”
The
noun erémōsis is the same term used several times in the Septuagint
version of Daniel for the “Abomination that DESOLATES,” and this
is not coincidental. Jesus wanted his audience to take note of his scriptural
allusion to the thing that “desolates” - (Daniel 8:13, 9:27, 11:31, Matthew
24:15).
“YOUR HOUSE”
This
judgment would leave their house “desolate.” In this context, “house”
refers to the Temple building. The sense of the Greek term rendered “desolate”
does not point directly to its destruction, but to its ABANDONMENT,
presumably, by Yahweh.
Ironically,
that is precisely what Jesus did when he departed from the Temple complex for
the last time. His departure signaled the abandonment of the Temple by God.
His presence would not dwell there ever again.
This
judicial sentence was on the “generation” that heard but rejected Jesu, “THIS
GENERATION.” Though it might include future generations, the words were
addressed to the generation that was contemporary with Jesus and rejected him as
the Messiah of Israel.
Comments
Post a Comment