Thursday, November 30, 2017

It Runs in the Family

My New Grandson

My new grandson looks just like Winston Churchill. Okay, not anymore. But just after his delivery, Jackson was a carbon baby copy of ol’ Winnie. Round face. Chubby cheeks. Button nose. Puffy eyes. The only things missing were the hat and cigar.

Over the past seven months, he’s thankfully taken on a strong resemblance to several members of his family. People see his mom’s eyes. Other folks make out his dad’s smile. Some even say Jackson has his grandpa’s dazzling personality. But is that REALLY my place to say?

Some families have strong physical traits that run powerfully through their descendants. You know what I’m talking about. There’s the legendary Kennedy chin. Will and Jada Pinkett Smith have apparently cloned themselves in their children. And the Kardashians are famous for their…well, um…fame.

Jesus’ Closest Relatives

Did you know there was a day when Jesus talked about His family resemblance? Mark writes all about the day our Savior was hanging out with a bunch of His followers when His mother and brothers show up to see Him (Mk 3:31-34).

When Christ gets word they are outside, He suddenly drops a bomb on His nuclear family in front of the crowd. He says His closest relatives include a lot more people than just His human parents and siblings.

It Runs in the Family

Jesus says they all share a strong family resemblance. What could it be? Full head of hair? Strong nose? The ability to water ski without a boat? Possibly.

But there’s one distinguishing trait that makes Jesus’ true family members unmistakeable. His true mom, His real brothers and sisters are the folks who love to obey their heavenly Dad.

In other words, obedience to God’s will runs in the family.

Rocky’s Story

We find Christ’s description of His spiritual next of kin in the third chapter of an ancient document we call the Gospel of Mark. This is actually the personal account of Jesus’ life from Peter’s perspective, the man our Savior chose to lead His team.

Many of the Lord’s followers back in the early church were totally convinced Pete is the source. The apostle Jesus nicknames Rocky shares the Son of God’s story with his young friend John Mark. That’s how we came to know it as the Book of Mark.

Insane or in Satan?

The scene Mark describes here is, shall we say, “messy.” For those of you who think the Bible is a collection of well-edited and whitewashed stories that make everybody look like squeaky clean, think again.

Mark has already told us that Jesus’ closest family members have shown up outside the crowded house for an intervention (Mk 3:20-21). It’s time to take their big Brother home. They’re convinced He’s not so much the Christ but cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs. Don’t believe me? Read it for yourself.

While they wait outside, Jesus has an interesting little debate with a team of religious muckety-mucks from the home office in Jerusalem (Mk 3:22-30). They don’t think Christ is cray-cray but instead accuse Him of collaborating with the enemy. And when I say “enemy,” they mean Satan.

Mary Calls a Family Meeting

Once Jesus sets the scribes straight, it’s time to deal with His family. “Then Jesus’ mother and brothers came to see Him. They stood outside and sent word for Him to come out and talk with them. There was a crowd sitting around Jesus, and someone said, ‘Your mother and your brothers are outside asking for You’” (v31-32).

Mary and her boys don’t come inside. Maybe it’s too crowded. Maybe they don’t want to embarrass Jesus in front of His closest friends and followers. For whatever reason, send Him an invitation to chat in the front yard.

His Brothers Don’t Believe Him

Mark has already made it uncomfortably clear how they’re questioning the Messiah’s mental health. His closest family members have serious doubts about all His talk of the kingdom of God. At this point, His own brothers don’t believe Jesus (Jn 7:5). They even openly tease Him (Jn 7:3).

Okay, so Christ’s kid brothers aren’t buying what He’s selling. Is that such a surprise? What would it take for your siblings to believe you’re God? How about walking out of the cemetery after your own burial? That certainly did the trick for Jesus’ brothers.

A Teenage Pregnancy

And what about Mary? You remember her story, don’t you? She gets a surprise visit from an angel named Gabriel who tells her how her teenage pregnancy will result in the Son of God (Lk 1:26-38).

The next thing you know she and her hammer-swinging husband Joe on the road to Bethlehem where they turn a barn into a birthing room (Lk 2:1-7). They get a visit from some smelly shepherds who tell a crazy story about an angelic light show announcing news about their newborn Son (Lk 2:8-20).

Mary’s Treasured Memories

Eight days later, the happy couple take their brand new Baby to the temple in Jerusalem for His bris, that rather delicate surgery done on little Jewish boys (2:21-38). There they meet Simeon and Anna who understand this Child is the one God has been promising to send for thousands of years.

While Mary certainly treasures these moments forever (Lk 2:19, 51), she apparently can’t wrap her maternal brain around all of who Jesus is and what He’s sent to do. And seriously, who can blame her? Do you know any other mother who’s given birth to the King of Kings, Lord of Lords, and the Second Person of the Trinity? Yeah, I didn’t think so.

An Amber Alert for God’s Son

Probably the best example of her misunderstanding her Son happens when Jesus is twelve. When Joe and Mary pack up the fam and head home from Passover, they don’t notice that their oldest Boy isn’t with them until they stop the next night (Lk 2:41-51).

His human parents hustle back to Jerusalem and look for Him everywhere for three days. Imagine hearing of an Amber Alert for the Savior of the world? Eventually they find twelve-year-old Jesus in the middle of a Q-and-A with the greatest Jewish scholars of the day.

Joe and Mary tell Him they’ve been worried sick. Their Son wonders why they didn’t come straight to the temple or in His words, “My Father’s house” (Lk 2:49). That went right over their heads. “They didn’t understand what he meant” (Lk 2:50).

A Crowded House in Capernaum

Fast forward twenty years later to the scene at the crowded house in Capernaum. Has Mary somehow forgotten all these amazing memories? No, but maybe doubt and time began to corrode her trust in God since then.

Don’t think that’s possible? Pretty sure that could ever happen to you? Ever hear the story about God miraculously leading the Israelites out of Egypt with a fiery funnel cloud while splitting apart the Red Sea for a shortcut?

Frosted Flakes and Doubting Thomas

No way they could ever doubt God after that, right? Wrong. It wasn’t long after that God’s chosen people were whining about the free Frosted Flakes He served them every morning (Num 11:6).

Then there’s our old buddy the Apostle Thomas. Here’s a dude who has a front row seat to watch the Son of God perform one miracle after another for three years. Yet Tommy Boy has serious doubts about his friends’ bizarre story of Jesus’ resurrection when he’s not there to see it for himself (Jn 20:25).

Jesus’ Mom Needs a Savior

Maybe you come out of a faith tradition that puts Mary on a pedestal as the perfect mom. She never doubts or questions her oldest Son. But the truth is that Jesus’ own momma was very human. She needed a Savior just like the rest of us (Lk 1:47; Rom 3:23; 6:23).

When it comes to her faith, I’m guessing she’s a lot like you and me. She had her good days. She had her bad days. There were times when her trust in what God was doing through her family ran deep. Other times not so much. This appears to be one of those days of doubt.

When Your Faith Wobbles Wildly

Do you freak out when your faith wobbles wildly? Hey, I’m not afraid to admit it. But the most important thing about your faith is the object of our faith. A weak faith in something or, in this case, Someone strong makes all the difference.

A strong faith in a weak object is a total waste of time. For instance, I might believe with every fiber of my being that I can dunk in my Nike LeBrons.

The Ultimate Object

There’s just one little problem. Me. I’m 5’ 10” and could barely touch the rim when I was in high school. Forty years later, my hops have not improved. No matter what I believe about a pair of high dollar kicks, they won’t do the trick.

But trusting in Jesus is always a sure thing. It’s why Paul tells his friend Timothy, “If we are unfaithful, He remains faithful” (2Tim 2:13). Whenever we place our weak faith in the ultimate Object, it’s a slam dunk!

Jesus’ Family Tree

Back inside the house, Christ doesn’t get up and go outside to talk to His family. Instead He asks the standing room only crowd a couple of questions. “Jesus replied, ‘Who is My mother? Who are My brothers?’” (v33).

One of the favorite pastimes in Galilee is taking a chainsaw to Jesus’ family tree. He didn’t exactly come from the good side of the tracks. It’s an easy target. Even Nathanael, one of His own disciples questions, “Can anything good come from Nazareth?” (Jn 1:46).

Critics in His own hometown love to bring up Jesus’ blue-collar background and trailer park tribe. “He’s just a carpenter, the son of Mary and the brother of James, Joseph, Judas, and Simon. And His sisters live right here among us” (Mk 6:3).

A Strong Resemblance

If I’m in the room, my answer to Jesus’ question about the identity of His family would be those folks outside. But Jesus’ isn’t looking to see who might have His family roster memorized. In reality, Christ wants to know what marks somebody as one of His close family members. Who shares a strong family resemblance?

Before anybody in the house can answer, the Lord fills in the blank for them. “Then He looked at those around Him and said, ‘Look, these are My mother and brothers’” (v34). Matthew tells us that Jesus points to His dozen disciples when He says this (Mt 12:49).

Jesus Connects the Dots

The Message makes it clear. “Right here, right in front of you—My mother and My brothers” (v34 The Message). You gotta figure folks are scratching their heads when He says this. Mother? Brothers? WHAT?!? I thought Your fam is in the front yard? These knuckleheads don’t look anything like You!

That’s when Jesus connects all the dots. “Anyone who does God’s will is My brother and sister and mother” (v35). In his version of this very same story, Dr. Luke quotes Christ as saying that His closest family members “are those who hear God’s Word and obey it” (Lk 8:21).

Notice that obeying the will of God means not just hearing it but doing it. Our obedience to God is in the application, not just the head knowledge of what He says. According to Jesus’ kid brother, knowing what to do without actually doing it is a waste of time (James 1:22-24).

Looking Like Our Heavenly Dad

Jesus wants us to know that obedience to our Father in heaven is what gives us the unmistakable family resemblance. Forget hair color, height, or sense of humor. We suddenly look a whole lot like the Son of God when we do what His Dad says.

As a matter of fact, the Lord is saying that the ties to our spiritual family are WAY stronger than to our blood relatives. That’s certainly great news for anyone who’s human family puts the funk in dysfunction. In case you’re wondering, that would be all of us.

The Savior’s Spiritual Family

The writer of Hebrews talks about our Savior’s amazing spiritual family. “So now Jesus and the ones He makes holy have the same Father. That is why Jesus is not ashamed to call them His brothers and sisters” (Heb 2:11).

A guy named Paul backs that up in a letter to believers in Rome. He says that God the Father personally selects His kids in advance to become like His Son. And that Jesus is “the firstborn among many brothers and sisters” (Rom 8:29).

Our Ultimate Big Brother

If we’ve placed our trust in Christ, He’s our Big Brother. Not only that but our Dad is making us look more and more like our oldest Brother every single day. Let that sink in. We participate in that process every time we do what God says.

Jesus tells the packed house that doing what God wants is what really makes His followers favor the family. That means there’s nothing that we can do to resemble our Big Brother and Heavenly Dad more than willing submission and obedience.

Loaded with Laws

Just what does that mean? Have you seen the Bible? It’s loaded with laws and commands. Jewish scholars have counted 613 commandments in the OT. According to some, the NT has another 1,015 rules and regulations.

If that’s not intimidating enough, Jesus’ little brother James goes so far as to say that if we break one law, we’ve broken all of them (James 2:10). I don’t know about you, but I won’t make past breakfast.

The Top of the To-Do List

That’s what makes the Good News such great news. “This is the only work God wants from you: Believe in the One He has sent” (Jn 6:28-29). At the top of our Heavenly Dad’s to-do list for us is this: Place our trust in His Son.

Jesus is the only one who’s ever lived to have a perfect record of obedience to His Father’s rules. He batted 1.000. Got ‘em all right. Every single do and do not. Christ did for us what we could never do for ourselves.

Jesus’ Perfect Obedience

Our Savior invites us to place our trust in His perfect obedience. He lived the perfect life that we’ve failed to live. He died the death for our sin and rebellion that we should have died. And if that’s not enough, He rose to a glorious new life that we don’t deserve.

Trusting in Jesus also means following His leadership. We unlock that overflowing life He made available (Jn 10:10) by doing what He says. Guess what? The more we do, the stronger our family resemblance to our Big Brother and Heavenly Dad.

Love God and Love People

A couple of different times, folks approach the radical Rabbi/Carpenter and ask Him to what obedience to God looks like. The Lord responds by summing up God’s law in two simple commands: Love God and love people (Mt 22:37-39; Mk 12:30-32). Notice I said “simple” and not “easy.”

Just before He heads home to heaven, Jesus doubles down on the command to love. “Love each other. Just as I have loved you, you should love each other. Your love for one another will prove to the world that you are My disciples” (Jn 13:34-35).

Did you catch the way we are to love? “Just as I have loved you.” Our Savior loved us by serving us (Mt 20:28; Mk 10:45). Paul tells his Philippian friends how the King of Kings left the heavenly throne room to became a slave in order rescue you and me (Phil 2:6-8).

To Love Is to Serve

God calls me to love others by serving others. That means putting their needs ahead of mine. It means forgiving them since God has already forgiven me of SO much. Showing them the same kind of amazing grace God’s shown me. Hey, it runs in the family.

It also includes sharing the incredible message of our awesome Big Brother with others. Remember, nobody’s good enough to get into God’s family on their own. We all need a Savior. God the Father is always looking to adopt new kids to reshape into the image of His Son!

It Runs in the Family

Meanwhile back in the Galilean living room, imagine the reaction to what Jesus has just said. The Lord has just given everyone there a sneak preview of His Dad’s soon-to-be growing family.

Jesus’ closest kin is not limited just to blood relatives. It will include those who do what His Father wants. You see, obedience to God’s will runs in the family.

©2017
Jay Jennings

Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Holy Home Invasion

Tied up at Gunpoint

There’s a HUGE crash as the front door flies open! Before anyone knows what’s happening, a handful bad guys have you and your family tied up and at gunpoint.

I don’t pretend to be a victim of a home invasion and certainly never hope to be. I hate it for anyone of you who may have been.

But did you know that Jesus actually talks about one of these attacks in Scripture (Mk 3:22-30)? Not only that, He’s actually the One who pulls it off! I’m telling you, there’s some wonderfully wild stuff in the documents we call the Bible. Do yourself a huge favor and read it for yourself.

An Accusation from the Home Office

Interestingly, the Lord shares this story while He’s at a residence in the fishing village of Capernaum in Galilee. A team of religious leaders from the home office have arrived. They think they’ve figured out how the radical Rabbi/Carpenter is kicking some serious demonic tail.

According to them, Jesus has the ability to exorcise evil spirits because He’s actually playing for Satan’s team. They accuse Him of being a mole or a plant. Their theory is that demons do what He says because it’s all part of the devil’s con game.

Our Savior tells these so-called experts to pump their brakes. They’ve got it all wrong. He’s got supernatural connections alright. But it’s with the Holy Spirit of God. They’re on an eternally slippery slope when they accuse Him of collaborating with the very one He came to defeat.

Wild Reports out of Galilee

As we mentioned earlier, this is at a home in Capernaum. It’s either the house Peter and Andrew share or the Son of God has His own place. It’s actually the same location and same moment when Jesus’ family comes to take Him home because they believe He’s lost His mind (Mk 3:20-21).

Not only have Mary and His brothers arrived. Some religious honchos have come to town to get to the bottom of all the wild reports they’re hearing from Galilee. Chances are local scribes and Pharisees made a 9-1-1 call to Jerusalem after Jesus handed them their lunch five times in a row (Mk 2:1-3:-6).

Jumping to Conclusion

A team of Jewish lawyers have already come to their conclusion before they come to town. Christ isn’t crazy. According to them, it’s worse than that. He’s controlled by Satan.

“But the teachers of the religious law who had arrived from Jerusalem said, ‘He’s possessed by Satan, the prince of demons. That’s where He gets the power to cast out demons’” (v22).

Jewish Bible Scholars

In the original language, Mark describes these teachers using the Greek word γραμματευς/grammateus. It literally means one who writes. Back in the day, this is somebody who works as a clerk or specializes in written documents.

In this case, those documents are the Scriptures. And at this time, we’re talking about the Old Testament since it is the ONLY testament around in the early First Century. They’re big-time Bible scholars.

Did You Hear the One about the Lawyer?

These religious teachers are experts in God’s Word and its application. They are seen as lawyers when it comes to God’s Law. So apparently lawyer jokes go back a few years. These attorneys will soon find out the joke’s on them.

John Mark has mentioned scribes on three previous occasions (Mk 1:22; 2:6, 16). But this is a new crew. These are the big dogs who’ve made the 85-mile trip from Jerusalem to put an end to this nonsense in north.

Beelze-what?

They cut to the chase and make their charge. “He’s possessed by Satan, the prince of demons” (v22). The translators of the NLT have tried to do us a favor and do the heavy lifting for us from the original Greek. But there’s some cool stuff going on here.

“Satan” is actually “Beelzebul” (Gr. Βεελζεβουλ/Beelzeboul). It’s the proper name for a Philistine deity, a variation on “Baal-Zebul” which mens “Baal the Prince.” The Israelites liked to twist it into Beelzebub, a putdown that means “lord of flies.”

Savior from Heaven or Trojan Horse from Hell?

Beelzebul is the handle they gave the devil as the demonic boss of all evil spirits. Just about every appearance of this title is in connection with this same story in the first three Gospels (Mt 12:23-32; Lk 11:14-23).

Their point is that Jesus casts out evil spirits because their satanic supervisor has told them to go. “That’s where He gets the power to cast out demons” (v22). According to them, Christ isn’t our Savior from heaven but a Trojan horse straight from hell.

A Teachable Moment

But whattaya know…the Son of God graciously sees their vicious indictment as a teachable moment. “Jesus called them over and responded with an illustration” (v23). He invites them over to explain.

The Lord doesn’t light them up. He doesn’t throw them under the bus. Instead He takes a moment to teach. There’s a lesson for all of us. His response is compassionate and caring.

Jesus begins by asking these scribes a question. “How can Satan cast out Satan?” (v23). Okay, boys. Since you’re the religious experts, tell Me how this works. He asks them to explain how in the devil’s name this would happen.

Gotta tell ya, the first thing that came to my mind is that scene in “Liar, Liar” where Jim Carrey beats the stuffing out of himself.

Civil Wars and Family Feuds

The Jewish teachers have got nothing. It’s almost like they haven’t thought their theory through. Jesus follows with a couple of examples of why their idea doesn’t hold a drop of water.

First He says, “A kingdom divided by civil war will collapse” (v24). A nation with that level of turmoil will destroy itself from the inside out. Its own citizens are its worst enemy. That even goes for Satan and his evil empire.

Secondly, the Son of God explains, “Similarly, a family splintered by feuding will fall apart” (v25). Okay, do I really need to explain this one? I think we all know families that are more than ready to play the feud…and I DON’T mean with Steve Harvey! Of course, I don’t mean yours. Heaven forbid.

Closing the Loop

With after drawing those examples, the Lord closes the loop and tells them how ludicrous their assumption is. “And if Satan is divided and fights against himself, how can he stand? He would never survive” (v26).

Again, nothing but crickets from these Jewish hotshots. Don’t you just wonder what this moment must have been like? How long does Jesus wait in awkward silence before He continues?

Holy Home Invasion

At some point, Christ continues. “Let Me illustrate this further. Who is powerful enough to enter the house of a strong man and plunder his goods? Only someone even stronger—someone who could tie him up and then plunder his house” (v27).

Here’s where we get to the home invasion. Let’s break it down so we understand who’s involved and what’s going on.

Satan’s Turf

Jesus uses the strong man’s house as a picture of Satan’s turf. Thanks to our sin and rebellion, we’ve opened the front door to the devil so he could walk right and rule our fallen world.

Our Savior tells His team how “Satan, the ruler of this world, will be cast out” (Jn 12:31). Paul warns the Corinthians how the evil one “is the god of this world” (2Cor 4:4). In other words, the strong man’s house is our fallen world.

Our Hero to the Rescue!

There’s only One who has the muscle and authority to break in and take the devil down. You get three guess as to Who that is and your first two don’t count. Yup. Jesus. I knew you could do it.

But there’s more to this holy home invasion than just overpowering our enemy. Jesus will “plunder his goods” (v27). What in the world does the devil have that the Lord would want? Us.

That’s right, Christ crashes through the front door in order to free us from the power of Satan, sin, and death. We’re the stuff He’s come to steal! Our Hero has come to our rescue!! This scene makes “Taken” look like a fairy tale.

Tweet This

Just in case these religious teachers have missed His point, Jesus sums it all up. And to do so, He makes sure their paying attention by dropping the phrase “I tell you the truth” (v28).

This little expression is Jesus’ way of telling everybody He’s about to say something important. VERY important. No, it doesn’t mean that He’s been playing fast and loose with the facts up till now. This is His way of saying this is the bottom line of what we’re talking about.

“I tell you the truth” (v28). This is the first time of the fourteen times the Lord uses these words here in Mark’s Gospel (Mk 6:11; 8:12; 9:1, 41; 10:15, 29; 11:23; 12:43; 13:30; 14:9, 18, 25, 30). Each time He does, it’s His way of getting everyone’s attention. If there was social media back in the day, He might say, “Tweet this!”

No One Is Beyond God’s Reach

Okay. Everybody listening? Listen up. “All sin and blasphemy can be forgiven” (v28). Whoa. Picture jaws on the floor all around the room. Think about what Jesus has just said. There’s nothing you and I can do that can’t be forgiven.

There’s no sin and no slander that God won’t forgive. Not adultery. Not armed robbery. Not murder. Not suicide. That includes breaking any or all of God’s Top Ten (Ex 20).

How’s that possible? Because of one incredibly important fact. Jesus is a better Savior than we are sinners. No one, and He means NO ONE is beyond the reach of His rescue.

One Very Important Exception

Apart from one very important exception. The Lord spells it out. “But anyone who blasphemes the Holy Spirit will never be forgiven. This is a sin with eternal consequences” (v29).

What in the wild world of sports does this have to do with the scribes accusation of Jesus playing for Satan’s team or His point about the holy home invasion? Turns out, everything.

Rejecting His Rescue

To blaspheme (Gr. βλασφημεω/blasphemeo) is to defame, slander, insult, speak evil against somebody. It’s intentionally trashing someone’s reputation. In this case, slandering the Spirit of God.

It goes a little something like this. The Holy Spirit’s job is to open our hearts to God’s goodness. We insult Him when we reject His offer of rescue in the form of the Son of God.

Sawing off the Branch

When we turn our backs on Jesus, we give God’s grace the Heisman. That’s when we blaspheme the Holy Spirit. You can’t shake your fist at your Forgiver while at the same time accepting His forgiveness.

Or as the Message puts it, “You are repudiating the very One who forgives, sawing off the branch on which you’re sitting, severing by your own perversity all connection with the One who forgives” (v29 The Message).

Evil Spirit or Holy Spirit?

Mark tells us this is exactly why Christ connects the dots for the scribes. “He told them this because they were saying, ‘He’s possessed by an evil spirit’” (v30).

Possessed by an evil spirit? Are you kidding me?!? Not even close. Jesus isn’t possessed by some evil spirit. He’s baptized by THE Holy Spirit! As a matter of fact, all three Members of the Trinity were there at the Jordan River that day (Mk 1:9-11).

It was an amazing moment when His Heavenly Dad gave His Son the ultimate “attaboy,” while the Spirit gave Him the supernatural ability to carry out His unbelievable search and rescue mission of sinners like you and me.

Evil spirit, no. Holy Spirit. Yes!

Tied up in Knots

So what do we do with all this talk of demonic possession, religious accusations, holy home invasions, and slandering the Spirit of God? I admit that it can get just a little confusing.

What has you tied up in knots? What has a hold on you that won’t let go? A sin? An addiction? A temptation? A self-destructive behavior. No matter how much you try or struggle, you can’t get free.

Let Him ALL the Way in

The great news is there’s Good News. There is Somebody who can cut you loose.  Jesus is able to punch demonic forces in the throat because He has the unlimited power of God’s Spirit at His disposal.

Only when we allow the Son of God to enter our lives do we have any hope of taking out the evil we’ve allowed in. Let Him in. I mean ALL the way in! Let Him do what He does best.

Do you need a holy home invasion? To be honest, we all do at some point.

©2017
Jay Jennings

Wednesday, November 8, 2017

Straight Outta Your Mind

The Joint Is Jumping

Picture the scene. The place is packed. The joint is jumping. So many people that you can barely move much less eat. And they’ve all come to see you.

Suddenly you see a handful of familiar faces in the crowd. It’s your family worming their way through the mob towards you. They’ve come to show you their love and support!

(Insert the sound of a record scratch here!)

But that’s NOT why they’re here. Not even close. They’ve come to take you home. They’ve come to shut you down.

Inspiration or Intervention?

Your family thinks you’ve let things get out of control. They’re actually worried about your mental health. A sane person doesn’t go around saying the things you say or doing the things you do.

They’re not here for inspiration but intervention! 

This is the scene John Mark paints in his bio of Jesus. Yup, that’s right. There’s actually a story in one of the documents of the New Testament where Christ’s own family thinks He’s come unhinged (Mk 3:19-21).

They've come straight outta Nazareth because they believe He's straight outta His mind.

A Messy Story

Maybe you believe the Bible is just a bunch of well-edited spin to get you to swallow some whacky story about a mythical, miracle-working man of God long, long ago, in a land far, far away. I get it. But when you read it for yourself, you get a whole new understanding.

The story of Jesus is messy. The human authors of Scripture make it clear that His closest followers are not exactly the brightest bulbs in the box. His own family thinks He’s lost His everlovin’ mind. And if that’s not bad enough, they embarrass Him in front of the big crowd.

Right after Draft Day

We pick up the scene in Mark’s amazing story of the Messiah right after draft day. Jesus has just selected the original roster of His disciples (Mk 3:13-19). He calls these twelve guys in so that He can eventually send them out.

Right after Christ announces His first dozen draft picks, Mark writes, “One time Jesus entered a house” (v20). Your Bible may put these words in verse 19. A lot of translations do. What’s up with that? Just about every expert believes this phrase has nothing to do with His picking the apostles and should start the next story.

You might say, “Hold up, cowboy! You’ve said God has inspired these documents we call the Old and New Testaments. Who are YOU to play editor?!?” Valid question. Let’s chat.

Chapter and Verse

The original Scriptures ARE absolutely perfect and straight from Almighty God (2Tim 3:16). But little problems like these began to pop up whenever we start translating them from their original languages and assembling them into what we now call the Bible.

The first chapters God’s Word didn’t appear until around 1200 AD. We added numbers to individual verse 300 years after that. These digits made it SO much easier to find specific passages. If you think the Bible is hard to navigate now, just imagine what it was like before we had these address numbers? Yikes!

The point is that while God’s Word IS perfect, chapter breaks and verse numbers are not. This is one example. So Judas Iscariot’s infamous double-cross of Christ in verse 19 has nothing to what happens next.

Jesus Goes Home

We read in this new story, “One time Jesus entered a house, and the crowd began to gather again” (v20). Most First Century homes are small. VERY small. No bigger than a one-car garage or decent sized shed. Galilean homeowners would be lucky if to have more than one room.

Mark tells us how our Savior “entered a house” (v19). John MacArthur thinks a better translation is that Jesus “went home.” In other words, Christ returns to Capernaum where He’s living at the time (Mk 2:1).

This could be the home Pete and Andy’s families share (Mk 1:29). Or the Son of God possibly has His own place in this little Galilean fishing village. One thing for sure, the Lord uses Capernaum as His home office for the first part of His ministry.

Jesus Needs the Rest

If we follow the events in Mark 3, we can see Jesus could use the rest. He heals a guy at the synagogue and has a showdown with the Pharisees who eventually put contract out on Him (Mk 3:1-6).

Then a crazy crowd gathers along the lake where Christ performs a boatload of miracles…from a boat (Mk 3:7-12)! Wrap that up with His careful selection of His expansion team He will train to change the world (Mk 3:13-19).

The 99 Percent

No matter who’s house it is, Jesus isn’t alone for long. “The crowds began to gather again” (v20). Mark chooses a Greek word for “crowds” (Gr. οχλος/ochlos) that we often see used for people in the middle and lower class. A couple of thousand years later, it’s what we’ve come to call the 99 percent.

In other words, these are folks on the outside looking in when it comes to society. It makes sense when you think about it. Galilee is not exactly the dynamic center of culture and finance. We’re talking about Capernaum, a blue collar town in the boondocks of Palestine.

Here We Go Again

Word gets out that the new radical Rabbi/Carpenter is back in town. It’s not long before there’s a flood of folks at His front door. Forget about getting some rest. Christ has to get back to work.

Here we go again. It happened at Pete’s place (Mk 1:32-34). Then there was the time four guys do an end run around the crowd by slicing a hole in the roof to get their disabled buddy in front of Jesus (Mk 2:1-12).

Rocky’s Story

Just how big is this crowd? While we don’t get a head count, we do see that Christ and His crew are up to their eyeballs in ministry. “Soon He and His disciples couldn’t even find time to eat” (v20). The original text literally reads “they are not able even to eat bread” (v20 YLT).

Remember, there’s a pretty good chance this is Pete’s eyewitness account that he’s telling to John Mark. The disciple Jesus nicknames Rocky still clearly remembers how hungry he was when things got crazy in Capernaum.

Working through Lunch

The Lord knows what it’s like to be so busy that you don’t have time to grab a meal. He and the boys work through lunch…and probably dinner as well! As God in human form, Christ gets hungry. But He and His team put their own needs aside in order to serve the folks who’ve packed the place.

There are going to be times we’ll miss a meal when serving others in Jesus’ name. It’s all part of putting others’ needs ahead of our own (Phil 2:3). After all, it’s what He did for you and me.

A Juicy Tidbit

Apparently it was just this lack of lunch that sounded the alarm for the Lord’s human family. “When His family heard what was happening, they tried to take Him away” (v21). Mark is the only Gospel writer to gives us this juicy little tidbit about Jesus.

Behind Mark’s description of “His family” are a couple of words in the original language which literally mean “the ones with Him” or “those near Him.” Some other versions translate it as “His own people” (NASB, NKJV).

Those Closest to Christ

The author wants us to know that these are the people closest to Christ. It’s clearly NOT His newly selected team of disciples (Mk 3:13-19). They’re already at the house missing a meal just like Jesus.

The other clue that cinches the identity of “those near Him” is what we read in just a few more verses in Mark. The author tells us how Jesus’ own mom as well as His brothers would like to have a word with Him (Mk 3:31-32).

His Brothers Aren’t Buying It

The amazing thing is that those who knew Jesus best aren’t buying that He’s the long promised Messiah. His own brothers aren’t going for it (Jn 7:5). The only family member who believes at this point is His weird leather-wearing, bug-eating cousin John who lives alone in the desert (Mk 1:4-11).

Think about it. What would it take for you to believe your big brother is God in the flesh? For Jesus’ family, it all changed the Sunday morning He came walking out of the cemetery. Resurrection from the dead tends to make believers out of hardcore skeptics. Just ask Saul of Tarsus (Acts 9:1-9).

Dr. Luke goes out of his way to list “Mary the mother of Jesus…and the brothers of Jesus” (Acts 1:14) among the 120 people attendance at the upstairs prayer meeting with the apostles after the Son of God headed home to heaven.

From Doubters to Disciples

God transforms Jesus’ family from doubters to disciples. One of those younger brothers is James. He will eventually take the lead of the local church in Jerusalem and writes the earliest document in what we now call the New Testament.

Then there’s His other brother who goes by the name of Jude (Jude 1). God’s Spirit will also inspire him to write a little letter to Jesus’ followers that bears his name.

But that doesn’t happen until AFTER their Brother’s crucifixion and resurrection. On the day Mark describes, it’s a VERY different story. They’ve come with their mother “to take Him away” (v21).

Grabbing the Son of God

I gotta tell you, that description really doesn’t do justice to what His family came to do. Mark uses the Greek verb κρατεω/krateo here. It means to seize, grab, take control, conquer, arrest, restrain, or even rule over someone or something.

The word describes holding on tightly and not letting go. It insinuates force, power, and strength. Matthew picks this term when writing about King Herod’s arrest of John the Baptizer (Mt 14:3).

Putting a Leash on the Lion

Christ’s family hasn’t come to gently put their arms around Him and guide Him to safety. They’re here to grab Him and put an end to all this. In their minds, this has gone on long enough.

Just a little tip…seizing Jesus is NOT happening unless He allows it. It’s not a good idea to put a leash on the Lion of Judah. It’s like the scene in the movie “Man of Steel” where the cops put Superman in handcuffs. “Supes” wears those cuffs only because he wants to.

God Does What He Wants

One of songwriters in the Psalms has a little lyric that goes a little something like this. God only does what He wants to do (Ps 135:6). In the highest heavens. Here on planet Earth. In the deepest parts of the ocean.

Hey man, if death and the grave couldn’t hold Him, what chance does anybody have? That includes you, me, and His own family. Seizing Jesus and trying to control Him is a big mistake. A VERY big mistake.

Out of His Mind?

John Mark then lets us in on the dirty little secret on why Jesus’ relatives are here to break up the party. “‘He’s out of His mind,’ they said” (v21). It’s one thing for Christ’s enemies question His sanity. But His own family? We’re talking about the blessed mother Mary here, not to mention His very own siblings!

Surely this must be some kind of mistake. Somebody must have jacked up the translation. Did some evil atheist slip this in to sabotage Scripture?!?

Nope. This is exactly what went down. It’s more proof that the documents we’ve assembled as God’s Word haven’t been edited and sanitized to make Jesus’ first followers and closest family members look good.

Out to Lunch?

If I’m Mary or James or Jude, I’m scheduling an editorial meeting with Mark to get this dropped from the final edition. But here it is. That’s because the story of Scripture has just one Hero. And His name is Jesus.

The original Greek in this verse leaves little doubt His family’s assessment of our Savior’s mental health. Mark describes how they think He is “out of His mind” (Gr. εξιστημι/existemi). It’s a compound word which literally means to be “out of (Gr. εξι-/exi-) the proper place (Gr. -στημι/-stemi).”

It’s a nice way to say you’re completely out of your mind. Out to lunch. Off your rocker. Whacked out. Out of touch with reality. That’s why Jesus’ family came for Him. Let that sink in for a minute.

A Poached Egg

A boatload of Bible experts back that up. Matthew Poole believes the Son of God’s human relatives “took what He did to be the product and effect of a natural infirmity and imperfect head and disordered reason.” An imperfect head. Such a nice word for bonkers.

McLaren says Mary and the family have come to take Jesus home “where He might indulge His delusions without doing any harm to Himself.” Barnes pulls no punches with his take. They thought He was “delirious or deranged.”

C.S. Lewis writes that for Jesus to do what He did and say what He said, He must be a liar, lunatic, or Lord. Those are the only options. Or in Lewis’ own words, “on the level with the man who says he is a poached egg.”

Crazy…about Jesus!

Christ isn’t the only one in the New Testament that people accuse of being crazy pants. One Roman governor thought Paul was a religious fruitcake for following doubling down on Jesus as God (Acts 26:24). The apostle tells the Corinthians that if his enemies accuse him of being crazy, they’re right. He’s crazy about Jesus (2Cor 5:13)!

Have you ever seen someone so committed to the cause of Christ that you thought they had gone off the deep end? Maybe they weren’t. Maybe YOU’RE the one who doesn’t have a grasp on what God is up to.

Family Feud

Maybe this is exactly what Jesus is talking about when He warns that trusting in Him as Savior and Lord has the real potential to split families apart (Mt 10:34-39). He should know. It certainly happened to Him before His death and resurrection.

Just about every follower of Christ can tell you that you’re own family can be the hardest to reach with the Gospel. Just ask Jesus. His own family didn’t believe Him until He punched death in the throat. Until then, they thought He was cray-cray.

Stacking the Kindling

Here’s some great advice from the Life Application Bible. “Family members require the most patience. They see you are your worst when your guard is down.” Jesus Himself knows how frustrating it can be to share God’s grace with your own family.

Hang in there. Keep your cool. Keep loving them. Remember, it’s NOT our job to convert anybody. Let the Holy Spirit do His thing. Matt Chandler calls it stacking the kindling. That way, whenever He ignites them, they’ll burn hot and bright!

A Check up from the Neck up

Jesus feels your pain. He knows what it’s like to have the ones closest to you reject you. His family didn’t just doubt Him in the beginning, they thought He was in need of a check up from the neck up.

Our job is to love them. Show them grace. Shower them with forgiveness. Pray for them. You never what God might do. He might just work a miracle right before our eyes. Wouldn’t THAT be crazy?!?

©2017
Jay Jennings