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Fighting God Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 7, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: The prophets made it clear that God had a universal love, but the people paid no attention to the prophets. Having this attitude caused them to fail in being God’s servant in reaching the rest of mankind.
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The first act of aggression by which one man attacked another
with intent to kill was motivated by religious intolerance. Cain
could not stand to see Abel in better harmony with God than
himself, and the result was murder. This attitude of intolerance is
found all through the Old Testament. Israel could tolerate false
gods, but could not tolerate the prophets of the true God, and so
they killed them. We come to the New Testament and see that one of
the biggest factors in the crucifixion of Christ was the religious
intolerance of the Jewish leaders. This intolerance was focused on
the church also. In spite of Gamaliel’s warning that they might be
fighting against God, they went on persecuting Christians, and they
did all they could to stop Paul. As Paul write to the Thessalonians
he is glad that they have stood firm in the midst of persecution. Paul
then seems to release some of his feelings toward the Jews, an in so
doing he opens for us an interesting study in religious intolerance
and righteous indignation.
I. RELIGIOUS INTOLERANCE.
The Jews became exceedingly narrow minded, and they failed
to realize that God had chosen them to be servants in the world.
They had the idea that they were chosen to be privileged characters,
and that God only loved them and had no concern for the rest of the
world. The prophets, of course, made it clear that God had a
universal love, but the people paid no attention to the prophets.
Having this attitude caused them to fail in being God’s servant in
reaching the rest of mankind. When Christ came as a suffering
servant rather than a conquering king they killed him. Their
bigotry made the idea of being servants to the Gentiles very
distasteful. They were intolerant of any religious teaching that did
not conform with their own misconceptions.
Paul would be the last man to encourage anti-Semitism, but he
gives us here a list of facts that we cannot ignore. First of all the
Jews killed the Lord Jesus as he says in verse 15. The Catholic
Church has been debating whether or not to make this fact less
forceful. Some want to make it clear that all men killed the Lord
Jesus, and in fact this is true. Jesus died for all of our sins, and it
was the sins of all people’s that put Him on the cross. Historic
accuracy, however, demands that we recognize that the anger,
intolerance and prejudice that nailed Him there was of the Jews.
The Romans were only involved incidently because of the
circumstances of that day. There was no malicious forethought on
the part of any but the Jewish leaders.
To despise Jews, as many have done through the ages, and to
hate them for this is totally non-biblical. Jesus forgave them on the
cross, and Paul in Romans says that he could wish himself accursed
if it would mean the salvation of the Jews. We do not have to deny
or distort the facts to love the Jews, and to feel love toward them, as
all other men without Christ. To try and deny that the Jews killed
Jesus is not biblical, and it serves no useful purpose. Since it has no
bearing on how we treat them or anyone else today, it is just a fact,
and not the basis for any attitude or action.
H. G. Enelow in the book A Jewish View Of Jesus tries to
reverse the whole account as it is biblically stated. He writes, “The
Jewish trial described in the Gospel’s is so full of irregularities and
improbabilities that we may well assume that it represents a later
assumption rather than an actual fact.” He goes on, “On the other
hand, it seems most probable that Jesus was seized by the Roman
government and tried and executed by the orders of Pilate.” He gets
the Jews off all together, but honesty demands that we accept the
record as it is, and that we see the bigotry and religious intolerance
of the Jews that lead them to kill their prophets and their own
Messiah.
Paul says they also drove us out. The Jews hated Paul after his
conversion, and it was basically because they could not tolerate the
truth. If Paul had become a quiet Christian he probably would not
have had any trouble, but he became zealous for the truth. In Acts
9:22-24 we read, “But Paul increased the more in strength, and
confounded the Jews which dwelt at Damascus, proving that this is
very Christ. An after that many days were fulfilled, the Jews took
council to kill him...and they watched the gates day and night to kill
him.” From that time on the Jews were out to get Paul.