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Sincere Faith: An Exposition Of Matthew 23:1-12
Contributed by Mark A. Barber on Oct 24, 2020 (message contributor)
Summary: It is all too easy to play the hypocrite. Sermon for Proper 26, After Pentecost, Year A
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Sincere Faith: An Exposition of Matthew 23:1-12
Everyone wants to feel important. People want to display their titles and achievements. Everyone wants to have a lot of followers on social media. People want to become influencers. Not only does it bring prestige, but it can also be quite profitable. People go to great lengths to be noticed and become quite depressed when they don’t. People do desperate things for just fifteen minutes of fame. It is kind of a flare. It is a call for help. People in churches, including leaders in the church, have this same lust to be noticed. Is this a good thing or a sign of inner insecurity? Let us see how Jesus deals with this.
In today’s passage, Jesus had just finished silencing the Pharisees after silencing the Sadducees as well. From this point, they did not dare to ask Jesus any more questions. So Jesus turns to teach his disciples and followers. This is the last time He would teach in the Temple. We read from Luke that at the end of this teaching, He noticed the widow woman who had cast her last two mites into the treasury. The rich people were all too happy to donate gold and silver for the adornment of the Temple. But did anyone care for this poor woman who was about to go home and starve. This was a glaring display of religious hypocrisy. Jesus left in disgust and went out to the Mount of Olives, never to step foot in the Temple again. To those disciples who were amazed at the beauty of the Temple, Jesus told them that not one stone of this will be left upon another.
The Temple was the pride of Judaism, although the massive renovation of it which was still underway was financed by someone who wasn’t a Jew at all. The Jews wanted the Temple to be the biggest and shiniest in the world. The Temple was the world of the Sadducees. The Pharisees were much less attached to the Temple. They saw through the hypocrisy of it. Of course, they were blind to their own hypocrisy. This is something which plagues us as well. Their life was centered around the synagogues in the local villages throughout Palestine and throughout the Roman Empire. It was because of the looser attachment to the Temple cult that the Pharisees survived the destruction of the Temple. They centered their lives around the study of the Torah. They wanted to live by it. They detested idolatry and Pagan culture. They found keeping the literal Torah too difficult, so they built up a supplementary and in many cases substitutionary teaching and tradition.
In this passage, Jesus does not attack their beliefs as much as their practice of religion. There was much in the Pharisee’s teaching which was similar to what Jesus Himself taught. This is why Jesus tells the Jews to do as they commanded in the synagogues. They sat in the Moses seat there as the place where the Rabbi’s taught the people. Inasmuch as they were faithful in proclaiming the Scripture, they were to be obeyed. What Jesus condemns in the Pharisees is their attitude. It is interesting that much of the Gospel of Matthew centers in on Jesus’ teaching in the Sermon on the Mount. Issues He dealt with there pops up again throughout the gospel. Jesus taught in Matthew six about the hypocrisy of public display of religion for the purpose of been seen and applauded by men. The Pharisees’ teaching centered around three pillars, prayer, fasting, and almsgiving. There Jesus accused the Pharisees of hypocrisy. They did not practice their religion to glorify God, but rather to be glorified by men. This is nothing else but idolatry.
So Jesus again attacks show religion again here in the 23rd Chapter of Matthew. The Pharisees prided themselves in enlightening the people. There is nothing wrong of that in itself. Any minister of the Gospel should be diligent to teach the Word of God to the people. We should teach the people how to pray and do charity for others in need. It is a good thing to get as much education as possible. This would include getting advanced degrees. We should be good examples in our public conduct. None of this is blameworthy at all.
Where things become blameworthy is when we do these things to draw attention on ourselves. It is hypocritical to command the people to do what we are not doing ourselves. The Pharisees placed many burdensome regulations upon the congregations that they were unwilling to practice themselves. We see hypocrisy like this in the world every day. In our country, the elite place burdensome regulations and laws upon the common people from which they exempt themselves. There is a law for the elite and a law for the commoners. How much people despise hypocrisy! They cannot stomach a politician going to a beauty parlor without a mask during Covid, yet they will arrest commoners and fine them for doing the same thing. This gives the country a black eye. How much worse is it when God is blasphemed by religious leaders in the church?