By Johann Peter Lange
Edited by Rev. Marcus Dods
THE HISTORICAL DELINEATION OF THE LIFE OF JESUS.
THE TIME OF JESUS APPEARING AND DISAPPEARING AMID THE PERSECUTIONS OF HIS MORTAL ENEMIES.
SECTION XXII
the last public appearance of
Jesus at Capernaum. discussions
among the disciples relative to
the primacy
(Mat 17:24-27; Mat 18:1-5. Mar
9:33-37. Luk 9:46-48)
That Jesus, after His public
appearance at the feast of
Tabernacles, returned once more
from Judea to Galilee, and that
He then took leave of this
country accompanied by a large
train of followers, has been
proved already.
But a question now arises,
whether this return to Galilee
took place immediately after the
occurrences at the feast of
Tabernacles (after Joh 10:21),
or after the public appearance
at the feast of Dedication
(after Joh 10:39). The most
numerous reasons, and those (we
think) of a decisive character,
seem to be in favour of the
former supposition.
It is certainly true that John
relates Christ’s public
appearance at the feast of
Dedication in unbroken
connection with that at the
feast of Tabernacles, and does
not, in the place where, on the
above supposition, it would
properly have come in (between
ver. 21 and ver. 22), say
anything about Jesus having in
the meantime gone to Galilee.
But, nevertheless, it is surely
without justification that some
have thence concluded, that
therefore, according to John, no
such intermediate piece of
history could have taken place.1
For in the way in which the
Evangelist leaves unmentioned
the journey from Judea into
Galilee, between the fifth and
sixth chapters, we see a most
striking example how, in putting
together different scenes, he
allows himself to pass over most
important particulars of this
kind which took place between.2
But when he does give a
specification of change of place
at all, he does it with a
distinctness which does not so
easily allow of our further
introducing particular
explanations, as would, for
example, be necessary in
reference to the statement in
10:40, that after the feast of
Dedication Jesus went again into Perea, which we should be
compelled to understand as
meaning that He went first into
Galilee and then into Perea, if
we assumed that it was not till
after the feast of Dedication
that He returned to Galilee.
Against this last supposition
several other circumstances seem
to us to militate. The feast of
Dedication began with the 20th
of December. If, then, Jesus did
not go back into Galilee at the
expiration of the feast of
Tabernacles, on the 19th of
October, we should have to
assume that He passed the whole
intervening time, that is, two
full months, in Judea in
concealment. No doubt, He would
in this case gain the
opportunity of effecting much
good in a secret manner among
the Judean disciples; but yet,
two months appear too much to be
assigned in this manner. And, on
the other side, the time
elapsing between the close of
the feast of Dedication (the
27th of December) and His public
reappearance in Judea before the
next Passover-feast, six days
before the Passover (towards the
1st of April), that is, a period
of about three months, would
hardly be enough to take in all
the occurrences which, on the
supposition in question, would
have to fall into the time. For
there would have to be
compressed into it the following
events:-The return of Jesus into
Galilee; His closing ministry
there; then His setting off in
the direction of Samaria, and
His wandering through the
border-country between Samaria
and Galilee into Perea; further,
His journey to the farthest
districts of Perea, and His
longer ministry there; lastly,
His going to Bethany to ‘awake’
Lazarus, and His last concealed
residence in the town Ephraim.
To this must be added, that a
setting out from Galilee to go
into Judea just immediately
after the close of a feast
(namely, the feast of
Dedication), would appear to
lack explanation.
In favour of the other
supposition, that after the
feast of Tabernacles Jesus
returned into Galilee, and from
thence journeyed into Perea,
there are several important
considerations. We do not mean
to lay any stress upon the
departing words which Jesus
spoke at His last public
appearance on the feast of
Tabernacles, although they
express His determination now to
take the last decisive steps,
and not much longer to conceal
Himself. But this, at any rate,
appears to us to be more
material, that Jesus’ departure
for Jerusalem after the
expiration of His last residence
in Galilee is fully accounted
for by the nearness of the feast
of Dedication. Next, a small but
definite statement in St John
seems to us to be here of great
importance. The Evangelist
states, that after the feast of
Dedication, ‘Jesus went away
again beyond Jordan’ (ἀπῆλθε
πάλιν πέραν τοῦ Ἰορδάνου). This
clearly points back to a
foregoing residence of Jesus in
Perea. But then the Evangelist
adds a further specification,
which is to be taken good
account of as well. He says that
Jesus went again into Perea, ‘to
the place where John at first
baptized, and there abode.’ It
follows that, on this occasion,
Jesus stayed close by the left
bank of Jordan. With a high
degree of probability, it is
considered that this notice is
meant to describe a contrast
between His present stay in
Perea and the one last
preceding; respecting which Mark
states that Jesus went through
Perea into the coasts of Judea,
and engaged in the work of His
ministry in that distant
neighbourhood: evidently a
different locality (Mar 10:1).
What has been now said is, we
think, sufficient to make good
our assumption, that about this
time Jesus returned into Galilee
to bring His work there to an
end.
On returning into Galilee, Jesus
again appeared publicly, but
(without doubt) under the same
conditions as at Jerusalem,
namely, amidst a circle of
friends. As He was preparing His
followers for the last crisis in
His course, it was natural that
they were now surrounding Him in
greater numbers. Thus, then, He
also came back once more with
His disciples to Capernaum. But
soon it appeared how much His
enemies had succeeded in shaking
His former popularity. The
collectors of the temple-tax hit
upon the thought of having Him
reminded of a debt, which it was
pretended had for some time
fallen due. ‘Doth not your
Master pay the two-drachma
piece?’ they asked Peter. This
was the term by which the
temple-tax was known.3 In all
probability this hint was
nothing more than a piece of
malignant chicanery. For, even
if they were not disposed to
heed the consideration, that as
a prophet Jesus held a position
according to which they were
bound to refer the payment of
the temple-tax to His own
option, yet they surely were not
in a case to know whether He had
not already paid the amount
elsewhere. They also appear to
have even neglected to demand
the didrachma of Peter. In this
act of the officials connected
with the temple there was a
plain reflection of the
disfavour with which Jesus was
regarded by the priesthood. The
under-officers were becoming
rude to Him, and thereby gave it
to be understood how their
superiors were affected towards
Him. So dogs begin to bark upon
the stranger when he has been in
an unfriendly manner dismissed
by the proprietor.
Peter had hastily given the
officials the assurance that
certainly Jesus would pay the
two-drachma piece. It is very
supposable that he did not
distinctly feel the sting in
their application, and in a
spirit of noble pride thought
scorn of disputing with them
respecting such a trifle. As he
did not at once proceed to speak
to the Lord of the engagement
which he had made, we may,
perhaps, assume that he had
meant to settle the business, as
being such a trifle, out of his
own resources. But Jesus
anticipated him. As soon as He
returned to their dwelling, He
addressed to him the question,
‘What thinkest thou, Simon? From
which class of men do kings of
the earth take custom or
tribute? From their own sons, or
from other people’ (their
subjects)? Peter thought the
answer plain and easy: ‘From
other people.’ Jesus drew the
inference: ‘Then the children
are exempt.’ And now He was able
at once to assume that Simon
understood Him: He regarding the
temple as the citadel of God;
Himself with His spiritual
partners as the free children of
the Lord of the citadel; and the
Jews, on the contrary, as the
subjects bound to the
maintenance of the citadel, and
consequently bound to pay the
temple-tax.4 But, however, in
the present case, He neither
would assert His own immunity
(and for the additional reason
that Peter had clearly made that
engagement for Him), nor
directly allow the claim of the
tax-collectors, because thereby
He would have recognized an
error. He therefore gave His
disciple the commission ‘to go
to the sea and throw out his
angling-line.’ He promised him
that he should forthwith draw a
fish, and find a stater or
four-drachma piece as soon as he
opened its mouth. This stater he
was to pay for Jesus and for
himself. Thus does the Prince of
the temple have the temple-tax
collected from Him; He has the
sum fetched up with an
angling-rod out of the depths of
the sea.
The disciples, however, were not
put out by the symptoms, which
were more and more frequently
showing themselves, of the
slight regard with which their
Lord was treated: the less so,
inasmuch as they saw how
triumphantly He came forth out
of every conflict. Nay, it was
just about this time that their
especial chiliastic expectations
and claims began to gather
strength. Why, the Lord had told
them, had He not, that the end
was now near? As for His
announcements of coming sorrow,
these they let be; they held
fast by the supposition that the
sorrow could only be of a
passing character, while the
final issue must be joyous. But
it seemed to them that it would
now soon be time for them to
ascertain what dignities they
should severally hold in the
coming kingdom. And thus it came
to pass that a dispute arose
among them, ‘who of them would
be the greatest in the kingdom
of heaven,’ or who would take
the highest place next to Christ
Himself in His kingdom. It was
on their way, as they were
coming home from the same
journey in which Peter had had
that hint given him by the
tax-collectors, that they had
been engaged in the animated
discussion of this question.
They had discussed it as much as
possible behind His back; but
nevertheless He read it in the
excitement and disturbance
visible in their countenances.
When they were returned and in
the house, He assembled them
around Him, and asked them,
‘What was it that ye disputed
among yourselves by the way?’
‘But they held their peace,’
says Mark. On the other hand,
Matthew remarks, that ‘they came
to Jesus, and asked Him, Who is
the greatest in the kingdom of
heaven?’ Out of this seeming
contradiction there fashions
itself to our minds a speaking
scene. With feelings of the
highest excitement they are
standing round their Master. He
shall solve for them the
question of the primacy. Their
countenances ask, and yet they
will not come out plainly with
the words; they seem to feel
that His spirit is against this
questioning about primacy.
And their feeling is verified by
the result. Jesus called a child
and placed it in their midst.5
An ambitious ecclesiastic
present there, might at this
moment have conceived an
apprehension that this child was
to be invested with the primacy.
But, in fact, the Lord’s aim was
to emancipate His disciples from
the hierarchical spirit by three
significant utterances.
The first was, ‘Verily, I say
unto you, Except ye be
converted, and become as little
children, ye cannot enter into
the kingdom of heaven.’
The second: ‘If one humbles
himself, becomes least of all,
and servant of all, little as
this child, he shall be the
greatest in the kingdom of
heaven.’
The third: ‘And whoever receives
such a child in My name,
receives Me; and he that
receives Me, receives Him that
sent Me.
The first expresses the thought,
that lustings after primacy must
be quelled in the disciples of
Christ by a radical conversion
and regeneration.
According to the second, such
lustings should then be yet more
put away through the law of
Christian brotherly love, which
makes it the holiest duty for
every Christian that he should
exercise towards his brethren
the deepest humility, and the
most sincere disposition to
subserve their welfare.
According to the third, such
lustings should be wholly
destroyed by the perfect
knowledge of the truth that
every child has the destination
of receiving into itself the
life of Christ, and therewith
the life of God; and that, in
pursuance of this destination,
it should be trained for God and
Christ in the realization of the
highest freedom from men.
And thus shall the disciple
through three successive steps
become free from all disposition
to claim a hierarchical primacy
for himself, and from all
acknowledgment of a hierarchical
primacy in others; namely, by
himself arriving at a threefold
evangelical primacy, and by
learning to reverence the same
in others.
The first primacy is the dignity
of being a spiritual child of
God. The second is the fair
honour of free, self-sacrificing
brotherly love; wherein a man
becomes great in proportion as
in true humility he humbles
himself to serve and love. The
third is the high consecration
implied in the calling to
receive in the heart, and to
exhibit in the conversation, the
life of Christ and of God
realized in the royal
priestliness conferred by
Christ’s Spirit. This is the
triple crown of the Christian.
He who has himself received it
knows that all men are called to
wear as believers that crown,
and that all service in the
Church is designed to train them
to realize this calling.
The whole manner in which our
Lord treats the question shows
that the kingdom of God is
designed, in its official
relations, to form the direct
opposite to official relations
in the world. The fundamental
impulse of the world is for all
to struggle upwards towards
power and distinction in order
to overtop and to rule each
other. On the other hand, the
fundamental impulse of the
kingdom of God is this, that all
shall stoop down in humility and
serving love in order to draw
each other up. And it is just by
the might of this disposition to
stoop that we are to measure a
man’s greatness in the kingdom
of God (see Philip. 2:6. seqq.)6
Therefore must the disciples be
converted, and in unassumingness
and self-surrender become like
children.7
───♦───
Notes
1. Neander also assumes that
Christ went down into Galilee
immediately after the feast of
Tabernacles. It is true that he
at the same time supposes that
Jesus really made His last
journey from Capernaum to
Jerusalem through Samaria; and
thereby the clear sequency of
events, which Neander at this
point retains is subsequently
again obscured. B. Jacobi, in
the above-cited treatise (p. 5),
disputes this view of the order
of events as it is set forth in
Neander. He considers that it is
hard to assume, that after His
transfiguration, and so many
discourses respecting what lay
before Him in Jerusalem, Jesus
should have gone thither, and
yet have then once more returned
back into Galilee.
2. That the narration of
children being brought to Christ
at a later time in Perea, that
He might bless them, relates to
an altogether different
occurrence, is so plain as to
require no elucidation. Even
Strauss (i. 722), in spite of
the similarity of the two
occurrences, is of opinion that
we may here suppose cases
originally different which (he
supposes) have become
assimilated. To these features
of assimilation it would
certainly belong that, according
to Mark, Jesus also here, as
well as in the later occurrence,
took the child which He placed
in the midst of the disciples in
His arms,—if there were any
difficulty in believing that He
did this twice at different
times (comp. Mar 9:36; Mar
10:16). Next, Strauss thinks it
unlikely that the sentence,
Whoever of you will be the
greatest shall be servant of
all, should have been spoken,
(1.) when He set forward a
child, (2.) on the occasion of
the request of Zebedee’s
children, (3.) in the discourse
against the Pharisees, and (4.)
at the Last Supper. It will be
apparent that, above all,
Christ’s treatment of Salome and
the sons of Zebedee is
thoroughly original, and that
here the repetition of the
sentence in question is quite in
its place, because the point
aimed at was the instruction of
a new and enlarged circle of
disciples. In the discourse
against the Pharisees, on the
other hand (Matt. 23), it occurs
as one ingredient of a larger
discourse in a connection wholly
new, and organically developed.
The last discourse of the kind,
which Luke assigns to the time
of the Passover, certainly in
the character of its expressions
agrees most with the second in
Matthew, but in its historical
idea it runs parallel with
Matthew’s third.
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1) See Lücke, ii. p. 423. 2) [The same instance of the character of John s narrative is cited by Riggenbach (Vorlesungen, p. 421), who adds (p. 565) as proof of our Lord s absence from Jerusalem between the feast of Tabernacles and the Dedication, that at the latter feast He alludes (x. 26) to the words He had spoken at the former, which He could scarcely have done had many of His words intervened between these two utterances. Lichtenstein (p. 200) presses the high improbability of His remaining in Judea after the attempt to stone Him.—ED.] 3) The temple-tax fell due in the month of Adar (March). It is therefore in this ease supposed that Jesus was in arrears with His payment. Most certainly Wieseler’s assumption (in his work already cited, p. 264) is mistaken, that the reminding Him of it could only have taken place about the time of payment, and that it therefore admits of being used as a chronological datum, But there is yet less occasion for our supposing, with Wieseler, that a Roman impost is referred to. For against the government of Rome Jesus would not have been able to plead conceptions belonging to the ideal of the theocracy, in the same way as He could against parties entrusted with the administration of the temple, 4) See John viii. 35. 5) According to the legend, this child was the martyr Ignatius. 6) See Olshausen, ii. 233. 7) ʻΣτρέφεσθαι, alter the direction of their minds; instead of going upwards, they should go downwards.ʼ—Olsh.
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