The Importance of Reading Your Bible In Context
A FIG TREE, UNCHARACTERISTIC ANGER AND A (SEEMINGLY) UNANSWERED QUESTION
Jesus has arrived in Jerusalem, and after his quiet entrance on the heels of the triumphal entry, what happens next cannot go unnoticed. The center of Sunday’s passage was the cleansing of the temple (11:15-19). An action which is anticipated and explained by the judgment sandwich of the fig tree scenes which occur before & after it (11:12-14, 11:20-26). This series of stories is confusing, at best, when taken out of context, leading to, at worst, harmful interpretations. But taken together in context, Jesus the Christ enters into the heart of the religious system of the day and indicts it and its leaders as corrupt and declares the people of Israel to be faithless - which is what the scenes with the fig tree symbolize. Jesus has come not to reform but to replace this defunct worship with a pure temple, faithful priesthood, and ultimate sacrifice. His shocking actions in the temple naturally raise the question amongst the Jewish authorities of the day, "By what authority does he do these things? Who does he think he is coming into the temple like that?" (11:28).