Sermons / The Gospel Of Luke / Jesus Wept As Destruction Drew Near
Luke 19:41–48 · Expository Sermon

Jesus Wept As Destruction Drew Near

Series: The Gospel Of Luke Episode 3

The crowds wanted a king to deal with Rome. Jesus looked at the city and wept — because Jerusalem's deadliest enemy was already inside her walls.

The Gospel Of Luke
About This Sermon

Why did Jesus weep over Jerusalem? The crowds of Palm Sunday hoped for a deliverer who would break the boot of Rome. But in this exposition of Luke 19:41–48, Dr. Toby Holt shows that Rome was not the corruption Christ came to confront — and Rome was not the reason He wept. As Jesus drew near and saw the city, He saw a wasteland of worship: a temple, sacrifices, priests, Pharisees — all the markings of a religious society, and all of it an inch deep. God's own people had forgotten God, and the proof is that within a week of His Son's arrival, they killed Him.

Dr. Holt traces three movements through the passage. First, the tears of verses 41–44: Jesus foretells the embankment, the siege, and the leveling of the city — “because you did not know the time of your visitation” — a prophecy fulfilled to the letter in AD 70, when Titus burned Jerusalem and the temple with it. If God was willing to burn His own temple when His glory was on the line, Dr. Holt asks, what nation, institution, or denomination can pursue a similar trajectory and avoid a similar fate? Second, the temple cleansing of verses 45–46: money changers had turned the court of prayer into a marketplace, and the Christ who is so often patient burns with zeal for His Father's house. Third, the hope of verses 47–48: while the religious leaders sought to destroy Him, ordinary people — hungry, hurting, and attentive — hung on His every word.

The listener will come away with a sober warning and a tender comfort: the greatest threat to the church is never outside its walls, and the Savior who weeps over judgment still calls sinners to Himself — His arms extended toward all who will hear.

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Questions This Sermon Answers

Jesus wept not over Roman oppression but over the spiritual condition of His own people. Jerusalem had every mark of religion — temple, sacrifices, priests — yet it was an inch deep: form without heart. The city had forgotten God, elevated tradition over Scripture, and would kill the Messiah within a week of His arrival. Jesus wept because He knew what that rejection would cost: “If you had known, even you, especially in this your day, the things that make for your peace! But now they are hidden from your eyes” (Luke 19:42, NKJV). His tears show that Christ takes no pleasure in the judgment He pronounces.

God had visited His people in the most direct way possible: His own Son walked into Jerusalem — God incarnate, standing before them. The time of visitation was that decisive moment when God drew near in grace, offering the things that make for peace. But Jerusalem could not recognize Him. The people had offered sacrifices for centuries yet could not perceive the Lamb of God in their midst; John the Baptist recognized Him, but the religious establishment did not. Jesus names this failure as the very reason for the coming destruction: not one stone would be left upon another “because you did not know the time of your visitation” (Luke 19:44, NKJV).

Yes — in precise detail, within the lifetime of many who heard Him. In AD 70, Titus, son of the Roman emperor Vespasian, surrounded Jerusalem, built a siege embankment, starved the population, and then conquered and burned the city, slaughtering its people. The temple itself burned. Every element Jesus named in Luke 19:43–44 — the embankment, the encirclement on every side, the leveling of the city and its children, the stones torn down — came to pass roughly forty years after He spoke. Dr. Holt presents this fulfillment as sobering proof that God's covenant warnings are not rhetoric: what God promises, whether blessing or judgment, He performs.

Dr. Holt answers: because the people had desecrated it. The temple still ran its sacrifices, but the worshipers had a form of godliness while denying its power — Scripture subjugated to tradition, tithes skimmed by money changers, and priests who could not recognize the One the temple typified. The temple existed to glorify God and point to Christ; once its worship became hollow and its people rejected the Son, God valued His own glory above the building that bore His name. Dr. Holt draws the sobering application: if God was willing to burn His own temple when His holiness was impugned, no nation, institution, or denomination can pursue a similar trajectory and expect a different fate.

Twice, in the view of most Reformed interpreters. John 2 records a cleansing at the very outset of Jesus' public ministry, when He made a whip of cords, drove out the sellers of oxen, sheep, and pigeons, and overturned the money changers' tables. Luke 19:45–46 records a second cleansing during Passion Week, days before the crucifixion. Taken together, the two events bracket His ministry and show that His anger in the temple was not an isolated outburst but a settled zeal for the purity of His Father's house — the zeal His disciples connected to the Scripture that says zeal for God's house had eaten Him up (John 2:17).

Two reasons. First, what they did: pilgrims needed Jewish currency to present offerings, and the money changers took a cut of the exchange — effectively claiming a percentage of the people's tithes. Second, and weightier in Jesus' rebuke, where they did it: the outer court of the temple, a space devoted to prayer, had been repurposed for commerce. Worship was traded for pragmatism. Jesus declared that God's house is “a house of prayer” and that they had made it a “den of thieves” (Luke 19:46, NKJV). Dr. Holt reminds listeners that the God who judged Nadab and Abihu for offering strange fire is never cavalier about how He is worshiped.

In his Expository Thoughts on the Gospels, the nineteenth-century Anglican bishop J.C. Ryle treats Christ's tears over Jerusalem as a window into the Savior's heart: Christ feels real, tender compassion for the souls of the lost, even for those who reject Him, and the ruin of those who perish lies at their own door, not in any unwillingness in Christ to save. Ryle also urges that ministers and ordinary Christians should share this compassion for the unconverted. Dr. Holt's sermon moves along the same line: the Lord who pronounces Jerusalem's sentence is the same Lord who longed to gather her children together, and who weeps over the judgment her unbelief made certain.

Not the threats we usually name. Dr. Holt argues that a strong church can withstand secularism, humanism, hostile media, corrupt politics, and every external pressure — the God who parted the Red Sea, felled Goliath, and flattened Jericho's walls has not changed. The real danger is internal: a church that keeps the appearance of religion — buildings, activity, stained glass — while losing sight of its Savior and subjugating its doctrines to something worldly. When that happens, Dr. Holt warns, the church no longer has to worry about man; it has to worry about God. That was Jerusalem's condition in Luke 19, and it stands as a warning to every congregation and denomination.

The Westminster Confession of Faith, chapter 21, teaches that the acceptable way of worshiping the true God is instituted by God Himself and limited by His own revealed will, so that He may not be worshiped according to human imaginations and devices or in any way not prescribed in Scripture. This is the Reformed regulative principle of worship, and Jesus' cleansing of the temple in Luke 19:45–46 displays its spirit: the court of prayer was not the money changers' to repurpose, however practical the arrangement seemed. Dr. Holt applies the principle to the modern church: pragmatism in worship — doing what seems to work rather than what God has appointed — brings the money changers back into the temple.

Even as the leaders plotted His death, Luke 19:48 records that the people were very attentive to hear Jesus — and what they heard was hope no Pharisee ever offered. Jesus spoke with heaven's authority to the hurting: blessed are the poor in spirit, blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted. Dr. Holt recalls a woman dying of cancer whose hope in God deepened even as her health failed — evidence that God often uses trials to draw people to Himself. Grief is not the end; the pain of today is not what tomorrow holds; comfort will be restored and losses will end in reunion. The sermon closes by asking whether Christ is calling you — His arms extended still.

Key Theological Points

1. The Greatest Threat to God's People Has Never Been External

Ask a first-century Israelite to name Israel's greatest problem and the answer would have been Rome. Dr. Holt shows from the sweep of redemptive history that this answer was always wrong. The danger was never how deep the Red Sea ran, how tall Goliath stood, or how high Jericho's walls rose — when God was with His people, seas parted, giants fell, and walls collapsed. The true threat in David's day, Ahab's day, and Christ's day was internal: what would happen if the people forgot God, and how God promised He would respond. Dr. Holt presses this on the church today. A strong church can withstand secularism, humanism, hostile media, and adversarial politics — the God who preserved Israel through every external assault has not weakened. But when the visible church keeps the appearance of religion — stained glass, pews, activity — while the glory departs, it no longer has to worry about man. It has to worry about God. That, Dr. Holt argues, is the sword that hung over Jerusalem as Jesus drew near.

2. God Is Both the Greatest Friend and the Most Fearsome Enemy

The greatest friend God's people ever had was God Himself; the greatest enemy they could ever make was also God. Dr. Holt traces this covenant logic through Kings, Chronicles, Joshua, and Judges: when Israel walked with the Lord — reading His Word, keeping His commandments — things went well, and they enjoyed peace and rest from their enemies. When they turned from Him, the covenant curses followed: war, oppression, exile, and death. Yet as often as the cycle repeated, hearts turned again. Dr. Holt points to King Jehoiakim, who heard Scripture read, cut the scroll into strips with a knife, and threw the strips into the fire (Jeremiah 36) — a microcosm of what God's people had been doing for centuries. First-century Jerusalem stood in that same line: killing the prophets, elevating tradition over Scripture, and finally killing the Son Himself. The wars Israel fought with Philistines and Moabites were nothing compared with what it meant to make the living God an adversary. The judgment Jesus foretold was not arbitrary; it was covenantal.

3. Christ Weeps Over the Judgment He Pronounces

The same Lord who declares that not one stone will be left upon another weeps as He says it. Dr. Holt insists that both halves are true. Jesus takes no pleasure in judgment: He had longed to gather Jerusalem's children as a hen gathers her chicks, but they would have no part of it. His tears over the city are the genuine compassion of the God-man toward sinners hurtling toward the consequences of their own rebellion. Yet compassion did not cancel justice. Within a generation — AD 70 — Titus, son of the emperor Vespasian, built the embankment, starved the city, burned it, and slaughtered its people, exactly as Jesus described. Even the temple burned — and Dr. Holt presses the staggering point that it burned on the watch, and at the volition, of the very One it typified. God burned His own temple because His people had desecrated it: a form of godliness denying its power, sacrifices without heart, priests who could not recognize the Lamb of God standing before them. Divine sovereignty and divine grief meet at the gates of Jerusalem.

4. Zeal for God's House: Worship Is Not Ours to Repurpose

Immediately after weeping, Jesus enters the temple and drives out those buying and selling in it. Dr. Holt notes that most Reformed interpreters see two temple cleansings — one at the outset of Jesus' ministry (John 2) and this one during Passion Week — so this is no isolated flash of temper but a settled zeal: as the disciples remembered, “Zeal for Your house has eaten Me up” (John 2:17, NKJV). The money changers were skimming a percentage off the people's tithes, but the deeper offense was where they did it — the outer court, devoted to prayer, repurposed for something carnal and pragmatic. The God who consumed Nadab and Abihu for offering strange fire is not cavalier about how He is worshiped — the conviction the Westminster Confession of Faith enshrines in chapter 21, that God may be worshiped only in the way He Himself has appointed. Dr. Holt warns that much of the modern evangelical world runs not on zeal for the house of the Lord but on pragmatism — and that we too have brought money changers into the temple.

5. Spiritual Hunger Finds Living Words in Christ

The passage ends with a cruel irony and a bright hope. The chief priests and scribes — the very men whose office Jesus fulfills as the great High Priest — sought to destroy Him, while ordinary people were very attentive to hear Him. Dr. Holt observes that corruption in the church characteristically starts at the top and works its way down; but spiritual hunger among the people is where grace does its work. He recalls a woman in a former congregation dying of cancer whose health never improved but whose hope in God grew stronger by the day. Jesus spoke what no Pharisee ever said: blessed are the poor in spirit, blessed are those who mourn — words of authority and comfort for the grieving, the hurting, and the lost. Grief is not the end; comfort will be restored; losses will give way to reunion. The sermon closes with the question Luke 19 presses on every hearer: is He calling you? You will find Him where He has always been — His arms extended.

About Our Speaker
Dr. Toby B. Holt

About The Speaker: Dr. Toby Holt serves as the third President of New Geneva Theological Seminary (Colorado Springs, CO), founded 1993. An expository preacher with over 1.9 million sermon downloads on SermonAudio.com, Dr. Holt brings over 17 years of pastoral experience to his verse-by-verse Bible teaching. New Geneva offers fully online, Westminster Confessional theological education — M.Div., Th.M., D.Min., and other degrees.

Sermon Transcript

Summary. Preaching from Luke 19:41–48, Dr. Toby Holt explains why Jesus wept as He drew near Jerusalem: not because of Rome, but because His own people had forgotten God and did not know the time of their visitation. He traces Christ's prophecy of the city's destruction to its fulfillment in AD 70, when Titus leveled Jerusalem and even the temple burned. He then examines the cleansing of the temple, showing Christ's settled zeal for pure worship against the pragmatism of the money changers. The sermon closes with the spiritual hunger of the ordinary people who were attentive to hear Jesus, and His words of hope for the grieving and the poor in spirit.

Speaker: Dr. Toby B. Holt · Text: Luke 19:41–48 · Full transcript (lightly edited for readability), ~26 min. Click any timestamp to jump to that point.

Jesus Wept as Destruction Drew Near

A few weeks ago, we celebrated Palm Sunday, the day that Jesus entered into Jerusalem at the outset of his Passion Week. Now, on the day that Jesus entered into Jerusalem, amidst all the palm branches, amidst all the cries of Hosanna, the people, as they cried out and as they waved the branches and the like, the people may have hoped that this one, or one very much like him, would come to the city and deal with and contend with who? The Romans. When Jesus entered into Jerusalem, you have to remember, this was during the historical context of the oppression under which the Israelites lived.

They lived under the boot of Rome. When the people got excited because one was coming into town, when the people thought about their greatest need, they identified that need as someone to come to deal with Rome. The Israelites, they knew their society was corrupted. The Israelites knew that their society was corrupted. They knew that things were not right in their midst. They knew that there was evil, but they identified that evil as the Romans.

And the Roman Empire that was in their midst. Now, the good news, the good news is that Jesus did come to confront corruption. However, the bad news was that Rome wasn't the corruption that he came to deal with. Rome was not the corruption that Jesus was concerned about, and Rome was not the reason that Jesus wept. You see, the most corrupt thing, as Jesus looked out at the city, as he approached it on that day, the most corrupt thing that he saw in Jerusalem, it wasn't the Roman influence. The most corrupt thing in Jerusalem was the religious practices of his own people. If you were to describe the city of David at the time that the Messiah entered into it, spiritually speaking, it's been said that this was a wasteland of worship. This was a place, it had all the markings of religious society. It had a temple. It had sacrifices up to the rafters.

It had priests with tall pointy hats. It had Pharisees standing on the corners. If you were to walk into Jerusalem, you would have said, wow, what a religious place. The problem was it was an inch deep. The problem was it was a bunch of habits and activities and sacrifices, but with no heart behind them. The problem was that it was God's own people who had forgotten God. They'd forgotten who He was, what he said, what he wrote, and what it meant for them. And the proof that they'd forgotten,

Continue reading the full transcript 27-minute read · 8 sections · every section links back to the audio

Christ Approaches Jerusalem

the proof that their hearts were a million miles away from God, is that within a week of his son entering into the city, they killed him. And that was Jerusalem. It's not like he went among the ammonites, the Canaanites, the Hittites, the Jebusites. It was his own people. And they killed Him within a week of him setting foot. When he looked out the city, he did not weep a single tear because of Caesar. When he looked at the city, he didn't weep a single tear because of roman oppression. When he looked out of the city, it wasn't paganism, it wasn't secularism, it wasn't humanism, it wasn't the media, it wasn't any number of other things that caused him to weep. It was the spiritual condition of his own people it was flatlining and they knew it not see if you were an israelite in the first century you probably didn't share Christ's tears if you're an Israel in the first century you thought you were doing fine that God was well pleased with you it's the Romans that He didn't like that would have been your perspective God loves us God is pleased with us we're doing great all things considered it's the Romans it's the Romans he doesn't like if God's gonna be angry somebody he'll be angry with Rome well yes God was angry with Rome and in due time he would deal with Rome but not before he used Rome to destroy Jerusalem to burn it to the ground the city the people the temple within it this morning we're going to consider that this morning we're going to talk about this and one of the observations we're going to consider is this that the greatest threat to Israel, if you had asked an Israelite of the first century, they would have said Rome or some other nation or some other people or something like that. Wrong. The greatest threat to first century Israel, the greatest threat to fifth century Israel, the greatest threat to Israel in David's time, Solomon's time, Ahab's time, Christ's time, the greatest threat to them was not some other nation. It was not some other army. It wasn't the power of the Canaanites. It wasn't how tall Goliath was. It wasn't how deep the Red Sea ran. It wasn't how wide and high Jericho's walls were, the greatest danger, the greatest threat, the greatest opposition to Israel was not external to Israel. The greatest danger is what would happen if they forgot God and how God promised he would respond. This is true in our day as well. In a moment, I'm going to read verse 41 and we're going to work our way through it, but I'll say this at the outset. This is true in our day as well. In our day, we could think that, you know, the greatest problem that we have in the church wow it's the politicians that we don't like it's the media if only the media was better maybe secularism humanism some other ism maybe it's what they're teaching college or what have you maybe that's the problem I can assure you I can assure you this a strong church could deal with all that if God could sustain his people if he could part red seas if Goliath could be knocked over with a stone if the Canaanites could fall before the Israelites no matter how numerous they were, if God could take and preserve and protect his people across all those centuries and all those opposition and do everything they said he would, if that was true in his day, then in our day, a strong church can absolutely deal with humanism and secularism and paganism and atheism and opposition and politics and the media or what other forces might collaborate against us. A strong church can withstand all that. But what if the church is not strong?

What if just like first century Israel, the visible church has the appearances of religiosity, stained glass pews and all that, but is really Ichabod, the glory has departed.

Luke 19 and the Coming Judgment

When or if that should happen to a church, a denomination, when or if that should happen? When the visible church loses its sight on its Savior and undermines or subjugates its doctrines to something lesser, something worldly. When a church does that, when a nation does that, when a denomination does that, it doesn't have to worry about man anymore. It has to worry about God. That, that's what Jesus knew was the danger, the sword of Damocles that hung over Jerusalem.

That was the danger, the wrath of God due to sin. Let's look at verse 41 and work our way through it. Verse 41, now, as he drew near to the city, he saw the city and he wept over it. You know, across the pages of history, the greatest friend that you could ever want is who? I heard Jesus. I'd also accept God. The greatest friend across the pages of history, the greatest friend that the people could ever have or ever want was God.

Every time they faced some opposition, some wall too high, some giant, some army, what have you, so long as the right man was on their side, so long as God was with them, they could face and overcome anything. The greatest friend you could ever have, then or now, as a church or as an individual, the greatest friend you could ever have is God. But guess what? The greatest enemy you could also have is God.

You see, when God's people walked with him in days past, Scripture says that they were blessed beyond measure. Things went well for God's people when they listened, when they obeyed. If you look back at the books of the Kings and the Chronicles and Joshua and Judges and the like, when you look at these historical records, you see something. You see that when the people were faithful, when they read the book and learned from the book and talked about God and followed his laws and did what he said and didn't do what he told them not to do, when they were walking with God, things went well. There was a one-to-one correlation between their faithfulness and how well things were going on in the world around them. But the reverse is also true, that when they turned from God, when they turned from God, things did not go well for them. The thing is, as often as that cycle repeated, just go to the book of Judges alone and you'll see that cycle time and time and time again. As often as you would think that they would have learned their lesson, as often as you would think that this time they got it, this time they'll be faithful now that they've returned to the Lord. Well, the thing was, the hearts were deceitfully wicked and hearts would turn and they frequently did. There was times in the Old Testament where despite having God's word before them, despite all the privileges of being God's chosen people, the kings and the leadership just threw all that out the door. There was a king, his name was Jehoiakim. Now Jehoiakim was one of those many kings that we call one of the bad kings, one of the naughty kings of Scripture. Now this king, this king, he had Scripture read to him. So he came in with a scroll and began to read God's word. And you know what he did? Instead of just plugging up His ears or leaving the room he took it one step further he took out a knife he took that knife and He began to slice the scroll into strips he took a knife and he cut through the Word of God and then and then as if that wasn't bad enough then he took the strips that he had cut and he threw them into the fire in a microcosm that's what God's people have been doing on and off for centuries and they had been doing it in Christ's own time as well. They still had a temple. They still had sacrifices.

They still had men in tall pointy hats. They had that. And yet God was not with them to the degree that they killed his son when he walked into town. That was the spiritual condition. And they knew it not. They didn't understand how bad things had got. They thought things were okay. They weren't. They thought things were fine. They were not. And they did not know the hour of their visitation. They did not know the hour of their visitation.

The Tears of Christ

And so Jesus wept. Verse 41, he draws near and he weeps. Let's look at verses 41 through 44. Now as he drew near, he saw the city, wept over it, saying, if you had known, even you, especially in this your day, the things that make for your peace, but now they're hidden from your eyes. For days will come upon you when your enemies will build an embankment around you, surround you, close you in on every side, and level you, your children within you, to the ground.

I will not leave one stone one stone upon another because you did not know the time of your visitation if you had only known the things that make for your peace if there's one thing that the Israels knew very little about over the years it was peace. God had promised them that when they were faithful, that things would go well. This was the nature of the covenant. God had called His people out, out of this world and promised them that if they were faithful, if they listened to their word and inclined their steps to follow the word, that things would go well for them. God had promised them that when they were faithful, they would have peace and rest all around from their enemies. Conversely, disobedience would lead to war, and persecution, and oppression, and exile, and death. Over the years, Israel routinely picked door number two. Over the years, Israel routinely picked that which they ought not, even though they knew better, and even though history and Scripture told them, told them what would happen if they turned their back against God. In fact, it told them what would happen if not only did they ignore God, but they became rebels and enemies of God. You know, the war is and contentions that they had with the other nations, Philistines and Moabites and Ammonites and Hittites and the like, that was nothing. That was nothing compared to what would happen if they were so intent on making God their adversary. And if you kill his prophets, if you reject his word, if you elevate traditions over Scripture, as was the norm in Christ's day, if you kill the prophets, you reject his word, you elevate traditions over Scripture, if you kill his own son, you can rest assured there are consequences. It's those consequences that Jesus is anticipating in verses 41 through 44. And it brought no joy to his heart to know they were coming. Make no mistake, this is part and parcel why he wept. It brought no joy in his heart to know what was coming, what the results of their decisions would be. He had longed to gather them close like a mother hen gathers the chicks close. That was his desire, but they would have no part of it. So because of their actions, because of their animosity toward the throne of heaven, he said this in verses 41 through 44. The days will come when your enemies will build an embankment around you. They will surround you. They will close you on every side. They will level you and your children within you to the ground. They will not leave you one stone upon another because you did not know the time of your visitation. 70 AD, as most of us know, 70 AD, within the lifetime of many who heard him, these verses would be fulfilled. 70 AD, Titus Flavius, the son of the Roman emperor vespasian he attacked first of all the forces surrounded the city then after starving them out a bit they conquered the city and finally they burned the city slaughtered the people and in the midst of the city even the temple even God's own temple burned as well consider that for a moment

Peace Hidden from Their Eyes

the temple of God the same temple that the people would cry out the temple Lord the temple Lord the temple of the Lord, that same temple burned at the hands of who? At the hands of He who it glorified, He who it typified. It burned on His watch, at His own volition. Why would He do that? This is His temple. You would think of all the things He'd preserved, that might have been on the list. Why did He burn it? There's more answers to that than we have time to describe, but at the very least, He burned it because the people had desecrated it. The people had a form of godliness, we talked about that earlier. They had the form. They had the accoutrements. They had the scrolls and Scriptures and temple and sacrifice and all that.

They had the form of godliness, but they were clearly denying the power of. They'd been given the Scriptures, but they subjugated that to traditions. The people had sacrificed animals all day long up to the heavens, and yet they couldn't recognize the Lamb of God when it walked in their midst. John the Baptist got it. The rest didn't. The people had the appearance of religiosity, but they had lost their religion. And as a result, because of all that, which had been inculcated from the leadership over years on down, because of all that, the people could not recognize, could not sense, could not perceive the Son of God, God incarnate, God in the flesh, right when they were looking in the eyeball.

Their hearts were dead. Their hearts were dead. And this is the sin, this inability to recognize. This is the sin that Jesus said would cost them. It says, not one stone will be left upon another because you did not know. The hour of your visitation. Among all the other reasons he could have gave, that was foremost. The temple's going down, the city's going down, and the reason it's going down is because you did not know the hour of your visitation. Let me ask you a relevant question. Let me ask you a thinking question.

If God was willing to burn his own temple to the ground, if God was willing to burn His own temple to the ground when his glory was on the line, when his word was being disparaged and his holiness impugned. What nation, what institution, what denomination do you think can pursue a similar trajectory and avoid a similar fate? Let's look at verses 45 and 46. Then he went into the temple and began to drive out those who bought and sold in it, saying to them, it is written, my house, my house is a house of prayer, but you, you've made it a den of thieves. You know, when I was younger, I was fascinated with this text. And it's usually because when you read about Jesus, He is so patient and kind and gentle. And he goes and he visits with the sinners and the tax collectors. And he dines with folks that were on the fringes of society. That's been nice, who were outside the fringe of society. He reached out to them. He was caring. He fed the 5,000. He healed the lepers. He did all that stuff. He was so wonderful and patient. And because that's true, any moment you see when he demonstrates anger stands out because that didn't seem to be the norm of his interaction with his people.

Well, here he demonstrated anger. And because it is somewhat rare, it must be really important. It must be really a big deal. What prompted Jesus to go into the temple and drive out those within it? Well, if you want to understand this event here in verses 45 and 46, I want you to understand something you might not be familiar with. This is not the first time he had done this. You know, you might have thought, you know, growing up, you hear the stories of Jesus going into the temple.

You might have thought that was like some one-off event. One time he goes in and he chases them out. Not so much. This happened twice. If you go back, if you were to look at John 2, the very start of John's Gospel, you would see what most Reformed scholars believe is a separate incident by which he did roughly the same thing. In John 2, we read these words.

The Day of Visitation

The Passover of the Jews was at hand, and Jesus went up to Jerusalem. And in the temple, he found those who were selling oxen and sheep and pigeons, and he found money changers sitting there. And making a whip of cords, he drove them out of the temple with the sheep and the oxen. And then he poured out the coins and the money changers. He overturned the tables, and he told those who sold the pigeons, take these things away. Do not make my Father's house a house of trade.

And his disciples remembered that it was written. Zeal for your house will consume me. Zeal for your house, zeal for worship, zeal for what we're here to do would consume him to the point where he'd get angry. When he'd get angry, when those would dare to cast that worship underfoot, make it a marketplace, den of thieves. Now, we don't have time to talk at length about what the money changers were doing.

The simplest explanation is this, that the reason the money changers were there was that if you went to the temple and you wanted to provide an offering, make a tithe and the like, you did it in Jewish money. Well, you typically had Roman money, so you exchanged it. However, the people who exchanged it with, they took a piece of the action. So in effect, they were claiming a percentage off of what was otherwise people's tithes.

And that decision to make a marketplace, that was bad enough. But in Jesus' mind, the bigger problem was where they did it. It wasn't just that they were doing that. It was where they were doing it. They were doing this. The outer court of the temple. They were doing it in the place that was to be devoted to prayer. They had repurposed it. They had repurposed it for something carnal and worldly. Something pragmatic that they thought they needed and would help them out in order to go about their business.

Well, Jesus says, no! Zeal for your house, O God. Zeal for your house, my Father, will consume me. Jesus was zealous for worship. This is a God who took out Nadab and Abihu when they made strange fire. Don't think that God is cavalier towards how he's worshiped. He's not. And Jesus, the time in which he was angry was when worship was besmirched by the people, treated as something other than it was, something carnal. He had zeal, zeal for the house of God. I wonder, do you think as you cup your ear to the greater church world outside these doors, as you cup your ear to what you hear, whatever that is, do you detect the sounds of those who are zealous for the house of the Lord or, or those who are pragmatic. Much of what is going outside within the broad scope of the evangelical world is not zeal for the house of the Lord, but pragmatism and the elevation of worldly thoughts, worldly deeds, worldly doctrines. And I can tell you with confidence that when that happens, it arises like a foul stench before the nose of our God. We have brought money changers into the temple. Let's look at verse 47-48. And he was teaching daily in the temple. But the chief priests, the scribes, and the leaders of the people sought to destroy him. And they were unable to do anything, for all the people were very attentive to hear him. You know, there's a cruel irony that stands on verse 47. You know, if you had said that the Messiah would come into first century Israel, you would have thought, I'm sure they would have thought, that the people most likely to recognize Him and love Him and worship Him and the like, that it would have been priests, right?

You would have thought that if Jesus came in, the Messiah had come in, that the first people to recognize Him for who He was and adore Him as such would have been the priests. Because they were the ones most often in the Word, the pastoral equivalent in that day, that that would have been the ones who would have figured things out.

Pastoral Application

You know, scribes and priests and the leadership, the religious elite that they would have figured out and then they would have passed that on to the laity. That's not what we see here. What we see here is a cruel irony that the very people who you would have thought would be the first to recognize and worship and bow down to Jesus were the ones who wanted to destroy him. If you were Jesus, how frustrating would that have been?

You know, you're the high priest, right? You're the great high priest. You come in, and these guys, these other priests, these guys whose office you are the ultimate fulfillment of, not only don't recognize you, but want you dead. For Jesus, this had to be frustrating. To know that the leadership was where the problems were gestating here in Jewish society. Again, as a side note, this sort of corruption of ecclesiastical leadership, it's not an accident or a coincidence.

If you're the evil one, you're no dummy. You know you start at the top. You work your way down. That's certainly what happened here. Now, we could linger on that observation. We could linger on the errors of the religious leaders. But I'd rather linger as we close this morning on what we see in verse 48 that's encouraging. What you might call the spiritual hunger of the people who were drawn to him.

Even as the leaders wanted him dead, there were those who had a spiritual hunger and they were drawn to what he was saying. So verse 47 says that the leaders sought to destroy him. But verse 48 says that the people, people like you and I, were attentive to hear him. You know, there was a lady at one of my previous churches who had terminal cancer. You might have thought that cancer would have shrunk her faith.

She was relatively young, 40s, and you might have thought that the cancer would have shrunk her faith. You might have thought that the diagnosis would have left her hopeless because she didn't have a long time frame to work with. Well, she didn't have a lot of time, and she did have a lot of reason to be bitter. And yet, what I found in talking and counseling with this woman in between chemo trips and the like, was that even though the trajectory of her health hadn't changed, at the same time, the trajectory of her hope and her relationship with God improved each day.

God used a trying circumstance, a trying time to bring her closer to Himself. And the best way I can describe is to say that she had this gnawing hunger to know more about her Maker, to understand Him better. In the same way in the first century or our century, there's a lot of people whose circumstances are good and there's a lot of people whose circumstances are bad. God can use whatever circumstances, and in my experience it's oftentimes bad ones, to bring people closer to Himself.

To bring people closer. They realize they're hungry, especially in the midst of trials. We understand we're hungry, and we understand that there's nothing outside these doors that can fulfill us. Well, when Jesus spoke to those with this sort of spiritual hunger, in verse 48, what he said resonated with them. Jesus was saying something that none of the priests were saying. He was saying something none of the Pharisees were saying. He was giving dying, hurting, lost people words of hope and encouragement.

Even in the midst of Roman oppression and opposition, even in the midst of whatever the world might throw at their door, He was extending to them a lifeline. And many, in the midst of their hurts and their pains, they reached out for it and they grabbed it. When Jesus spoke, he not only spoke words that were true, but he spoke with the authority that comes from on high. And when he told people, in my Father's house are many mansions.

When he told people he was going to prepare a place for them. When he told people of that undiscovered country. When he told people that a day and a time was appointed when all tears would be wiped away. In the midst of the tears they were crying then, they gave them hope. They knew that the story ends well. They knew that no matter what would happen, whether it was in 70 A. D., 90 A. D., the 21st century, that God's on his throne and he still loves sinners and calls them to himself.

Jesus called them to himself.

Christ, Grace, and the Closing Exhortation

And when he opened his mouth, people came from miles and miles around to listen. Into the darkened world in which they lived, under the boot of Rome, came light and truth. And they seized upon it because in the crucible of their pain, to borrow an old term, the crucible of their pain, here was someone who not only cared about them, cared for them. He not only had sympathy for what they were going through, He had empathy as one who lived amongst them and who would die for them.

There's no one else that loves you the way that he does. Again, as we close here, Jesus said, he said things like this in Matthew 5. He said, blessed are the poor in Spirit. No Pharisee ever said those words, but Jesus did. He said, blessed is the poor in Spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are those who mourn. Blessed are those who grieve, for they shall be comforted. Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth.

For those who are grieving, those who are hurting today, this is medicine, good medicine. It does our hearts well to know that grieving is not the end. Hardships are not the end. The pain of today is not what tomorrow will hold. Our grieving, according to God who made the heavens and the earth, our grieving will end. Our comfort will be restored. Our losses, our losses will expire, and they will result in reunions with those that we've lost.

The poor in Spirit will be raised up, strengthened, encouraged. He's doing so today in small ways. It will reach a culmination, and it's not that far off. That's exciting. Verse 48, Jesus called hurting people close. They came and listened. This morning, the question is, is he calling you? This morning, are you aware of a spiritual hunger within you? Hunger perhaps to turn to him for the first time or perhaps to return to him from afar.

Whatever the case, you will find him just where he's always been. His arms extended towards you. Let's pray.

More in The Gospel Of Luke

Continue the verse-by-verse series.

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