LANGUAGE:
Hello. This is Dr. David Wolfe, one of the pastors at Bensenville Bible Church, a culturally mixed community located on the outskirts of Chicago.
Our study today comes from Mark’s Gospel, chap 11:1-11. This chapter begins with what is referred to as Jesus’ Triumphal Entry into Jerusalem, leading up to the greatest Passover event ever to occur in the history of Israel.[i] As presented in the four Gospels, we find that the last week of Jesus’ life is really the entire focus, culminating with His resurrection. As pointed out by Frank Harrington, Those who wrote of Jesus were saying that the most important part of the disclosure of who He was, and who He is, is really encapitulated in the last week of His life.[ii]
The words that describe Jesus last week are a filled with tremendous emotions—emotions like hosanna, confrontation, betrayal, denial, trial, scourging, crucifixion, tomb, and Jesus’ heart rendering cry, “It is Finished!” Followed by the most electrifying words of all time—“He is not here! He is risen!"
Jesus last week opens with shouts of praise, and a visit to the Temple. I have entitled our study, The King Visits His Father’s House.
Let’s take a moment and ask God to guide us as we take a closer look at the opening of The Passion Week of Christ. Heavenly Father, we pray for your help as we study this passage together. We pray that you will save us from error, lead us into the truth, and then help us to live in the light of that which you call for us to trust and obey. And we ask this in your Son’s name. Amen.
Mark 11:12–14 (GW) 12The next day, when they left Bethany, Jesus became hungry. 13In the distance he saw a fig tree with leaves. He went to see if he could find any figs on it. When he came to it, he found nothing but leaves because it wasn’t the season for figs. 14Then he said to the tree, “No one will ever eat fruit from you again!” His disciples heard this.
Mark 11:1–11 (NASB95) 1As they approached Jerusalem, at Bethphage and Bethany, near the Mount of Olives, He sent two of His disciples, 2and said to them, “Go into the village opposite you, and immediately as you enter it, you will find a colt tied there, on which no one yet has ever sat; untie it and bring it here. 3“If anyone says to you, ‘Why are you doing this?’ you say, ‘The Lord has need of it’; and immediately he will send it back here.”
4They went away and found a colt tied at the door, outside in the street; and they untied it. 5Some of the bystanders were saying to them, “What are you doing, untying the colt?” 6They spoke to them just as Jesus had told them, and they gave them permission. 7They brought the colt to Jesus and put their coats on it; and He sat on it. 8And many spread their coats in the road, and others spread leafy branches which they had cut from the fields. 9Those who went in front and those who followed were shouting: “Hosanna! BLESSED IS HE WHO COMES IN THE NAME OF THE LORD; 10Blessed is the coming kingdom of our father David; Hosanna in the highest!” 11Jesus entered Jerusalem and came into the temple; and after looking around at everything, He left for Bethany with the twelve, since it was already late.
Assuming that you have your Bibles open to Mark’s Gospel chap 11, vs1-11, we will be looking at these eleven verses from four perspectives:
The events recorded by Mark are also given to us in Matthew 21:1-11, Luke 19:29-38, and John 12:12-15. Though Mark’s storyline is our primary focus, the other three gospels give us additional insights to the drama of the day. Because it is Passover time, whether Jesus was there or not, the crowds in Jerusalem would have been huge. But on this occasion, because of His presence, many believe the population of Jerusalem may have been pushing 2.6 million people.[iii] From a close reading of Daniel 9:24-27, the year and the day of this moment was marked on the calendar 483 years previously.[iv] The date is believed to be Nisan 6, 32AD[v], which would be the month of April for us, and would put Jesus’ age somewhere around 40 yrs of age, assuming He was born around 6BC.[vi] In addition, Matthew tells us in chap 21:4, that this ‘all’ took place to fulfill what was spoken through the prophet Zechariah (9:9). The point is, the events that unfolded were preplanned, and not happen-stance.
A brief scan of Mark’s account tells us that Jesus was very much in control of the goings on of the day. He made no spur of the moment decisions.
V1-2, 1Jesus stops near the Mount of Olives, and sends two of His disciples into Bethany 2and said to them, “Go into the village opposite you, and immediately as you enter it, you will find a donkey tied there, on which no one yet has ever sat; untie it and bring it here. 3“If anyone says to you, ‘Why are you doing this?’ you say, ‘The Lord has need of it’; and immediately he will send it back here.”
I find the instructions fascinating. They are so explicit. Jesus tells them to go to Bethany, there they’ll find a donkey tethered that’s never been ridden; and when asked as to why they were taking the donkey, they were to give a passphrase, the Lord is in need of it, and then tell presumably the owner the donkey will be returned. And guess what, it happened just as Jesus said. Luke tells us that indeed the disciples were challenged when untying the donkey (19:33). And when they give the passphrase, and the owner said, that is just fine.[vii]
Don’t miss the details. They are so very explicit--donkey, location, and a ‘passphrase’--the Lord needs it (v3). How detailed can one get!!!? And get this, how did the owner know the passphrase? That is all very fascinating. V7, the two disciples go to town and find the donkey, bring it back to Jesus, saddle him up with their coats, and then Jesus sat on it. Now don’t forget, this donkey has never been ridden. Jesus is very clear about that little detail. Having been on a farm, unbridle animals do not welcome things like this. They will dump you. Ray Stedman is spot on when he observes that here is an animal that no one had ever sat on--but Jesus sat on him, and he was quiet, responsive, and obedient, and carried Him through the streets of the city without being bothered by the noise and crowding.[viii]
But there is more in the detail that we should note. In the Old Testament King David, King Solomon, and King Jehu all rode donkeys. And Zechariah 9 prophesied that the coming Messiah Davidic King would enter Jerusalem riding on a donkey.[ix]. By doing this, Jesus was announcing that He is none other than the foretold Messiah King. So John 12: 15 (NASB95) 15“FEAR NOT, DAUGHTER OF ZION; BEHOLD, YOUR KING IS COMING, SEATED ON A DONKEY’S COLT.” This is a partial quote of Zechariah 9:9 (NASB95) Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion! Shout in triumph, O daughter of Jerusalem! Behold, your king is coming to you; He is just and endowed with salvation, Humble, and mounted on a donkey, Even on a colt, the foal of a donkey. But, with all the fanfare, the disciples missed it. John 12:16 (NASB95) These things His disciples did not understand at the first; but when Jesus was glorified, then they remembered that these things were written of Him, and that they had done these things to Him.
Jesus, now on the donkey, heads down the Mount Of Olives, surrounded by a huge and growing crowd. V8, many in the crowd spread their coats in the road, and others spread leafy branches which they had cut from the fields. It was a pomp and circumstance parade. Matthew tells us it was loud and boisterous as people were praising God joyfully with a loud voice for all the miracles which they had seen. The parade is massive. Vs9-10, they were shouting, dancing, and singing Psalm 118—Hosanna!! Blessed is He who comes in the Name of the Lord! Blessed is the coming kingdom of our father David.
The emotional excitement must have been overwhelming. Indeed, Matthew tells us that Jesus’ entrance to Jerusalem placed the city in turmoil (21:10). The Gk word he uses refers to a violent shaking. Its descriptive of what happens when an earthquake strikes.[x] The point is, as Michael Marsh observes, Matthew is likening Jesus’ entrance into Jerusalem to a seismic event. It’s an event in which lives and the world are shaken to the core. Like the destruction of an earthquake, something was being destroyed in Jerusalem that day, and something new was being birth. The turmoil of the week was designed to change who we are and the life we live.[xi] In the midst of the turmoil, the religious leaders were asking the crowd, Who is this? (Matt 21:10). Another way of asking ‘who is the Grand Marshall’ leading the parade?
V11, the crowds answered back, Its the prophet Jesus, from Nazareth. I suspect that there were more answers to the question than recorded. Michael Marsh gives us some hints as to some additional answers:
The parade culminates with Jesus stepping into the temple proper; V11 Jesus looks around at everything, then leaves for Bethany with the twelve, since it was already late.
Remember Luke 2:19? When Jesus was 12 Joseph and Mary came to Jerusalem for Passover. After leaving, and several days out, they realized Jesus was not part of the crowd. They go back and find Him in the temple in deep discussion with the religious authorities. They interrupt, asking, “Jesus, we’ve been looking everywhere for you. What are you doing here?” And he said, “Didn’t you know I had to be in my Father’s house?” So here Jesus is again in His Father’s House. Here He enters, looks around at everything, and then leaves. A somewhat anticlimactic ending a grand entrance, yet it tells us what He really came to the temple to do. He is in His Father’s house.
Make a note of this: this is an official visit of the King of the Kingdom of God. It’s not a passing visit like a tourist might do. It’s an inspection tour, if you please. He was looking and analyzing carefully the very heart of the nation. He went into the temple, where the very heartbeat of the nations was supposed to be throbbing for God. He scopes it all out. If we skip down to v15, we are told what he saw--
He did not say a word. He just looked around at everything, and then left.[xiii]. Jesus’ coming to Jerusalem wasn’t about the grand parade, or donkey ride, or the palms, or even the jubilation of the crowd. It’s about what He saw, and it was about scoping out the broken heartbeat of the nation. Luke captures the brokenness of Jesus’ heart as he approach Jerusalem 41He saw the city and He wept over it, 42saying, “If you had known in this day, even you, the things which make for peace! But now they have been hidden from your eyes. 43“For the days will come upon you when your enemies will throw up a barricade against you, and surround you and hem you in on every side, 44and they will level you to the ground and your children within you, and they will not leave in you one stone upon another, because you did not recognize the time of your visitation.” [Luke 19:41–44 (NASB95)]
Well, I hope you are still hanging in there with me. It’s hard for us, 2000 plus years removed, to really understand the importance of what was happening that day. We need to remember that the people caught up in the grand parade were not thinking about sin and personal salvation. John 6:14-15 tell us they had a king inauguration mindset. Alistair Begg writes: Their minds were on political revolution. They were thinking of overturning and abolishing Roman authorities and atrocities. Jesus was their biggest political hope. They hated the Romans. They were done living in subjugation. They wanted a political champion.[xiv] And they believe they’d finally found one.
This is the moment we need to make some personal application and reflection, asking ourselves as to how this event should shape our lives. I think there are at least two points of reflection for us.
The first one comes in v11, where we are told that Jesus entered Jerusalem and came into the temple; and after looking around at everything He left . . .
Remember. The temple was initially designed to be the heartbeat of the nation, the place where they came to meet God and offer worship.
This was a personal an intimate moment for Jesus. According to the Old Testament writings,
When Jesus entered that day, it must have been a day of great sorrow. I wonder what was going on in His mind as He scoped out the inward workings of the place designed for the people to worship and pray. There He stood in His Father’s house, instead of a house of prayer, He saw a materialistic disaster zone.
As I reflect on Jesus’ survey of His Father’s house, I am reminded of 1 Corinthians 6:19 (NASB95) do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and that you are not your own?[xvi] Paul is point out to the Corinthians and to us that our bodies serve as temples of the Holy Spirit, a special place where the presence of God resides.
Take a look around at everything in your heart. That’s what Jesus did. What does He see that needs to be put in the dumpster?
Another thought that comes to my mind is the mentality of the crowd. They had become so mired in the political, emotional, and social abuse under the Roman domination that they missed the truth of the Gospel of the Kingdom that Jesus proclaimed. You see, they didn’t understand the core message of the Gospel of the Kingdom because they were selective in their reading and studying. They totally missed the proclamation of redemption from sin, and focused entirely on a political and social redemption. To put it out there, they had the cart before the horse. All that to say, unless we permeate our lives with right thinking, studying, and praying Scripture, we will also live in a world of confusion and miss the message of the Gospel of the Kingdom.
As Alistair Begg reminds us, The story of the Bible is the story of man’s placing himself where God deserves to be, in rebellion and sin, and of God now coming and placing himself where man deserves to be—in the place of punishment for sin. So that from the very beginning of the Bible all the way to the end, the focus is on the way in which God will bring sinners into the perfection of his heaven.[xviii]
My point for us to ponder is, is that unless we keep the Gospel of the Kingdom that Jesus proclaimed at the center of our lives, we will, like the people of the parade, create a Jesus of our own making. Like the people in the grand parade, we will strive to turn Him into a political and social savior. As soon as Jesus is woven into our political and social mindset, we leave behind the Gospel of the Kingdom. Listen carefully, the kingdom of God comes first in the person of Christ, in His words and in His works; the kingdom of God is revealed in the preaching of the gospel; and in that preaching the kingdom of God becomes open and universal. But Christ’s kingship is not a warlike office. He rides a donkey, “gentle and lowly in heart.”[xix] As Jesus said in Matthew 11:28–30 (NASB95) 28“Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest. 29“Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and YOU WILL FIND REST FOR YOUR SOULS. 30“For My yoke is easy and My burden is light.” Are you weary and heavy-laden? Jesus will give you the rest you need. And that my friends is absolutely true.
Would you join me now in prayer? Heavenly Father, thank you for the challenge given to us today which is designed to shape us, stir us, move us and cause us to think clearly with Your written word. Forgive us when we strive to squeeze Jesus into our own agendas that make us comfortable. Lord, I ask that you help us not be naïve, but help us to be gracious, to be kind, to be forceful, to be true, breaking down barriers so that we can reach more people in our communities and beyond with the good news of the Gospel of the Kingdom. Amen
Well, there you have it, the opening day of the week leading to Jesus crucifixion. As Matthew tells it, it was a seismic day, a shaking of Jerusalem, a shaking of the religious paradigm of the day. The grand parade that day was about Jesus coming to the inner sanctuary of the life of the nation of Israel, and by application to our own heart beat for God. What He saw was that the center of worship had gone astray and was buried by materialism.
So, how is your heartbeat for God? Like the nation of Israel, do you need an earthquake encounter with God? Know Jesus is looking at your center; do you need to do some serious house cleaning?
If you would like to contribute to this ministry, go to our website: Bensenvillebiblechurch.com, click on the Donation Drop down and pick your donation preference. May the grace of the Lord Jesus, the love of God, the fellowship of God the Holy Spirit, help us in this endeavor. For Christ’s sake we ask it. Amen.
[i]
http://die2live.worthyofpraise.org/the-final-passover-week/ -
Good Thursday (or Wednesday) & the Final Passover Week. Cf., Chuck Missler,
https://www.khouse.org/articles/2008/769/; April 6, 32 A.D. - end of the first 69 Weeks of Daniel & day Messiah is manifest king. “Sir Robert Anderson by a careful analysis of the prophecy of Daniel 9:24-27 calculated that Jesus, to the very day, fulfilled Daniel’s prophecy concerning the appearance of the Messiah. Dr. Alva McClain has written, ‘April 6, 32 A.D., therefore, is fixed definitely as the end of the era of the first 69 Weeks; and according to Daniel’s prophecy, it should mark the very day of Messiah’s manifestation as the Prince of Israel.’ Without attempting to enter into the clear but intricate chronological calculations set forth by Anderson in his book, The Coming Prince (Pages 95-105), I shall simply state his conclusion that April 6, 32 A.D., was the tenth of Nisan, that momentous day on which our Lord, in fulfilment of Messianic prophecy, rode up to Jerusalem on the ‘foal of an ass’ and offered Himself as the Prince and King of Israel.” Alva J. McClain, Daniel’s Prophecy of the Seventy Weeks (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1969), p. 20.
https://www.puritanboard.com/threads/april-6-32-a-d-end-of-the-first-69-weeks-of-daniel-day-messiah-is-manifest-king.86469/;
https://www.timeanddate.com/calendar/monthly.html?year=32&month=4&country=34; http://historicchristianity .blogspot.com/2006/05/chronology-of-easter-week-32-ad.html. I should also point out that the calculation of ancient dates is by no means a straightforward affair. Sources are usually unclear as to their frame of reference, Julian or Gregorian, and the Hebrew calendar is confusing even to those familiar with it. Online calendar calculators will yeild contradictory results, because different assumptions have been programmed in.
http://www.abdicate.net/cal.aspx; http://www.csgnetwork.com/juliancountdaysfromtocalc.html. Thus the following is not confirmed by such tools:"A most compelling Biblical Prophecy is found in Daniel, chapter 9, verse 25. Written 500 years before the birth of Jesus Christ (the oldest preserved copy dating 200 years before the birth of Christ), it foretells the very day Christ would enter Jerusalem. The prophecy states: 69 weeks of years (69 x 7 = 483 years) would pass from the decree to rebuild Jerusalem, until the coming of the Messiah. This is according to the Babylonian 360-day calendar, since Daniel was written in Babylon during the Jewish captivity after the fall of Jerusalem. Thus, 483 years x 360 days = 173,880 days. According to records found by Sir Henry Creswicke Rawlinson in the Shushan (Susa) Palace, and confirmed in Nehemiah 2:1, this decree was made on March 14th, 445 BC, by Artaxerxes Longimanus. Exactly 173,880 days later, on April 6th, 32 AD, Jesus Christ rode into Jerusalem upon a colt (fulfilling the prophecy in Zechariah 9:9). The world celebrates this day as Palm Sunday." http://www.allabouttruth.org/Biblical-Prophecy.htm
[ii] Frank Harrington, A Day of Applause (Luke 19:28-43), https://www.preachingtoday.com/sermons/sermons/2005/august/ 175.html
[iii] John MacArthur, The False Coronation of the True King (Mark 11:1-11), https://www.gty.org/library/sermons-library/41-56/the-false-coronation-of-the-true-king. It is estimated that as many as two million people would be in Jerusalem at a Passover even in ancient days. And one of the ways we get at that is ten years after this, 40 A.D., there’s a record in Jewish history that two hundred and sixty-thousand lambs were slain at that Passover – over a quarter of a million. Usually there was one lamb per ten people. That would put it at 2.6 million people possibly. It was a massive crowd. The crowd around Him must have been in the hundreds of thousands. This was the time and this was the place to allow this to agitate His enemies so that He would die in God’s perfect timing.
[iv] Ibid., In Daniel 9 we’re given a really important prophecy, Daniel 9:24 to 27, that it’ll be four hundred and eighty three years, sixty-nine weeks of years – sixty-nine times seven, four hundred and eighty three – four hundred and eighty-three years from the decree of Artaxerxes to rebuild Jerusalem, which was in 445 B.C., four hundred and eighty-three years to the arrival of Messiah. If you do the calendar work on that, four hundred and eighty-three years from the decree of Artaxerxes lands you on this day when Jesus came into the city. God’s timing is perfect, down to the clearest detail. It was a faithful arrival, faithful to the divine purpose, prophecy, and timetable.
[v] Ray Stedman, The King Is Coming (Mark 11), https://www.raystedman.org/new-testament/mark/the-king-is-coming. Sir Robert Anderson, with his precise mind and his training in logic, analyzed the book of Daniel and determined the exact date when that decree of Artaxerxes was issued: March 28, 445 B. C. Counting from that date, and making the necessary corrections for calendar errors, he determined that on April 6, A. D. 32, Jesus rode into Jerusalem -- exactly four hundred eighty-three years later.
[vi] Cf., Believing that Jesus was born in 6BC. https://www.livescience.com/42976-when-was-jesus-born.html But nobody really knows exactly when Jesus was born. Some scholars think that he was born between 6 B.C. and 4 B.C., based partly on the biblical story of Herod the Great. Not long before Herod's demise, which is believed to have occurred in 4 B.C., the ruler of Judea supposedly ordered the death of all male infants who were under the age of two and lived in the vicinity of Bethlehem, in an attempt to kill Jesus.
[vii] Alistar Begg, Coming Kingdom (Mark 11) https://www.truthforlife.org/resources/sermon/coming-kingdom/ a small thing to us, until we begin to read our Bibles and discover that in the Old Testament, when a donkey, when a beast of burden, was pressed into royal or kingly service, they did not routinely go to the pool of local donkeys who were involved in moving things around in secular business pursuits, but rather they went expressly to the fields where there had been unbroken beasts, where they were unridden creatures. And Jesus here is very clear in pointing out that when they take hold of this donkey, it will be just that. Incidentally, if you’re making notes and you wonder where I find this material, then you will find that in Numbers chapter 19,[2] you’ll find it in Deuteronomy chapter 21,[3] you’ll find it in 1 Samuel chapter 6.[4]
[viii] Ray Stedman, The King Is Coming (Mark 11) https://www.raystedman.org/new-testament/mark/the-king-is-coming
[ix] 2 Samuel 16:2; 1 Kings 1:38-40, 2 Kings 9:12-13, Zechariah 9:9-17
[x] Donald A. Hagner, Matthew 14–28, vol. 33B, Word Biblical Commentary (Dallas: Word, Incorporated, 1995), 596.į¼σεĪÆσθη πį¾¶σα į¼” πĻλις. the verb σεĪÆειν, “shake,” is used figuratively again only in 28:4; cf. the whole of Jerusalem being “troubled” at the report of the birth of the messianic king in 2:3).
[xi] Michael Marsh, Life-giving Turmoil – A Sermon for the Sunday of the Passion: Palm Sunday, Matthew 21:1-11 https://interruptingthesilence.com/2014/04/13/life-giving-turmoil-a-sermon-for-the-sunday-of-the-passion-palm-sunday-matthew-211-11/
[xii] Michael Marsh, This Is The One – A Palm Sunday Sermon On Matthew 21:1-11, https://interruptingthesilence.com/ 2020/04/05/ this-is-the-one-a-palm-sunday-sermon-on-matthew-211-11/
[xiii] Michael Marsh, Looking Around and Leaving Nothing Behind – A Palm Sunday Sermon on Mark 11:1-11, https://interruptingthesilence.com/2015/03/30/looking-around-and-leaving-nothing-behind-a-palm-sunday-sermon-on-mark-111-11/
[xiv] Alistar Begg, Coming Kingdom (Mark 11) https://www.truthforlife.org/resources/sermon/coming-kingdom/
[xv] The Purpose Of The Temple, https://biblehub.com/sermons/auth/rowland/the_purposes_of_the_temple.htm
[xvi] John 2:21 (NASB95) 21But He was speaking of the temple of His body. 1 Corinthians 3:16–17 (NASB95) 16Do you not know that you are a temple of God and that the Spirit of God dwells in you? 17If any man destroys the temple of God, God will destroy him, for the temple of God is holy, and that is what you are.
[xvii] Michael Marsh, Looking Around and Leaving Nothing Behind – A Palm Sunday Sermon on Mark 11:1-11, https://interruptingthesilence.com/2015/03/30/looking-around-and-leaving-nothing-behind-a-palm-sunday-sermon-on-mark-111-11/
[xviii] Alistar Begg, Coming Kingdom (Mark 11) https://www.truthforlife.org/resources/sermon/coming-kingdom/
[xix] Ibid., Matthew 11:29 (NASB95) “Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and YOU WILL FIND REST FOR YOUR SOULS.