Jesus Unleashed: A New Vision of the Bold Confrontations of Christ and Why They Matter
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About this ebook
Walk through the gospel records of the “bold confrontations” of Jesus and discover how to use your newfound knowledge of the person of Jesus to defend the biblical truth of the Christian faith.
“What you think of Jesus Christ will thoroughly color how you think about everything else,” writes John MacArthur. This is a critical truth in the life of every believer. Your view of Jesus affects the way you view God, the world, and every one of your decisions.
So often Jesus is portrayed as a pacifist, a philanthropist, or a docile teacher. He strikes a plastic—and sometimes pathetic—pose in the minds of many. Some prefer the meek and mild Jesus who heals the sick, calms fears, and speaks of peace and goodwill. These things do represent a portion of the Messiah. But tragically, too many have never been exposed to the rest of him. They have never seen a full 360-degree view of the Savior. His boldness in the face of confrontation and why that matters. Until now.
Jesus Unleashed, abridged from John MacArthur's classic bestseller The Jesus You Can't Ignore, takes a revealing walk through the gospel records. Like an investigative journalist on a mission, MacArthur shows you a remarkable and compelling picture of Jesus unleashed, including:
- Jesus's bold and confrontational interactions with religious leaders, challenging the common perception of Him as solely gentle and meek.
- The importance of understanding the full character of Jesus, including His authoritative and provocative nature in the face of those who distorted God’s truth.
- The necessity of using Jesus's example to defend the truth of the Christian faith today against false teachings.
Jesus Unleashed highlights a neglected but vital aspect of who Jesus really was—a bold and powerful teacher who never shied away from confronting those who would warp God's truth for their own purposes. MacArthur reminds you of the importance of courageously following Jesus' example as you defend biblical truth against those who would distort it.
John F. MacArthur
Widely known for his thorough, candid approach to teaching God's Word, John MacArthur is a popular author and conference speaker. He has served as pastor-teacher of Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, California, since 1969. John and his wife, Patricia, have four married children and fifteen grandchildren. John's pulpit ministry has been extended around the globe through his media ministry, Grace to You, and its satellite offices in seven countries. In addition to producing daily radio programs for nearly two thousand English and Spanish radio outlets worldwide, Grace to You distributes books, software, and digital recordings by John MacArthur. John is chancellor of The Master's University and Seminary and has written hundreds of books and study guides, each one biblical and practical. Bestselling titles include The Gospel According to Jesus, Twelve Ordinary Men, Twelve Extraordinary Women, Slave, and The MacArthur Study Bible, a 1998 ECPA Gold Medallion recipient.
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Jesus Unleashed - John F. MacArthur
PREFACE
Try to imagine a Bible teacher so devoted to the truth that he never misses an opportunity to confront false teachers and refute their errors. He exposes and rebukes religious hypocrisy wherever he sees it. He is not an insider as far as the current power structure is concerned; he doesn’t have any of the customary credentials. But advanced degrees and exalted titles do not intimidate him. He is, if anything, more forthright and severe with the priestly elite than with unschooled lay people. And he never shies away from controversy.
Someone like that would be despised and rejected by today’s evangelicals—especially by the movement’s most influential leaders. They would do their best to muzzle him and check his influence, even if they agreed with his views. Because in this postmodern era of tolerance and diversity, agreeability is deemed a higher virtue than faithfulness in the pursuit of biblical truth.
But the person in the above description is Jesus. He was deliberately provocative. He was passionate for the truth and therefore fiercely indignant against the religious hypocrisy and unbiblical doctrine of false teachers—especially the leading Pharisees. They wore a genteel, scholarly disguise and demanded His respect. He was relentlessly harsh with them.
It seems most evangelicals in the current generation would prefer a more domesticated, deferential Messiah. They want Him to be passive, polite, politically correct, and always pleasant. Any suggestion that our Lord might ever be angry or argumentative poses a severe challenge to the image they have created in their imaginations. They must at all costs keep Jesus subdued and make Him safe.
But Scripture stresses that Jesus spoke and taught as one having authority
(Matthew 7:29)—unrestrained, assertive, and at times angry.
It’s true that Jesus is merciful, gracious, and sympathetic to our weaknesses (Hebrews 4:15). He can have compassion on those who are ignorant and going astray, since he himself is also subject to weakness
(5:2). He is portrayed in prophetic imagery as a lamb, and also as a tender shepherd.
But He is also depicted in Scripture as a lion. He is the Lion of the tribe of Judah
(Revelation 5:5). And He is not to be muzzled or declawed. It is pure blasphemy to imagine that toning Him down would somehow improve His character, make Him seem nicer,
or elevate His glory.
My objective in this book is to highlight the boldness and power of Jesus by examining the intensity of His interaction with the Pharisees—listening as He speaks for Himself, without attempting to soften or censor anything. "See then the kindness and severity of God" (Romans 11:22 NASB).
As C. S. Lewis wrote about Aslan (the messiah figure in The Chronicles of Narnia), He isn’t safe. But he’s good.
INTRODUCTION
ac•a•dem•ic (ak e-DEM ik) adj. 1. abstract, speculative, or conjectural with very little practical significance. 2. pertaining to scholars and institutions of higher learning rather than to lay people or children. 3. of interest as an intellectual curiosity, but not particularly useful in real-world applications. 4. provoking curiosity and analysis rather than passion or devotion. 5. pedantic, casuistical; good for making a display of erudition but otherwise trivial. 6. belonging to that realm of scholastic theory and intellectual inquiry where certainty is always inappropriate. 7. not worth getting agitated about.
Spiritual truth is not academic
by any of the above definitions. What you believe about God is the most important feature of your whole worldview. It will color how you think about everything else—especially how you prioritize values, how you determine right and wrong, and what you think of your own place in the universe. That in turn will surely determine how you act.
The practical effects of apathy or unbelief are as potent as those of heartfelt devotion—only in the opposite direction. An atheist’s private life will inevitably become a living demonstration of the evils of unbelief. To whatever degree some atheists seek to maintain a public veneer of virtue and respectability—as well as when they themselves make moral judgments about others—they are walking contradictions. What possible virtue
could there be in an accidental universe with no Lawgiver and no Judge?
People who profess faith in the Almighty but refuse to think seriously about Him are also living illustrations of this same principle. In fact, the hypocrisy of a superficially religious person has potentially even more sinister implications than outright atheism, because of its deceptiveness.
It is the height of irrationality and arrogance to call Christ Lord with the lips while defying Him with one’s life. Yet that is precisely how multitudes live (Luke 6:46). Such people are even more preposterous examples of self-contradiction than the atheist who imagines he can deny the Source of all that’s good and yet somehow be good
himself. But the hypocrite is not only more irrational; he is also more contemptible than the out-and-out atheist, because he is actually doing gross violence to the truth while pretending to believe it. Nothing is more completely diabolical. Satan is the master hypocrite, disguising himself so that he appears good rather than evil. He transforms himself into an angel of light. Therefore it is no great thing if his ministers also transform themselves into ministers of righteousness, whose end will be according to their works
(2 Corinthians 11:14–15).
It is no accident, then, that Jesus’ harshest words were reserved for institutionalized religious hypocrisy. He waged a very aggressive public controversy against the chief hypocrites of His era. That conflict began almost as soon as He entered public ministry and continued relentlessly until the day He was crucified. In fact, it was the main reason they conspired to crucify Him.
His campaign against hypocrisy is a prominent, if not dominant, emphasis in all four gospels. Jesus never suffered professional hypocrites or false teachers gladly. He never shied away from conflict. He never softened His message to please genteel tastes or priggish scruples. He never suppressed any truth in order to accommodate someone’s artificial notion of dignity. He never bowed to the intimidation of scholars or paid homage to their institutions.
And He never, never, never treated the vital distinction between truth and error as a merely academic question.
I never could believe in the Jesus Christ of some people, for the Christ in whom they believe is simply full of affectionateness and gentleness, whereas I believe there never was a more splendid specimen of manhood, even its sternness, than the Saviour; and the very lips which declared that He would not break a bruised reed uttered the most terrible anathemas upon the Pharisees.
—Charles H. Spurgeon
One
WHEN IT’S WRONG TO BE NICE
Then, in the hearing of all the people, He said to His disciples, "Beware of the scribes . . ."
LUKE 20:45–46
Jesus’ way of dealing with sinners was normally marked by such extreme tenderness that He earned a derisive moniker from His critics: Friend of Sinners
(Matthew 11:19). When He encountered even the grossest of moral lepers (ranging from a woman living in adultery in John 4:7–29 to a man infested with a whole legion of demons in Luke 8:27–39), Jesus always ministered to them with remarkable benevolence—without delivering any scolding lectures or sharp rebukes. Invariably, when such people came to Him, they were already broken, humbled, and fed up with the life of sin. He eagerly granted such people forgiveness, healing, and full fellowship with Him on the basis of their faith alone (cf. Luke 7:50; 17:19).
The one class of sinners Jesus consistently dealt with sternly were the professional hypocrites—religious phonies, false teachers, and self-righteous peddlers of plastic piety—the scribes, lawyers, Sadducees, and Pharisees. These were the religious leaders in Israel—spiritual rulers
(to use a term Scripture often applies to them). They were the despotic gatekeepers of religious tradition. They cared more for custom and convention than they did for the truth. Almost every time they appear in the gospel accounts, they are concerned mainly with keeping up appearances and holding on to their power. Any thought they might have had for authentic godliness always took a back seat to more academic, pragmatic, or self-serving matters. They were the quintessential religious hypocrites.
The Sanhedrin and the Sadducees
The ruling power these men possessed was derived from a large council based in Jerusalem, consisting of seventy-one prominent religious authorities, collectively known as the Sanhedrin. Council members included the high priest and seventy leading priests and religious scholars. (The number was derived from Moses’ appointment of seventy advisors to assist him in Numbers 11:16.) The Sanhedrin had ultimate authority over Israel in all religious and spiritual matters (and thus even in some civil affairs).
The gospel accounts of Christ’s crucifixion refer about a dozen times to the Sanhedrin as the chief priests, the scribes, and the elders
(e.g., Matthew 26:3; Luke 20:1). The high priest presided over the full council, of course. The chief priests were the ranking aristocracy of the high-priestly line. (Some of them were men who had already served as high priest at one time or another; others were in line to serve a term in that office.) Virtually all the chief priests were also Sadducees. The elders were key leaders and influential members of important families outside the high-priestly line—and they too were predominantly Sadducees. The scribes were the scholars, not necessarily of noble birth like the chief priests and elders, but men who were distinguished mainly because of their expertise in scholarship and their encyclopedic knowledge of Jewish law and tradition. Their group was dominated by Pharisees.
So the council consisted of a blend of Pharisees and Sadducees, and those were rival parties. Although Sadducees were vastly outnumbered by Pharisees in the culture at large, the Sadducees nevertheless maintained a sizable majority in the Sanhedrin, and they held on to the reins of power tightly. The status of their priestly birthright in effect trumped the Pharisees’ scholarly clout, because the Pharisees were such devoted traditionalists that they bowed to the authority of the high-priestly line—even though they strongly disagreed with practically everything that made the Sadducees’ belief system distinctive.
For example, the Sadducees questioned the immortality of the human soul—denying both the resurrection of the body (Matthew 22:23), and the existence of the spirit world (Acts 23:8). The Sadducean party also rejected the Pharisees’ emphasis on oral traditions—going about as far as they could in the opposite direction. In fact, the Sadducees stressed the Pentateuch (the five books of Moses) almost to the exclusion of the rest of the Old Testament. As a result, the powerful messianic expectation that pervaded the teaching of the Pharisees was almost completely missing from the Sadducees’ worldview.
In most respects, the Sadducees were classic theological liberals. Their skepticism with regard to heaven, angels, and the afterlife automatically made them worldly minded and power hungry. They were much more interested in (and skilled at) the politics of Judaism than they were devoted to the religion itself.
Meet the Pharisees
Nevertheless, it was the Pharisees, not the more doctrinally aberrant Sadducees, who became the main figures of public opposition to Jesus in all four New Testament gospel accounts. Their teaching dominated and epitomized the religion of first-century Israel.
The word Pharisee is most likely based on a Hebrew root meaning separate.
Pharisees had an ostentatious way of trying to keep themselves separate from everything that had any connotation of ceremonial defilement. Their obsession with the external badges of piety was their most prominent feature, and they wore it on their sleeves—literally. They used the broadest possible leather straps to bind phylacteries on their arms and foreheads. (Phylacteries were leather boxes containing bits of parchment inscribed with verses from the Hebrew Scriptures.) They also lengthened the tassels on their garments (see Deuteronomy 22:12) in order to make their public display of religious devotion as conspicuous as possible. Thus they had taken a symbol that was meant to be a reminder to themselves (Numbers 15:38–39) and turned it into an advertisement of their self-righteousness, in order to gain the attention of others.
The Pharisees’ influence was so profound in early first-century Jewish life that even the Pharisees’ theological adversaries, the Sadducees, had to conform to the Pharisees’ style of prayer and ceremonialism in their public behavior, or else popular opinion