Will Jesus Weep Over You?
Now as He drew near, He saw the city and wept over it, - Luke 19:41
The last week of Jesus ministry began with a triumphal entry into
Jerusalem. Jesus was met with shouts of rejoicing, “Hosanna to the Son of
David! ‘Blessed is He who comes in the name of the LORD!’ Hosanna in the
highest!” (Mat. 21:9). But the scriptural account goes on to state, “Now as He
drew near, He saw the city and wept over it, . . .” Jesus wept because He knew
the fickleness of humanity and their dullness to the ways of God. He wept
because He knew the sad truth that humanity misses out on God’s blessings
because they are unready for them. Humanity misses out on God’s best because of
disregard, spiritual dullness, and a degenerate set of priorities.
The nation of Israel missed her Messiah because she was unready for Him.
To this day they are sadly still looking for the first coming of their Messiah
when He has come and is due to come again. Despite hundreds of prophetic
identifiers Israel was unready for her Messiah. This was the source of sorrow
for Jesus.
We need to learn from history. Otherwise as George Santayana said, “Those
who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” Just as Israel missed
the first coming of Messiah, Christians can miss the Second Coming of Messiah
due to not being ready for it. This too would be a source of sorrow for Jesus. When
we examine Luke 19 we find instructions on how to be ready for the coming of
Jesus. If we heed the scripture, we’ll be ready when Jesus returns. Then we’ll
be the cause of rejoicing not weeping in our Savior. What do we learn in Luke
19 about being ready for His coming?
First, don’t let anything keep
you from the salvation Jesus offers (19:1-10). On His way to Jerusalem Jesus passed through
Jericho (19:1). Jericho was known for its palm trees. It was a rich and
flourishing town. It was at this point we are introduced to Zacchaeus, a rich
chief tax collector (19:2). Tax collectors were despised and because his wealth
came from collecting taxes he was likely resented by those around him. He was
wealthy and had position in society and yet when he heard of Jesus nearby he
sought Him out (19:3).
Zacchaeus had some obstacles to overcome in order to see Jesus. He was
short. Even though he didn’t measure up physically, he ran ahead and climbed a
sycamore tree so that he could see Jesus (19:3-4). For a wealthy man of status
to run and even climb a tree was an act of humiliation. Zacchaeus made seeking
Jesus a priority by humbling himself
to a position where he could see Him. When we come to the Lord we do so humbly,
on His terms, not our own. Zacchaeus didn’t proudly push through the crowd for
an audience with Jesus. He humbly and in a childlike way scampered up a tree to
see Jesus. Jesus said to enter his kingdom you had to enter it as a child,
humbly and open to learn (Luke 18:16-17).
As Jesus passed by He looked up and saw Zacchaeus and said to him,
“Zacchaeus, make haste and come down, for today I must stay at your house”
(19:5). Interestingly Jesus knew Zacchaeus’ name. Zacchaeus was seeking Jesus,
but Jesus knew of and was maybe looking for the short tax collector too. It’s
also interesting that Jesus invited Himself to Zacchaeus’ house. What right did
He have to do this? A King can invite Himself anywhere He wants. The host Zacchaeus
then became the guest of King Jesus. Jesus takes control of the salvation
process. He comes our way and is ready when we respond or show evidence of
receiving the word He offers.
At Jesus’ invitation, Zacchaeus immediately scampered down the tree and,
"received Him joyfully” (19:6). Zacchaeus accepted the invitation of Jesus. He did so joyfully. Something in
the rich tax collector responded to the invitation of Jesus. He may have had
all he needed materially, but he was missing something more important. He knew
that too. Otherwise he wouldn’t have climbed that tree. When Jesus said He
would stay at his house, Zacchaeus heart leaped for joy. He sensed his
emptiness was about to be ended.
The bystanders complained about this. They resented Jesus going to stay
with a “sinner” (19:7). But public opinion didn’t prevent Zacchaeus from
receiving Jesus. Even though these were the people he had to work with and live
amongst, Zacchaeus didn’t let their opinion and peer pressure deter him. Nothing
could keep him from opening his home and heart to the Savior.
We don’t know what the entire conversation was between Jesus and
Zacchaeus but what we do know is that it had an impact on the rich tax
collector. He stood up and said to the Lord, “Look, Lord, I give half of my
goods to the poor; and if I have taken anything from anyone by false
accusation, I restore fourfold” (19:8). These words indicate a life change
based on an inward heart transformation. Zacchaeus was convicted of his sin. He
wanted to make things right. What Jesus brought Him, he received. We know this
because Jesus responded, “Today salvation has come to this house, because he
also is a son of Abraham” (19:9). A “son
of Abraham” is another way of saying Zacchaeus had put his faith in God (see
Gen. 15:6; Rom. 4). Zacchaeus was not saved by his works, his works were a product
of being saved by the faith he put in Jesus.
The account of Zacchaeus salvation is an example of Jesus’ priority.
Jesus said, “for the Son of Man has come to seek and save that which was lost”
(19:10). That was Jesus’ priority and that should be our priority. If we are
going to be ready for His coming we have to be saved ourselves. We have to
receive Jesus into our hearts. Jesus said, “Behold, I stand at the door and
knock. If anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and
dine with him, and he with Me” (Rev. 3:20). That’s the first order of business,
be saved yourself. Then once your salvation is secure, make evangelism a
priority like Jesus did. This is the first step in getting ready for Jesus.
Second, be faithful to use what
the Lord gives you (19:11-27). As Jesus spoke of His priority to seek and save the lost He shared the
parable of the ten minas. He spoke of a nobleman who went away on a journey to
receive a kingdom. As he left he entrusted ten of his servant’s with a mina (i.e.
about three months wages) each with the command, “Do business till I come”
(19:11-13). Despite some resistance the nobleman received his kingdom (19:14). Upon
his return he called the servants to give an account of what they had done with
the ten minas (19:15). The first two servants that gave account had differing
achievements but the nobleman complimented both and gave each even greater
responsibility (19:16-19). But the third servant came and returned the mina
with no profit reasoning that he was fearful and implied the nobleman was harsh,
unjust, and unreasonable (19:20-21). The nobleman assessed this one as a
“wicked servant,” and took his mina from him and gave it to the servant who had
invested the mina wisely (19:22-26). Then the nobleman called for his enemies
to be brought before him to be slain before him (19:27).
What was so wicked about the inaction of this last servant? Was it simply
a monetary matter? No, it was much more than this. The inactivity of the wicked
servant implied that he did not expect or
desire the return of the nobleman; he assumed he wouldn’t come back. He was
an enemy within the household of the nobleman and deserved the same fate of the
enemies that outwardly opposed the nobleman (compare the Parable of the Talents
in Mat. 25:30). Actions
speak louder than words. When we do nothing with what the Lord entrusts to us,
it implies we really don’t believe He’s coming back. We may even have a desire
that He doesn’t come back. That is wicked.
The message here is faithfulness means
wisely using and investing what the Lord entrusts to you. If we are going
to be ready for Jesus coming we need to invest what He has entrusted to us in a
way that will yield a profit. Our talents, material resources, spiritual
gifting, everything He has entrusted to us should be invested in the priority
of seeking and saving the lost.
Third, understand Jesus will be
praised (19:28-40). As Jesus
drew near Jerusalem He instructed His disciples to go ahead of Him to secure
His mode of transportation, a colt (19:28-31). In Matthew’s account it mentions
a donkey and a colt (Mat. 21:1-7). This is not a contradiction only a
typological insight added by Matthew. Typologically the donkey and colt refer
to the Old Testament and New Testament. In Matthew it states Jesus “sat on
them” (Mat. 19:7). But in Luke it shows that while Jesus may have begun sitting
on both, He made the transition to sitting only on the colt. Typologically this
refers to the transition from Old to New Testaments.
As Jesus rides the colt His “disciples began to rejoice and praise God
with a loud voice for all the mighty works they had seen saying: ‘Blessed is
the King who comes in the name of the LORD!’ Peace in heaven and glory in the
highest!” (19:32-38). When some Pharisees heard this, they immediately knew
Jesus was being hailed as Messiah. They called for Jesus to rebuke His
disciples (19:39). To this Jesus said, “I tell you that if these should keep
silent, the stones would immediately cry out” (19:40). Jesus is going to be
praised. A day is coming when every knee will bow and every tongue confess that
Jesus Christ is Lord (Phil. 2:9-11). This is going to happen. Nothing people
say or do can prevent it. Will you be one of the disciples praising Jesus or
will you be a religious Pharisee trying to prevent it? Will you be ready when
Jesus comes?
Fourth, don’t neglect prophecy
(19:41-44). Jesus coming as
Messiah should not have met with resistance or rejection. The Messiah was
clearly identified in prophetic scriptures. Jesus laments, “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” (19:41-42). Because they neglected God’s
prophetic word and rejected Jesus as Messiah, blindness came upon them that
prevented them from seeing Messiah Jesus for who He was. Rejecting God’s word
always leads to a hardening, a dulling, and desensitization to the truth of
God. The apostle Paul spoke of a blindness that has come upon many Jews that
will last until the end times (Rom. 11). Then through a series of events that blindness
will be lifted. It will be lifted when they see Jesus return (Zech. 12:10). And
Paul says, “And so all Israel will be saved” (Rom. 11:26). That will be a great
day!
But before that day comes Jesus prophesied there would be great trial and
hardship for Israel. He predicted the enemies of Israel would surround
Jerusalem and literally bring it down stone by stone (19:43-44). This was
literally fulfilled in 70 AD when the Romans destroyed Jerusalem and the
Temple. You can trust the word of Jesus.
That God’s word predicted clearly what the coming of Messiah would be
like is seen in such passages as Zechariah 9:9 that states:
·
Zechariah 9:9 - “Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion! Shout, O daughter of Jerusalem!
Behold, your King is coming to you; He is just and having salvation,
Lowly and riding on a donkey, A colt, the foal of a donkey.
This is how Jesus entered
Jerusalem. But if that isn’t enough, the book of Daniel contains a more incredible
prophetic word identifying to the day
when Messiah would make His triumphal entry into Jerusalem:
·
Daniel 9:25 - “Know therefore and understand,
That from the going forth of the command To restore and build Jerusalem
Until Messiah the Prince, There shall be seven weeks and
sixty-two weeks; The street shall be built again, and the wall, Even in
troublesome times.”
This is an incredible prophecy! What it means is that
from the time that the people are permitted to return to the Holy Land to
rebuild Jerusalem, there will be “seven weeks and sixty-two weeks” or 69 weeks
of seven years each, 483 years (69x7 = 483). We need to keep in mind too that
the Hebrew year consisted of 360 days, not 365 like our calendar.
In the book of Nehemiah we are told of the “command”
made by King Artaxerxes to allow the Jews to return to their land from
captivity and to rebuild Jerusalem, (not just the Temple but the city of
Jerusalem):
- Nehemiah 2:1,5,8 – “And it came to pass in the month of Nisan, in
the twentieth year of King Artaxerxes, when wine was before
him, that I took the wine and gave it to the king. Now I had never been
sad in his presence before.5 . .
.And I said to the king, “If it pleases the king, and if your servant has
found favor in your sight, I ask that you send me to Judah, to the city of
my fathers’ tombs, that I may rebuild it.” . . . 8 “and a letter to Asaph
the keeper of the king’s forest, that he must give me timber to make beams
for the gates of the citadel which pertains to the temple, for the
city wall, and for the house that I will occupy.” And the king granted them
to me according to the good hand of my God upon me.”
It is well documented in history that the first day
of Nisan “in the twentieth year of King Artaxerxes” is equivalent to March
14, 445 B.C. That is the starting point for this prophecy. You might think,
“Wait a minute teacher, how do you know what day of the month in Nisan it was?”
In his great book entitled, The Search for Messiah, Mark Eastman
explains the following:
“By Hebrew tradition, when the day of the month is not specifically
stated, it is given to be the first day of that month. So, the day of the
decree by Artaxerxes was the first day of the Hebrew month Nisan 445 B.C.E. The
first day of Nisan 445 B.C.E. corresponds to the 14th day of March.
This was verified by the astronomical calculations at the British Royal
Observatory and reported by Sir Robert Anderson.” [1]
Now if we multiply 69 x 7 year units (360 day years)
the result is 173,880 days. When we mark off 173,880 days from March 14,
445 B.C. it brings us to April 6th, 32 A.D. In Luke 3:1 it
states that Jesus’ ministry began “in the fifteenth year of the
reign of Tiberius Caesar.” The date at
which Tiberius’ reign began is calculated with certainty to be 14 A.D. If we
add 15 years starting from 14 A.D. it brings us to 29 A.D. We then need to add
an additional 3 years due to the three years of ministry depicted
chronologically in the gospels. That therefore brings us to 32 A.D. In his
pamphlet Jesus Historical Facts, Ralph O Muncaster notes that:
“The Royal Observatory in Greenwich, England confirms the Sunday [Palm
Sunday – Triumphal Entry] before Passover [in 32 A.D.] to be APRIL 6TH,
32 A.D.’[2]
Therefore, what we have in Daniel 9 is an exact
calculation to the day when Messiah Jesus made his triumphal entry into
Jerusalem! This not only attests to the supernatural Divine
authorship of this prophecy, but it also identifies and bears testimony that
Jesus is the Messiah!
The prophecy of Daniel goes on to predict what would happen
to Messiah at the end of that week that began with the triumphal entry:
·
Daniel 9:26a - “And after the sixty-two weeks
Messiah shall be cut off, but not for Himself;
Here we have a direct reference to the crucifixion of
Jesus one week after His triumphal entry into Jerusalem. “Messiah shall be cut
off, but not for Himself;” is referring to the substitutionary atonement of
Jesus as the Scripture attests:
- Isaiah 53:4-6 – “Surely He has borne our griefs And carried our
sorrows; Yet we esteemed Him stricken, Smitten by God, and afflicted.5 But
He was wounded for our transgressions, He was bruised
for our iniquities; The chastisement for our peace was upon Him,
And by His stripes we are healed.6 All we like sheep have gone astray; We
have turned, every one, to his own way; And the Lord has laid on Him the iniquity of us all.”
In the New Testament it speaks of the substitutionary
work of Jesus in the following way:
- 2 Corinthians 5:21 – “For He made Him who knew no sin to be
sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.”
- 1 Peter 2:24 – “who Himself bore our sins in His own body on the
tree, that we, having died to sins, might live for righteousness—by whose
stripes you were healed.”
- 1 Peter 3:18 – “For Christ also suffered once for sins, the just
for the unjust, that He might bring us to God, being put to death in the
flesh but made alive by the Spirit,”
The Jews had been looking for a political Messiah who
would free them from the oppression of the Romans. But had they checked the
word of God more closely and not relied so heavily on the tradition of men,
they would have understood that Messiah would first give His life as a
substitutionary sacrifice for the sins of all humankind.[3]
We need to pay attention to prophecy in scripture.
Otherwise when Jesus returns, we may not be ready. Learn from those who missed
His first coming so that you won’t miss His second coming!
Fifth, clean house (19:45-48). Upon entering Jerusalem Jesus went
straight to the Temple. As soon as He got there He cleaned house. He drove out
those who had reduced the holy Temple grounds to a place of manipulative
monetary profit. The money changers preyed on pilgrims who came to the Temple
to bring offerings to the Lord. The pilgrims would bring their own sacrifices
but they would be rejected and told they needed to buy the acceptable
sacrificial animals from the priests. To do this they had to convert their
secular money to Temple money. When people would go to the money changers to convert
their money, they would be charged exorbitant conversion charges. Since the
pilgrims had travelled far from home, they had no recourse but to pay the
extortionist expense. Jesus threw those involved in such unjust practices out
of the Temple. He then reemphasized that
God’s house was to be a house of prayer not a den of thieves (19:45-46). And He
taught daily in the Temple. The religious Pharisees resisted and objected to
this. They began plotting how to kill Jesus. But the people were hungry for God’s
word and there was nothing that could prevent them from receiving the word
Jesus taught.
The final thing we need to do to
be ready for Jesus’ coming is to clean our house. Christians are likened to
being temples of the Holy Spirit who are not their own but are now owned by God
(1 Cor. 6:19-20). We need to invite Jesus into our house and ask Him what needs
to go. We need to reestablish prayer and the teaching of God’s word in our
house, in our hearts.
Jesus is coming again. Many
missed Him the first time He came despite hundreds of prophetic indicators.
When He comes back next time He will return in two phases. He will come
secretly to rapture true believers (1 Thess. 4:13-5:9) before the Tribulation.
Then He will come in power and great glory for all to see at His Second Coming
at the end of the Tribulation (Luke 21:25-28; Mat. 24:27-31; Mark 13:24-27).
Will you be ready? Are you ready? Will Jesus weep over you?
[1]
Mark Eastman, The Search For Messiah,
Costa Mesa, CA: The Word For Today, 1993) p. 80.
[2]
John O Muncaster, Jesus Historical Facts – Investigation of the Evidence, (Mission
Viejo, CA 92691:Strong Basis To Believe, 1996) p. 14-15.
[3]
A good book to consult concerning what the Rabbis were expecting Messiah to be
is Mark Eastman’s book The Search
For Messiah. Mark Eastman, The Search For Messiah, (Box 8000
Costa Mesa, CA 92628. Phone 714-979-0706).
Hello Pastor Claude. I am also a Pastor from Mumbbai, india. I did contact you earlier but did not get your response. I am blessed by your blog post. I have been in the Pastoral ministry for last 37 yrs with the Nazarene in the great city of Mumbai, india a city with a great contrast where richest of rich and the poorest of poor live. We reachout to the poorest of poor with the love of christ to bring healing to the brokenhearted. We also encourage young and the adults from the west to work with our church during their vacation time. We would love to have young people from your church to come to Mumbai to work with us during their vacation time. I am sure they will have a life changing experience. God willing I will be coming to the United States in the month of May and will be soglad to stop by and meet you. While being Pastor of a local church in Mumbai I served the Church as a District Superintendent for 24 yrs. My email id is : dhwankhede(at)gmail(dot)com and my name is Diwakar Wankhede. Looking forward to hear from you very soon.
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