P1712:1, 153:3.1
Many were the questions asked Jesus during this after meeting. Some were asked
by his perplexed disciples, but more were asked by caviling unbelievers who
sought only to embarrass and entrap him.
P1712:2, 153:3.2
One of the visiting Pharisees, mounting a lampstand, shouted out this question:
"You tell us that you are the bread of life. How can you give us your flesh
to eat or your blood to drink? What avail is your teaching if it cannot be
carried out?" And Jesus answered this question, saying: "I did not teach you
that my flesh is the bread of life nor that my blood is the water thereof.
But I did say that my life in the flesh is a bestowal of the bread of heaven.
The fact of the Word of God bestowed in the flesh and the phenomenon of the
Son of Man subject to the will of God, constitute a reality of experience
which is equivalent to the divine sustenance. You cannot eat my flesh nor
can you drink my blood, but you can become one in spirit with me even as I
am one in spirit with the Father. You can be nourished by the eternal word
of God, which is indeed the bread of life, and which has been bestowed in
the likeness of mortal flesh; and you can be watered in soul by the divine
spirit, which is truly the water of life. The Father has sent me into the
world to show how he desires to indwell and direct all men; and I have so
lived this life in the flesh as to inspire all men likewise ever to seek to
know and do the will of the indwelling heavenly Father."
P1712:3, 153:3.3
Then one of the Jerusalem spies who had been observing Jesus and his apostles,
said: "We notice that neither you nor your apostles wash your hands properly
before you eat bread. You must well know that such a practice as eating with
defiled and unwashed hands is a transgression of the law of the elders. Neither
do you properly wash your drinking cups and eating vessels. Why is it that
you show such disrespect for the traditions of the fathers and the laws of
our elders?" And when Jesus heard him speak, he answered: "Why is it that
you transgress the commandments of God by the laws of your tradition? The
commandment says, `Honor your father and your mother,' and directs that you
share with them your substance if necessary; but you enact a law of tradition
which permits
undutiful children to say that the money wherewith the parents
might have been assisted has been `given to God.' The law of the elders thus
relieves such crafty children of their responsibility, notwithstanding that
the children subsequently use all such monies for their own comfort. Why is
it that you in this way make void the commandment by your own tradition? Well
did Isaiah prophesy of you hypocrites, saying: `This people honors me with
their lips, but their heart is far from me. In vain do they worship me, teaching
as their doctrines the precepts of men.'
P1712:4, 153:3.4
"You can see how it is that you desert the commandment while you hold fast
to the tradition of men. Altogether willing are you to reject the word of
God while you maintain your own traditions. And in many other ways do you
dare to set up your own teachings above the law and the prophets."
P1712:5, 153:3.5
Jesus then directed his remarks to all present. He said: "But hearken to me,
all of you. It is not that which enters into the mouth that spiritually defiles
the man, but rather that which proceeds out of the mouth and from the heart."
But even the apostles failed fully to grasp the meaning of his words, for
Simon Peter also asked him: "Lest some of your hearers be unnecessarily offended,
would you explain to us the meaning of these words?" And then said Jesus to
Peter: "Are you also hard of understanding? Know you not that every plant
which my heavenly Father has not planted shall be rooted up? Turn now your
attention to those who would know the truth. You cannot compel men to love
the truth. Many of these teachers are blind guides. And you know that, if
the blind lead the blind, both shall fall into the pit. But hearken while
I tell you the truth concerning those things which morally defile and spiritually
contaminate men. I declare it is not that which enters the body by the mouth
or gains access to the mind through the eyes and ears, that defiles the man.
Man is only defiled by that evil which may originate within the heart, and
which finds expression in the words and deeds of such unholy persons. Do you
not know it is from the heart that there come forth evil thoughts, wicked
projects of murder, theft, and
adulteries, together with jealousy, pride,
anger, revenge,
railings, and false witness? And it is just such things that
defile men, and not that they eat bread with ceremonially unclean hands."
P1713:1, 153:3.6
The Pharisaic commissioners of the Jerusalem Sanhedrin were now almost convinced
that Jesus must be apprehended on a charge of blasphemy or on one of flouting
the sacred law of the Jews; wherefore their efforts to involve him in the
discussion of, and possible attack upon, some of the traditions of the elders,
or so-called oral laws of the nation. No matter how scarce water might be,
these traditionally enslaved Jews would never fail to go through with the
required ceremonial washing of the hands before every meal. It was their belief
that "it is better to die than to transgress the commandments of the elders."
The spies asked this question because it had been reported that Jesus had
said, "Salvation is a matter of clean hearts rather than of clean hands."
But such beliefs, when they once become a part of one's religion, are hard
to get away from. Even many years after this day the Apostle Peter was still
held in the bondage of fear to many of these traditions about things clean
and unclean, only being finally delivered by experiencing an extraordinary
and vivid dream. All of this can the better be understood when it is recalled
that these Jews looked upon eating with unwashed hands in the same light as
commerce with a harlot, and both were equally
punishable by
excommunication.
P1713:2, 153:3.7
Thus did the Master elect to discuss and expose the folly of the whole rabbinic
system of rules and regulations which was represented by the oral law -- the
traditions of the elders, all of which were regarded as more sacred and more
binding upon the Jews than even the teachings of the Scriptures. And Jesus
spoke out with less reserve because he knew the hour had come when he could
do nothing more to prevent an open
rupture of relations with these religious
leaders.