Luke 6:12-16 · The Twelve Apostles
A Terrorist among the Twelve
Luke 6:12-16
Sermon
by Donald B. Strobe
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One of the retired ministers in our congregation bet me that I won’t be able to finish my series of sermons on the Twelve Apostles.  The reason is because we know so very little about some of them, especially these last four.  In the case of the one we are considering this morning, we only know one word.  But that one word speaks volumes.  The Gospel says that he was a “Zealot.” Luke refers to him as “Simon who was called the Zealot.” (Luke 6:15) The designation is important, because there are at least nine individuals named Simon in the New Testament.  It can get confusing. 

Luke calls him “zelotes,” which means “the Zealot.” Matthew and Mark complicate things by calling him “Simon the Cananaean.” (Matthew 10:4, Mark 3:18) At first, we might think that is a geographic designation, for we may remember the Land of Canaan from our Old Testament readings.  But the word here is different.  The best and most ancient manuscripts use the word Kananaois.  This word is derived from the Hebrew word kana, which means to be jealous; and it was used for those who were “jealous for the Law;” and therefore means almost exactly the same thing as the Greek word “Zealot.”

I.  THE ZEALOT MOVEMENT BEGAN WHEN JESUS WAS ABOUT TWELVE YEARS OLD.  The Zealots were a fanatical religious-political group, a clandestine band of Jews who imagined themselves to be super-patriots, and their battle cry was: “No king but God; no tax but the Temple tax; no friend but the Zealot.” They hated the Roman occupying power. 

For many years Herod (called the Great) held the nation together by the sheer force of his personality, his enormous building projects, and his skill in diplomacy, which enabled him to work with the hated Romans and get from them a modicum of special privileges for his people, the Jews.  The people never really appreciated any of this, nor respected him at all, for to them he seemed a collaborator, a “quisling,” a man who had sold out his people in order to gain power.  And there was some truth in their accusations.  Herod reigned over Israel from 37 to the year 4 B.C. 

When Herod died, he left his kingdom to his three sons.  His son Herod Archelaus was to be ruler over Judea.  His son Antipas, whom Jesus called “that fox” (Luke 13:32), was to be ruler over Galilee.  His son Herod Philip was given the northern portion of the country above the Sea of Galilee.  Archelaus was never really given much of a chance to rule Judea, for the people took his father’s death as an opportunity to gain their independence from Rome.  They sent a delegation to the Roman emperor requesting that their province might be governed directly from Rome.  The Roman emperor agreed and sent a man named Quirinius to take charge.  Quirinius had proven himself to be an able administrator when he was governor of Syria. 

The first thing Quirinius did was to raise the taxes.  He didn’t even ask the people to read his lips.  He simply raised the taxes.  The problem was: nobody had ever taken a census to see how many people actually lived in Judea.  You can’t assess taxes unless you first take a census.  So he began a census and ordered a land survey so that he might also enact a land tax.  This was the census mentioned in the Christmas story which required that every Jew return to his place of ancestral birth, the census which caused Joseph and Mary to journey from Nazareth to Bethlehem where Jesus was to be born. 

Fanatical Jews immediately arose in protest.  Remember their motto: “No king but God; no tax but the Temple tax; no friend but the Zealot.” They organized around a man named Judas of Galilee (see Acts 5:37), a fiery orator who was able to create anger and hysteria against Rome.  But they did more than just talk about revolt: they started one.  Their weapons were the torch to set on fire the buildings of their foes, the sword of the soldier for open conflict, and the deadly sharp dagger for secret violence and assassinations.  In other words, they were terrorists.  They were the equivalent of the most radical wing of our modern PLO. 

The Zealot revolt of 6-7 A.D.  was quelled by Rome, in a violent demonstration of overwhelming power.  Its leaders were nailed on crosses along the roadside.  As Jesus walked among the hills of Galilee, as a young boy, He saw those crosses, (2000 of them by one reckoning), and so knew perfectly well what He was talking about when He spoke to his followers about taking up a cross to follow Him.  Although the revolt was crushed, the Zealots went underground, and their frustrated members became ever increasingly more violent.  When the Temple fell in 70 A.D., one of the reasons for the weakness of its defense is that the Zealots were there, not only battling their sworn enemies, the Romans, but also killing any of their own people who so much as hinted that they might try to take a more moderate approach to the hated Romans. 

Twenty years after the suppression of the first Zealot revolt, one of the members of this band of fanatical super-patriots met up with a man named Jesus, and that meeting forever changed his life.  This man was named Simon, which was a most common name in the first century.  We have already spoken of the other Simon in the band of Twelve to whom Jesus gave the new name: Peter, the “Rock.” Here is one who is called simply “Simon who was a Zealot.”

II.  THERE CAN BE NO GREATER CONTRAST THAN THAT BETWEEN SIMON THE ZEALOT AND JESUS THE CHRIST.  Simon had made a decision early on that the only way to freedom was through violence.  “That’s the only language those blankety-blank Romans understand.  You gotta fight fire with fire,” he said.  Jesus knew better.  He knew that when you fight fire with fire, then everybody gets burned. 

The presence of Simon the Zealot among the disciples of Jesus raises the question of just who was the unnamed individual who drew a sword and struck at the servant of the high priest, cutting off his ear.  (Mark 14:47) The sword wielder is not identified in the first three Gospels as a disciple, but simply as “one of those who stood by.” Obviously, Simon the Zealot was the man most likely to have a dagger at hand, and have the impulse to use it in such a situation.  The fourth Gospel says that it was Simon Peter who did the violent deed that night in the Garden, but whoever it was, it gave occasion for some of Jesus’ most familiar words.  “Put your sword back into its place; for all who take the sword will perish by the sword.” (Matthew 26:52)

Whatever their grievances, terrorism comes about as close to the unpardonable sin as anything I can imagine.  Killing in wartime is bad enough, but killing innocent people to make a political point seems to me to be unconscionable! 

“All who take the sword will perish by the sword.” A lighter commentary on Jesus’ words is to be found in the story of Sir Robert Watson-Watt, the brilliant man who helped to invent radar.  Much to his chagrin, while driving in Canada he was arrested for speeding after being timed by radar.  He wrote a short verse to commemorate the occasion:

Pity Sir Robert Watson-Watt
Strange target of his radar plot.
And thus, with others I could mention,
A victim of his own invention.

If we are not careful that will be the epitaph of our earth. 

George Bernard Shaw sat lightly toward all religion during his lifetime, but toward the end of his life he made this confession: “I am not a Christian any more than Pontius Pilate was...but I am ready to admit, after studying the world of human misery for 60 years, that I see no way out of the world’s trouble but the way Jesus would have found, had He undertaken the work of a modern statesman.”

We may not really believe that the meek will inherit the earth, but we have come to realize that unless we stop being belligerent and start being meek, there will be no earth left to inherit!  Some folks in Iowa read in the weather forecast column of their local newspaper sometime back that “there is a 90% chance of tomorrow.” I certainly hope so.  But there won’t be unless more of us wake up to the reality which Jesus proclaimed on a hillside twenty centuries ago, the reality that Simon the (former) Zealot came to see in Jesus Christ, when he left behind his daggers and bombs and hatreds and began to follow the Prince of Peace. 

Simon was attracted to Jesus whose hatred of oppression was just as strong as that of Judas of Galilee.  Only gradually did it dawn upon Simon that Jesus had a different way of dealing with His enemies, a radically different way, which was absolutely foreign to everything Simon had grown to believe.  When the multitude wished to take Jesus by force and make Him king, He simply disappeared.  When the people shouted “Hosanna” as He entered Jerusalem on Palm Sunday, he chose to enter not on a great stallion with shining armor, but riding on a humble donkey.  Again and again people tried to make Him an earthly king, but He refused, saying, “My kingdom is not of this world...else would my disciples fight....” (John 18:36) And Simon came to realize that he either had to give up his sword or give up his Savior. 

Something like this, I think, happens to all of us who start down the road with Jesus.  We may begin with acceptance of Jesus as Savior and Lord, and give our hearts and allegiance to Him.  At first we may not fully understand the radical nature of His call.  We are happy with what Leonard Sweet calls a “Jacuzzi Jesus,” a religion which brings us warmth and comfort but makes few demands upon us.  Then, as we sit at the feet of the Master, we begin to hear Him say startling things: “Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you.” (Luke 6:27) Now we are faced with a dilemma.  We must either make some radical changes in our lives, or get off the Jesus bandwagon.  I imagine it must have taken some real soul-searching and gut-wrenching changes in the life of Simon the Zealot in order for him to become a full-fledged disciple of Jesus.  But he did it.  Luke calls him: “Simon who was a Zealot.” Past tense. 

While Simon was no longer a zealot, I hope he kept some of his zeal.  While nothing is known of Simon’s further activities beyond this brief mention, again, traditions have come in to fill the gap.  One ancient tradition says that Simon preached the gospel of love and peace in many parts of the world, and even got as far as Britain where he was martyred.  It is fascinating to speculate: if Simon got to Britain, and John Wesley came out of the Church of England, perhaps the churches that were started during the English Reformation are spiritual descendants of Simon!  We sure could use some of his zeal these days.  We live in a day when the committed are intolerant, and the tolerant are uncommitted. 

Irish poet William Butler Yeats wrote that: “The best lack all conviction, while the worst/Are full of passionate intensity.” That sure seems to be true.  I’d like people with about 10% of the passion of Simon the Zealot.  Zeal is like fire; in a certain amount it warms and gives life; too much burns and consumes.  When it comes to church members, I’d rather have a few over-zealous ones whose zeal must be tempered with love, than lukewarm folks who don’t get much excited about anything.  It is easier to cool down a fanatic than it is to warm up a corpse! 

III.  FINALLY, I WANT YOU TO THINK FOR A MOMENT ABOUT THE VAST DIFFERENCES WHICH EXISTED WITHIN THAT APOSTOLIC BAND.  Among the Twelve there was a former Zealot and a former tax-collector!  There must have been many interesting discussions around the campfire.  The Church is not a group of “like-minded” people.  Just the reverse.  It is a band of cut-throats who might well be enemies were it not for the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ.  Too many people have a saccharine-sweet view of the church.  Once in awhile I hear someone say, “I’m against organized religion.” Well, brother, come join us—you’ve never seen such a disorganized bunch of clowns in your life, tripping over each other trying to do their Master’s will.  As Frederick Buechner says, we are like friends of a bride or groom thrown together at a wedding, each eyeing the other suspiciously, and realizing that we would probably never have even met one another except for the love we have in common for the bride or groom.  (Frederick Buechner, THE HUNGERING DARK, New York: Seabury Press, 1969, pp.  41-42) Well, Christ is the bridegroom and the church is His bride.  And we are here together for one reason and one reason only: because we love Him and love His Church. 

In the “Great Thanksgiving” prayer said before the celebration of the Lord’s Supper or Holy Communion, these words are found: “Christ our Lord invites to his table all who love him, who earnestly repent of their sin, and seek to live in peace with one another.” In other words: “Leave your old life behind; leave your old animosities behind, leave your angers, hurts, grudges, grievances, and jealousies behind, and make a new start here and now, a new start in love with God and with your neighbor.” For if we are not in communion with one another, how on earth can we be in communion with God?

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Words, by Donald B. Strobe