John 2:12-25 · Jesus Clears the Temple
Zeal!
John 2:13-22
Sermon
by John Jamison
Loading...

Have you ever had one of those times when you had just had enough? One of those times that you have held your breath, you have turned away, maybe many times, because you just don’t like what you see going on, but then finally come to the point that you just can’t turn away one more time? You’ve had enough, and you decide you just can’t be silent any longer. So you do something fairly dramatic. Looking back on it, it may not have been all that smart, but you had had enough and you did it. Can you remember one of those times? Take just a moment and search your memory, and maybe this story about Jesus cleansing the temple will make a little more sense.

But before we actually begin the story let’s recognize some of the confusion around this incident and get it out of the way so we can hear what the story actually has to say to us. Sometimes we get distracted by things and miss out on what the story is actually trying to tell us.

Today’s version of the story from John’s gospel takes place at the beginning of Jesus’ ministry, during his first visit to Jerusalem for Passover. John tells us that Jesus actually made at least three trips to Jerusalem for the Passover. The other gospel writers only tell us about Jesus making one trip to Jerusalem for Passover — at the end of his three years of ministry. It was during that visit when Jesus entered the city on a donkey in the big parade and walked into the temple where our story takes place. John tells the story differently. Does it matter? Let’s hear the story one more time together and you can decide if it really makes any difference.

It was Passover. Passover is one of the largest holidays of the Jewish faith, remembering and celebrating the Exodus of the slaves out of Egypt with Moses, centuries earlier. Every faithful Jew who was capable was supposed to travel to Jerusalem and present an offering at the temple. By presenting their offering they not only received forgiveness for all of their sins but they were also demonstrating their loyal obedience as a faithful Jew. So Jews traveled from all over the world to be at the temple on Passover, and that included Jesus and his followers, who came to town with all of the other faithful Galileans prepared to make their sacrificial offering.

Try to imagine what the Passover experience was like. The typically busy city was now stretched to the limit with visitors from all around the world, wearing all manner of colorful clothing, and speaking dozens of different languages. Rooms were full, streets were packed, and everyone was focused on one thing: getting to the crowded temple to offer their Passover sacrifice.

While Passover meant a time for families to get together for huge feasts and celebrations, the center of the holiday was the moment they went to the temple and offered their required sacrifice to the temple priests. It had been a practice since the time of Moses, one that continued in the temple of David’s time, and in Jesus’ generation in the temple high on the hill overlooking the city.

The specific type of sacrifice you had to make depended on many things: where you were from, how old you were, what your job was, how nasty the sins were for which you needed to be forgiven, and a long list of other things. Your sacrifice might be as simple as a dove and a half bushel of wheat, or something more elaborate like a full-sized, unblemished oxen. Most sacrifices included at least some form of animal, and the requirement was that the animal be perfect and free of blemish. This not only meant it should be physically perfect but it needed to be clean and look nice and healthy as well.

This leads to an interesting issue for those coming from out of town. Can you imagine the challenge of traveling a good distance across country, mostly by walking the crowded and narrow roads, typically for many days, and the entire time dragging along a few crates of doves, several bushel of grain, not to mention a couple of sheep or oxen? You not only needed to keep the animals from wandering off and getting injured from the hours of walking on the rocky paths, but you needed to bring enough food for them so they looked nice, fat, and healthy when you finally got them through the crowds, up the steps, and into the temple. You needed to keep them clean as well.

It’s not surprising that most travelers thought it was best to not bring their sacrificial animals with them, but to wait and buy them once they got to Jerusalem. As a result, there was quite a variety of vendors set up in their booths around the temple yards, all offering the types of sacrifice that travelers needed to purchase. Because the visitors had to purchase their sacrifice there, the vendors were able to charge more, kind of like buying gasoline along the interstate instead of driving a few extra miles where you can find better prices. It was truly a seller’s market.

Just making sense of all of those rules was nearly impossible for most folks as well, so what you actually had to sacrifice depended a lot upon who you knew and asked. As an example, one of the things people argued about was what you did with the sacrificial animal that you purchased, after you purchased it. Some said that you could just get it from the vendor and take it to the priests. Others argued that if you touched the animal yourself, it became unclean, so the only option was to have one of the temple workers take your animal from the vendor to the priest, which would be done for a small fee. One of the religious rule books of the day describes that argument:

“Jose ben Joezer says: On a festival day a man may not lay his hands on the offering before it is slaughtered. Joseph ben Johanan says he may. Joshua b. Perahyah says he may not. Nittai the Arbelite says he may. Judah b. Tabbai says he may not. Simeon b. Shetah says he may. Shemaiah says he may. Abtalion says he may not. Shammai says he may not lay on his hands. Hillel says he may” (Hagigah 2.2). Every rabbi interpreted the rules in their own way, so what you had to do and pay depended on just how well you knew how to play the game.”

In addition, every person entering the temple courtyard itself was required to pay an admission fee of one-half shekel of Tyre, which was a fairly common coin in Jerusalem at that time. However those coming from out of town were probably carrying money from their home location, which more than likely meant they did not have one-half shekel of Tyre. So before entering the temple to offer their sacrifice, they had to visit one of the many moneychangers who were scattered among the vendors, and who were known to charge whatever exchange rate they could get from those needing their services.

But there was more. The way the process worked was that you would take your sacrifice to the temple courtyard where it would be presented to one of the priests. Sacrificial animals were killed and butchered, parts of the animal were burned on the altar fire as the law required, and the rest of the meat was thrown into a large pot and cooked, to be used as part of the various Passover feasts. This is important to remember because according to law, the priests would throw the meat into the boiling pot and let the meat cook for a while. After the meat had cooked up and begun to fall apart, the priest would take a huge fork and jab it down into the pot and when he pulled it back up, any of the meat that was stuck to the fork would be given to the priests for their own food, as a part of their salary. However if we stand here and watch people take their animals up to the priests, we see them butcher the animal and throw scraps in the fire and drop the rest of the meat over into the boiling pot. But the priest waits perhaps thirty seconds, then takes that big fork and jabs it down into the pot. When he pulls it up he’s got an entire side of meat that takes two hands to pull out of the pot.

So get the picture. Noise, crowds of people needing to buy a sacrifice, going from vendor to vendor who are all yelling about their pricing. The animals are running everywhere, and there are the sounds and the smells that come with having animals running around all over the place. You have moneychangers and people arguing and bickering over exchange rates. You watch the people paying to enter the courtyard and humbly presenting their sacrifice to the priests, and watch as their “holy” sacrifice is quickly turned into just another revenue stream for those who are running the show.

Anyone who became upset about what they saw and who went to the authorities to complain were sent to the Sadducees, who oversaw the operations of the temple. Keep in mind that the Sadducees were the rich folks who lived in the big homes near the temple. They received a percentage of the income from the sacrificial vendors, the moneychangers, and the priests. Let’s just say that they weren’t all that sympathetic to those disapproving of the business dealings taking place during Passover.

That feels a little irritating to you standing and watching this, so it might help explain what went through Jesus’ mind as he stepped up the stairs, entered the temple courtyard, and stood there watching and listening. Then he came to that moment when he had finally had enough. We’re told he grabbed some rope from one of the vendor tents and started swinging it around like a whip, chasing vendors, moneychangers, and livestock out of the temple courtyard. He grabbed the metal boxes the moneychangers used to hold their loot and poured the coins out all over the ground, which had to have created a stir all by itself. As he did this, he was shouting: “Take these things out of here!” and “Stop making my Father’s house a marketplace!”

Let’s pause right there for just a moment to point out that Jesus was not yelling at us and telling us that we can’t have bake sales or fall festivals in the church. His anger was not about the fact that something was being sold but that those doing the selling were taking complete advantage of those buying. It wasn’t that money was involved; it was that one group was treating the other as if they were worthless and had no value in the eyes of God. They were doing that in the very place that was meant to be the ultimate symbol of fairness and equality among all people, God’s temple. So, he drew a line. He took a stand.

It got a lot of attention. But while we let Jesus go ahead and finish his house cleaning, we might look around the rest of the temple courtyard.

Over there were those Sadducees with the money and the power, watching this man cutting into their income stream, something they clearly could not allow to continue. Standing next to them were the priests, wearing their robes symbolizing their holiness and power, watching this naïve preacher from Galilee make them look like a bunch of crooks. Did I mention the Romans? We can’t forget the Romans.

During Jesus’ lifetime, the temple in Jerusalem is the second largest building in the city. The largest building is actually right next door to the temple, standing just a couple of meters higher, just to make a point. This is the Antonia Fortress, built by the Romans to hold squads of soldiers. Their sole purpose was to make sure that nothing ever happened in Jerusalem that might become a problem. King Herod was the current overseer of the land, and the way he kept his job was to make sure that Rome never confronted a problem in Jerusalem. Herod was crazy, but he was also cautious, so during the Passover holiday we’re told he had a Roman centurion standing at every pillar in the temple area, and another squad standing at the top of the Antonia Fortress, watching, just to make sure there was never any problem. I think we can be sure they were all watching Jesus quite closely.

In the game of chess, it is often said that there are actually three different games being played: the opening, the middle game, and the end game. In the opening game, the players begin positioning their pieces on the board in a way that will allow them to do something meaningful later. In the middle game, the players use a range of strategies to create power and build their strength. In the end game, the players rely upon all that has been done so far and watch for the moment to make their final attack to win the game. There is no turning back from the end game.

Jesus has begun his end game today in the temple. It may well be that Mark is more accurate in telling us this story took place during Jesus’ final visit to the city, because it seems highly unlikely that any of the powers-that-be would have been open to allowing him to go back home and stir things up for another three years. Even the disciples realized it. As they watched him, one of them said that it reminded him of Psalm 69, in which the writer spoke to God and said: “Zeal for your house will consume me!” (v. 17). Although the disciples weren’t always that bright, they clearly understood that what Jesus was doing was going to end up consuming him. They might not have understood everything that was to come, but they realized he had had enough, and he wasn’t going to sit back any longer. Enough was enough. The end game had begun.

Let’s end our retelling of this story with a couple of important points. First, as suggested earlier, Jesus wasn’t making a point about bake sales and fall festivals, though I’ve heard some amazing arguments against them based on this story. He was upset that one person was not treating another person as an equal, as another child of God.

Second, the story is not a call for all of us to become zealous about some issue and to go out and turn over tables and drive away the evildoers. We live in a time that is running wild with zealots, each proclaiming their view of right and doing horrendous things to other human beings, far beyond turning over tables and swinging a rope. No one can take this story of Jesus in the temple and use it to justify an act of abuse or terror of any kind — no one. We don’t see the world as the Son of God sees the world, so any zealous act we might pursue is going to be corrupted through our limited understanding.

What might we take from this story, other than understanding a bit more about why Jesus did what he did that day in the temple? The story’s message seems clear. Our task is to zealously make sure that our church, this house of God, never becomes a place in which any one person is treated as less equal to, or less valuable than, any other person. Our task is to keep the house clean of those things that might cause any person to feel less at home here, less safe here, or less welcome here.

Our task is to obey the one rule of the clean house: “This one commandment I give to you: love one another.”

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Simple Faith?: Cycle B Sermons for Lent-Easter based on the Gospel Texts, by John Jamison