Do some of our modern traditions actually contradict the teachings of scripture?
Making the Word of God of No Effect by Our Traditions (Mark 7:1-16)
How do you apply
Scripture? Here are few application questions:
Ceremonial Hand Washing (Mark 7:1-5). The religious leaders of Israel had a tradition that it was sin to eat without washing your hands “in a special way.” They did not say that it was a good idea. They said it was God’s commandment.
But there is no such commandment anywhere in the OT or NT, for that matter. This was something that the Jewish rabbis came up with over time. They studied the OT and came up with a list of hundreds of commandments that are not found in the OT. These were what they thought were reasonable applications of the OT.
But as this passage shows, we must take great care with applications. First, we must not elevate them to commandments. Second, we must take great care that our suggested applications do not actually contradict God’s commandments
Isaiah’s
Prophecy about the Commandments of Men (Mark 7:6-8): -
Jesus does not directly address the actions of the disciples. He is clearly defending their actions. But His point is that it is the words and actions of the Pharisees and scribes that are wrong.
Isaiah rebuked the
Jews of his generation for honoring God with
their lips yet having hearts that were far from God. They did
worship God. But their worship was “in vain.” Vain worship is empty
worship. To take God’s name in vain is to use it in an empty way. To
worship God with your words while your heart is a million miles away is vain
worship.
Isaiah said that the
reason their hearts were far from God and their worship was in vain was because
of the traditions of men. The very issue that the Pharisees approached Jesus
about, handwashing, was a contemporary example.
Jesus is saying that what Isaiah wrote 750 years before applies directly to the people confronting Him. How did the Pharisees “lay aside the commandment of God” (v 8)? The Lord goes on to give an example.
The Jews had come up
with a tradition that said if you dedicated money to give to God, then you must
pay it even if your aging parents need that money.
Jesus said that such a policy about Corban involves “making the word of God of no effect through your tradition which you have handed down” (v 13).
The word Corban is merely the Greek letters put into English. Mark explains what it means when he writes, “that is, a gift to God.” In Jewish tradition, if you vowed to give so much money for the temple, then that pledged gift superseded all other obligations, including taking care of your elderly parents in need.
When Jesus speaks of defilement, he is talking not about physical disease, but of moral defilement. The Lord is not denying that we can get sick if we have a virus on our hands and we touch our nose or mouth or eyes. He is talking about moral defilement.
Jesus is saying that what we put into our mouths does not defile us morally, as the Pharisees believed. Instead, He was saying that what comes out of a man, what he says and what he does, is what defiles him morally. The Pharisees were defiled by their self-righteous words and actions. The disciples did nothing wrong by eating bread without ceremonially washing their hands first.
Can we recognize when
our tradition leads us to violate the Word of God? If I and/or any other author or
speaker gives an application that seems to be contrary to the Word of
God, then reject it unless you become convinced that it is consistent. We
will each be evaluated by the Lord Jesus at the Judgment Seat of Christ for the
ways in which we have applied the Word of God (2 Cor 5:9-10) which says :-
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