Read Mark 2:13-22
Questions from the Scripture text: Where does Jesus go in Mark 2:13? Who comes to Him? What does He do with them? Where does Jesus see Levi? What does He tell Him to do? When Jesus goes to Levi’s house who else has followed Him? How many of them? Who are surprised that Jesus would eat with tax collectors and sinners? Whom does Jesus say He came to call to repentance? Who are surprised at Jesus’ disciples in Mark 2:18? What does Jesus call Himself in Mark 2:19? How would the friends of the bridegroom feel and act at a wedding? When would those friends fast, according to Jesus? What happens to a tear if you put the wrong kind of patch on it?
Whom does the Lord save and use? Mark 2:13–22 prepares us for the hearing of God’s Word, publicly read, in the holy assembly on the coming Lord’s Day. In these ten verses of Holy Scripture, the Holy Spirit teaches us that the Lord saves and uses those who need Him and delight in Him.
In the gospel reading this week, the Lord Jesus keeps surprising us.
He surprises us by choosing as one of His disciples a tax collector (Mark 2:14), one of the most hated people among the Jews. He surprises us by welcoming the situation of being surrounded by many tax collectors and sinners (Mark 2:15-17). He surprises us by His response about fasting (Mark 2:18-22). What is He teaching us by all of these surprises?
The first thing that He teaches us is that our usefulness to Him does not depend upon our past before we knew Him. Remember, that so far in Mark, “follow Me,” means “become a trainee in man-fishing” (cf. Mark 1:17). Who is a really good candidate to be used by Christ? Anyone who follows Him. A fisherman who follows Him. A tax collector who follows Him. A sinner who follows Him. Even a scribe or a Pharisee who follows Him.
Why doesn’t it depend upon what we were before we followed Him? Because it cannot depend upon us. When Jesus says “I did not come to call the righteous” (Mark 2:17). He’s talking about a figment of our self-deceived imaginations. His point is that the reason that He had to come in the first place is that there are no righteous. If we think that we are righteous without Him, we have sadly and terribly misunderstood both ourselves and Him.
Another, and glorious, thing that Jesus is teaching us is that He has come to be our joy. Those who have misunderstood Sabbath-keeping consider it a burden, a drag, a way that we show God how serious we are about Him by denying ourselves of pleasure (cf. Isaiah 58:1-5). But those who understand it well consider it a most generous gift of most glorious joy, and they imitate Him by becoming generous and joy-giving to others (cf. Isaiah 58:6-14).
Such an attitude can extend to how we respond to Jesus. We should be rejoicing over Him like a groom’s friends at his wedding (Mark 2:19). Jesus identifies Himself as the Bridegroom of the Song of Songs, and His disciples as the friends of the Bridegroom (cf. Song of Songs 5:1e). There, He had welcomed His friends and beloved ones to eat, and to drink deeply. Rejoicing with Him, over the spiritual fruit that He produces in His church, should be the longing of every believer. We should treasure moments with Him as if we’d been waiting all our lives to share that joy with Him! Of course, His disciples weren’t fasting! And neither should have been John’s or the Pharisees’.
Do you know when you should fast? When earthly pleasures seem big and Christ seems small, then fast, as you seek His presence, and for Him to be your Pleasure. When, for any reason, He seems distant, then fast after Him. When you are feeling the weightiness of sin and the corruption and decay of this world, and You are longing for His return and the great resurrection, then fast after Him.
We mustn’t only fast at the right time, but in the right way. We mustn’t think of fasting as a way to make ourselves miserable as a proof of our spirituality. In fact, if we fast in that way, we are telling God that turning aside from earthly things is miserable.
Whom are you more likely to consider incorrectly “not good Christian material”: yourself or others? What are you going to do about that? What kind of day should the Lord’s Day be, and how and why? When have you felt like Christ was distant (perhaps now)? How will you specifically use fasting to turn to Him and long for Him?
Sample prayer: Lord, thank You for calling and using a tax collector as one of Your apostles. Forgive us, for when we think that usefulness to You depends upon us. And thank You for giving us to have Yourself as our joy. Forgive us for not longing for You more. Grant that we would long for You and fast for You, by Your Spirit, we ask in Christ’s Name, AMEN!
Suggested songs: ARP2 “Why Do Gentile Nations Rage” or TPH151 “Lord of the Sabbath, Hear Us Pray”