Saturday, August 16, 2025

AUGUST 16 THE JESUS QUESTIONS JQ#24 “Is the power and authority of baptism from heaven or from men?”” (Matthew 21:25)

 


AUGUST 16  THE JESUS QUESTIONS  

JQ#24

  “Is the power and authority of baptism 

from heaven or from men?””  

(Matthew 21:25)


LIVING FOR JESUS Daily Prayer    

JESUS, thank You Lord for Your daily “Manifest Presence” that You

 bless us through the Filling of the Holy Spirit in the lives of all 

who keep a place prepared for You in our humble and contrite hearts.

 King David who was known as a man “after God’s own heart”

 knew about Your Manifest Presence and prayed that You would 

create in him a clean heart and a steadfast spirit for it was 

through preparation of his heart by the Holy Spirit that David would

 again know the “joy of salvation” and David pleaded as I do,

 “And uphold me by Your generous Spirit” (Psalm 51)

 Daily Lord Jesus I stand in need of Your Mercies that are renewed

 each morning so I rise and give You Praise and lift up my 

offering of Thanksgiving ——— You have answered my prayer and

 You are leading me down paths of righteousness 

for Your name’s sake, the Name above all names, 

JESUS!   


AMEN


THE JESUS QUESTIONS

Jesus left the conflict in Jerusalem and strolled through the Kidron Valley

 to the Mount of Olives to the humble town of Bethany where He

 “lodged” in a home where He obviously felt welcomed, He needed

 a good night’s rest in the company of loved ones for He is going 

to return to Jerusalem in the morning and this is going to be a 

very intensive week for Him which will result in His death on a 

cross on the eve of the Passover Feast. (Matthew 21:17) Jesus 

spent the refreshing night in Bethany and rose early and headed

 back to the Eastern Gate:

 “Now in the morning as He returned to the city, 

He was hungry. And seeing a fig tree by the road, 

He came to it and found nothing on it but leaves, 

and said to it, 

‘Let no fruit grow on you ever again.’ 

Immediately the fig tree withered away.”

 (Matthew 21:18) 

This “curse” on the fig tree has received a lot of questions 

and there has been much debate — for Jesus to pronounce 

this “curse” had to be significant! This fig tree has been 

defended with excuses that it was “not the season for figs” 

— but those that defend the “fig tree” and suggest that  Jesus

 could have made a “mistake” here are probably doing so from

 inside the walls of Jerusalem and have never themselves 

considered what possible motive might Jesus have had to “curse”

 a poor defenseless fig tree outside the Eastern Gate!?!? 

 I must admit that for years and years that I would feel 

uncomfortable reading this passage in Matthew 21:18-22 and the

 other uncomfortable passage where Jesus said,

 “I never knew you.” (Matthew 7:23)

 but when the “curse” is looked at as part of a 

“Divine Statement”

 that Jesus makes about the “doctrines of men” and the 

religious leaders that were promoting “traditions of men” for 

their convenience, the context surrounding this debated passage

 of the fig tree curse makes sense. The context begins with Jesus

 and the disciples “when they drew near Jerusalem” (Matthew 21:1)

 and Jesus sent two disciples to collect a donkey and her colt

 from the village of Bethphage just outside the Eastern Gate. 

(Matthew 21:2-6) 

Jesus then made His Triumphal Entry into Jerusalem on 

Palm Sunday where He was greeted with mixed reviews; 

some asked “who is this?”, while others cried 

“Hosanna to the Son of David”

and others were wrongly explaining 

“This is Jesus, the prophet from Nazareth of Galilee.” 

(Matthew 21:7-11) 

However, once Jesus was inside the city

 “Jesus went into the temple of God and drove out 

all those who bought and sold in the temple, 

and overturned the tables of the money changers 

and the seats of those who sold doves. And He said to them,

 ‘It is written, My house shall be called a house of prayer’,

 but you have made it a den of thieves.”

 (Matthew 21:12-13) 

While in the temple Jesus began to use the temple for its

 intended purpose to minister to the multitudes but even though 

Jesus was healing all that were brought to Him in the temple, 

the chief priests and scribes saw 

“the wonderful things that [Jesus] did” but they became “indignant”.

 Jesus rebuked the chief priests and scribes in the temple and then

 left the city to lodge in Bethany for the night. 

(Matthew 21:14-17) “Now in the morning, as [Jesus] 

returned to the city, He was hungry.” (Matthew 21:18) 

If we fail to understand the “context” of the “curse” on the fig tree,

 then we are left to be blown about by the winds of ignorance 

and apathy and all we can hope to do is to not be blown over a 

precipice or into a pit, however if we study “where and when” Jesus

 did what He did and “who” Jesus did it to, then we will have the

 Truth of God 

revealed to us. Clue: Bethphage is located just outside the eastern 

gate and it was a walled village built by the Sanhedrin 

(the Supreme Court of Israel) and was populated by priests. 

The name Bethphage means “house of unripe figs” 

and the Sanhedrin that was controlling the religious lives of Israel 

by handing down their “doctrines of men” to the multitudes 

and claimed the “authority” over their lives that is reserved only

 for God Himself. Since Jesus was returning to Jerusalem from

 Bethany and was heading to the eastern gate, then it is most likely

 that Jesus is in Bethphage and possibly near some of the chief 

priests and scribes that Jesus had confronted on Palm Sunday! 

It makes more sense to think of the “curse” being on the 

Sanhedrin in Bethphage and not just this one poor defenseless 

fig tree because the “curse” happened after bookend confrontations

 between Jesus and the chief priests and elders. This is a pretty

 important final week in the earthly ministry of Jesus and I am sure

 He would not waste His time on “petty curses” against a fig tree, or

 do you think there is some mistake here and it just happened to 

get caught on “tape” {{how utterly careless is that of God to let

 a mistake made by His Perfect Son get written down in 

God’s Holy Bible for all generations to read?}}

Friday, August 15, 2025

AUGUST 15 THE JESUS QUESTIONS JQ#24 “Is the power and authority of baptism from heaven or from men?” (Matthew 21:25)

 


AUGUST 15  THE JESUS QUESTIONS  

JQ#24

  “Is the power and authority of baptism 

from heaven or from men?”  

(Matthew 21:25)


LIVING FOR JESUS  Daily Prayer    

JESUS, Lord Jesus, thank You for letting me see who I really am,

 a sinner, a dirty unclean disobedient child of God! I say again 

Thank You for letting me know that everything I do is but filthy rags

 … everything but one … Obedience to the Father’s will — 

for now that I know that You KNOW who I am and You have called

 me HOME  even though it is You that I have sinned against!?!?!?   

I can say again, “Thank You Lord”!!! Knowing that I am a sinner

 is a good thing because I know that You KNOW and so there is

 nothing to hide from the One that says to my soul, 

“I know you are a sinner, that’s why I died on the cross for you! 

I KNOW you are a sinner —BUT — You are a child of the KING,

 REPENT and come HOME to the FATHER who FORGIVES.” 

When I know I am a sinner and know how worthless I am,

 It gives me gives me Great Spiritual Strength to know that if I OBEY

 the Father, and REPENT of my sins, that He stands

 WITH OPEN ARMS REJOICING and I hear Him say,

 “For this [child] of mine was dead [in sin] and is ALIVE AGAIN” [Luke 15:24] 

— “kill the fatted calf and we will celebrate!”    

Sin is good for one thing, when you REPENT from your sins, you have 

a Loving Father calling you HOME!!!   OBEY the Father that KNOWS 

you are a sinner, 

REPENT and COME HOME to the

 FEAST HE HAS PREPARED for you!!!!   

AMEN


THE JESUS QUESTIONS

Jesus leaves Jerusalem and walks to Bethany to spend the night

 and we wonder why He would leave the temple of God that He had

 just cleaned out and the city of God where He had just been declared

 “King” by the multitudes?  But it is not a mystery when we consider

 that Jesus had declared that He 

“knows the hearts of all men” (John 2:24)

 and 

“destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up”! 

(John 2:19) 

Jesus knew the mood in Jerusalem in spite of what the “multitudes” 

were “saying” so Jesus is demonstrating that by His leaving the city 

of Jerusalem and going to the little village of Bethany that 

our Spiritual Reality is not what we say with our lips 

but what we believe with our hearts! 

We know that the “houses” in Bethany were not like the grand houses

 in Jerusalem but then maybe Jesus wasn’t going to a “house” in 

Bethany but He was most likely going to a “home”. In fact, Bethany

 was the “home” of Mary, Martha, and Lazarus and also Simon the leper.

 There are no big houses in Bethany so why would Jesus choose

 to abandon the “big city” and go “lodge” in a humble dwelling?


 There can be only one explanation, 

Jesus was going where there 

were people whose hearts 

had previously “welcomed” Jesus and 

He knew that He would feel “at HOME” with them! 


Bethany was a special place to Jesus, not because of the real estate

 in Bethany but because of the “real state” of some special hearts

 that made their “home” in Bethany, humble hearts, welcoming hearts

 in Bethany that Jesus simply could not find in Jerusalem!!! 

Therefore, Jesus shows us that He will “lodge” where there are

 warm hearts that welcome Him into their “home” because He is not

 concerned with the structure of the house! 


Jesus is showing us 

that what is on the outside is called the house

 but how we prepare the inside

 is what makes a “house” a “home”! 


Have you prepared a 

“grand house” for the admiration of the “multitudes” or have you

 prepared your “home” where Jesus would be comfortable “lodging” there?


  God is demonstrating with every step Jesus takes toward 

Bethany that what is in our heart is of more value 

than what is in our bank accounts! 


Jesus was called the “Son of David” by the multitudes during 

the Triumphal Entry of Jesus into Jerusalem; however, much of that

 could have been mass hysteria for the masses soon changed 

their rhetoric to “crucify Him”, but if they had read the scriptures they

 would have read where King David himself had written: 


“For You [LORD] do not desire sacrifice, or else I would give it; 

You do not delight in burnt offering. The sacrifices of God 

are a broken spirit, a broken and contrite heart — 

these [sacrifices] O GOD, You will not despise.” 

(Psalm 51:16-17) 


The mystery is solved for me for I know that the hearts of Mary, 

Martha, Lazarus, and Simon the leper were grateful hearts, open

 and welcoming to Jesus but in Jerusalem all Jesus had 

encountered were empty defiled temples and greedy, ungrateful 

hearts — so which would you choose? Would you rather “lodge” 

with friends and loved ones or stay in a fancy room filled 

only with rejection? 

Bethany is sounding like a pretty good place 

to spend the night don’t you think?  

At least Jesus thought so ———