Saturday, April 11, 2020

This is It - Episode 14: Cleansing the Temple



As they drew near to Bethphage, at Mount Olive, Yeshua sent two students, saying, Go into the village. Right away, you’ll find a colt and a donkey. Untie them and bring them to me. If anyone asks you about it, tell them ‘the Teacher needs these’ and they will let you take them.

The students returned with the colt and donkey. Cloaks were spread over them, and some spread their cloaks on the road, while others cut branches from the palm trees and strewed them in the road. The throngs of people made a parade, with Yeshua in the midst of them riding the donkey. 

The people called, Hosanna for the son of David! Blessed him that comes in the name of the holy one. Hosanna to the highest heavens!

As the procession entered Jerusalem, the people there were shaken, saying, Who is this? What’s happening?

And the people processing said, This is the prophet Yeshua, the Nazarene.

Yeshua dismounted from the donkey and went into the temple. He threw out the buyers and sellers. He overturned the tables of the moneychangers.

He said, It is written, ‘My house will be known as a house of prayer,’ but you’ve taken the sacred space and made it into a mercantile den of thieves.

Yeshua healed the blind and lame who came up to him. The throng cheered him on with shouts of Hosanna for the son of David!

The high priests and canon lawyers were outraged.  

Yeshua turned and left, his followers going with him. They camped in Bethany.

Next morning, Yeshua was walking back to Jerusalem, in search of breakfast. He saw a fig tree, but found nothing on it but leaves. 

There is no need for a fruitless tree, Yeshua said, and it withered and dried.  

The students were amazed and asked, How could that tree dry up so fast?

And he said, When you pray, you can move mountains. This tree was no longer useful; there was no need to preserve it. If a mountain is holding you back, with prayer, you can move the mountain out of your way.

Returning to the temple, the chief priests asked him, Who do you think you are? By what authority do you do these things?

Yeshua said, If you answer my question, I’ll answer yours.  Where did the mikvah of John come from, heaven or the world?

Any answer they might give, one way or the other, would make them look bad. So, they answered, We don’t know.

Yeshua said, So, you didn’t answer my question. I won’t answer yours.

But, here, I’ll give you another chance. A father had two sons. He went to the first and asked him to go to the field and work. That son at first declined, but then changed his mind and did work in the field. The father asked the second son, who said he would gladly work, but didn’t do any work at all. Which son did as his father asked?

They answered, The first sonof course.

Yeshua said, John came to you and all teaching the path of justice. You did not believe in his mission, but the whores and the toll collectors and other people reviled by you did believe. The people who believe will apprehend the realm of the holy one, regardless of class. The people reviled by you will apprehend the realm before you do.

As it is said, ‘The stone that was rejected by the builder has at last become the chief cornerstone.’ The realm of the holy one is for the people that labor in the fields, whose labors bear fruit that is shared equitably. I tell you, the rejected stone will crush the fruitless.

The Pharisees wanted Yeshua taken into custody, but doing so in a such a public way would make them look bad, for the crowds regarded Yeshua as a prophet. They called some of their students, along with a few of Herod’s men, and approached him, hoping to trap him into confessing that he was against the Roman occupation.

The students of the Pharisees asked him, So, we know you are honest and teach the word of the holy one truthfully. What do you think? Is it okay to pay taxes to Caesar or not?

Yeshua said, Show me the coins given to pay the tax

The coins were shown to him. 

Yeshua asked them, Whose picture is on these coins?

They answered, Caesar’s.

He said, Give what is Ceasar’s to him; give to the holy one what belongs to the holy one. Everything belongs to the holy one, and none of it bears a false image.

The students and Herod’s men went away.

Later that day, a group of Sadducees, who did not believe in resurrection, pose a trick question to him: The tradition of Moses says that if the husband of a couple dies without leaving any children, the brother must take in his widow. In one village, a woman married into a family with seven sons. Her husband died. They’d had no children, so he left her as chattel to his brother, who later died without leaving children, and so on through all the brothers of the family. Then the widow died. When the resurrection comes, which of the seven will be her bridegroom?

But Yeshua said, In the realm of the holy one, there are no brides or grooms, only messengers, helpers, angels. In ancient times, the holy one called from the bush, ‘I am. I am of the living, not of the dead.’

Those who heard the teaching were amazed. Later, the Pharisees approached him again and asked Yeshua which of the commandments was most important.

And he said, The most important commandment is the very first one: To love the holy one with all of your heart, all of your spirit, all of your mind. And I say there is a second that works with the first: Love your neighbor as you love yourself. All that is written in the law and the prophets is supported by these two commandments.

He turned to his students and said, Where Moses sat, now the Pharisees and canon lawyers sit. Do what they say, but don’t do what they do. They are not good role models, for they do not practice what they preach, and everything they do is for show. They tax the people and offer no pubic benefit to those in need. They take the best seats and the best food and enjoy being called, ‘Master.’

Don’t try to be a Master, like them; after the holy one, your teacher is your only leader, and you are all a family. The highest person among you will be the servant of all.

Woe to all of the unaccountable fakes and frauds who act as gatekeepers and deny average people any opportunity to enter the realm of the holy one. Jerusalem, Jerusalem, killer of prophets and stoners of ambassadors, now that you have laid to ruin the sacred temple, all the blood you have shed will come back upon you.

Now I will go away and be gone until that time when you say, ‘Blessed is he who comes in the name of the holy one.’



© 2020 by Elisabeth T. Eliassen and songsofasouljourney.blogspot.com

A brief note about my literary exploration of the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth: I have undertaken this exercise having read, sung (in several languages), meditated and prayed on the contents of the Synoptic Gospels (as well as the Non-Synoptic Gospels) for at least 45 years. In that time, I’ve accumulated a bit of a library (which comes as no surprise to those who know me), and I try to follow modern scholarship. Here is a partial list of the authors and books that come to mind as I write these episodes:

Ballentine, Debra Scoggins, The Conflict Myth & the Biblical Tradition; Oxford University Press 2015
Erdman, Bart, various titles
Gaus, Andy, The Unvarnished New Testament; Phanes Press, 1991
Herzog, William R., Parables as Subversive Speech; Westminster John Knox Press, 1991
Louden, Bruce, Greek Myth and the Bible; Routledge, 2019
Wajdenbaum, Philippe, Argonauts of the Desert, Routledge, 2011
Ward, Keith, The Philosopher and the Gospels, Lion Hudson, 2011
Yosef ben Maityahu (Titus Flavius Josephus), various writings



This is It - Episode 13: On the Realm of the Holy One



They were now on the road going to Jerusalem. Yeshua was telling them what was going to happen, and the students were overwhelmed with concern. 

James and John asked if they could be sit at the right and left of Yeshua when he achieved his glory.

He said to them, You don’t know what you ask. Can you drink from my cup?

They said, We can.

The others were outraged.

Yeshua gathered them together and said, Perhaps you are able to drink from my cup, but as to the proximity of anyone’s seat to mine, that is not up to me to decide.

Look, you know how rulers lord it over their subjects and how strongmen abuse their power. It will not be like that among you. Whoever wants to be great is going to be a servant; everybody who wants to be number one will be everyone’s slave. I did not come to be served, but to serve.

If any of you are confident enough to feel moral superiority to others, hear this: Two men went to the temple to pray; one was a Pharisee and the other was a toll collector. The Pharisee prayed: ‘I thank you, holy one, that I am not like everyone else, that I am not thieving, unjust or adulterous, like that toll collector. I fast and give tithes.’ The toll collector stood off where he could not be seen. Looking down at the ground, he beat his breast and prayed: ‘O holy one, forgive me, sinner that I am.’

I tell you the second man was forgiven, not the first.

Those who promote themselves as better than others will be demoted; those who demote themselves will be elevated.

One among those gathered asked when and where the realm of the holy one would appear.

Yeshua said, The holy one does not approach with visible signs. People might say, ‘Look, here it is,’ or ‘Look, there it is.’ But do not believe them. There is no map to the holy realm. The truth of the matter is that the realm of the holy one is all around you and within you. This is it!



© 2020 by Elisabeth T. Eliassen and songsofasouljourney.blogspot.com

A brief note about my literary exploration of the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth: I have undertaken this exercise having read, sung (in several languages), meditated and prayed on the contents of the Synoptic Gospels (as well as the Non-Synoptic Gospels) for at least 45 years. In that time, I’ve accumulated a bit of a library (which comes as no surprise to those who know me), and I try to follow modern scholarship. Here is a partial list of the authors and books that come to mind as I write these episodes:

Ballentine, Debra Scoggins, The Conflict Myth & the Biblical Tradition; Oxford University Press 2015
Erdman, Bart, various titles
Gaus, Andy, The Unvarnished New Testament; Phanes Press, 1991
Herzog, William R., Parables as Subversive Speech; Westminster John Knox Press, 1991
Louden, Bruce, Greek Myth and the Bible; Routledge, 2019
Wajdenbaum, Philippe, Argonauts of the Desert, Routledge, 2011
Ward, Keith, The Philosopher and the Gospels, Lion Hudson, 2011
Yosef ben Maityahu (Titus Flavius Josephus), various writings


I do this writing with a goal in mind. I want to reclaim, for myself, the personof Jesus, a human exemplar. Jesus is one among a pantheon of what Joseph Campbell called “The Hero with a Thousand Faces.” So many people call themselves Christian without embracing the actual moral code Jesus taught, a moral code taught in the Torah and brought forth in new context to a new generation through the parables and ministry of Jesus. Once Jesus died, a political and religious martyr, he was translated into a God-figure. Since that time, much of lived Christian theology puts the work of creating a just world on the Godhead, rather than on the people. This misreading turns the Bible on its head. What is the point of the Bible, if not to encourage and insist that people do God’s work, not make God do all the work and then also forgive people for continuing to sin! “Thought, word and deed” is not and can never be replaced by the “thoughts and prayers” that abdicate from the active service of justice—we were made to serve. 

This is It - Episode 12: On Virtue



One of the students asked him to define virtue.

He thought for a moment. After all, this is everything he had spoken of, in different ways, for weeks. Some heard and understood; he had seen that this was true. Some people were new to the group of followers. Patience, he realized, was a primary virtue that he must continue to practice. 

But this is what he told the students: 

I’ll repeat: Woe to this world filled with stumbling blocks and snares. It is enough that they exist in the natural world, but cursed is the person who creates them to harm or limit another person from doing what they perceive to be the right thing, in any given moment. 

If you fall out with a friend or relative, do whatever it takes to make up. Pay all debts you owe and cancel the debts owed to you.

One student pressed him, What good must I do to have eternal life?

And he said, Why do you ask about what is ‘good’? Why is the word ‘must’ in your question? There is only one sense of good, that done without question or obligation. If you want to fully enter life, observe the commandments.

One young man asked, Which ones?

And Yeshua said, Do not murder; do not commit adultery; do not steal; do not give false testimony; honor your father and mother; care for your neighbor as you care for yourself.

The young man said, I have done all these things. What am I missing?

And Yeshua answered, To be perfect, sell all you have, leave everything behind, and come with me. You cannot enter into life encumbered by obligation to things. Those obliged to love things are beholden neither to other people nor to the holy one.

The young man turned and walked away, for he was encumbered by wealth.

Yeshua was saddened, but did not stop him. As the young man walked away, Yeshua said, It is difficult for the rich to enter into life. Easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich person to carry their wealth and reputation with them through the narrow door that leads to life.

Whatever is bound in life is bound everywhere. Whatever is freed in life is freed everywhere. 


© 2020 by Elisabeth T. Eliassen and songsofasouljourney.blogspot.com

A brief note about my literary exploration of the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth: I have undertaken this exercise having read, sung (in several languages), meditated and prayed on the contents of the Synoptic Gospels (as well as the Non-Synoptic Gospels) for at least 45 years. In that time, I’ve accumulated a bit of a library (which comes as no surprise to those who know me), and I try to follow modern scholarship. Here is a partial list of the authors and books that come to mind as I write these episodes:

Ballentine, Debra Scoggins, The Conflict Myth & the Biblical Tradition; Oxford University Press 2015
Erdman, Bart, various titles
Gaus, Andy, The Unvarnished New Testament; Phanes Press, 1991
Herzog, William R., Parables as Subversive Speech; Westminster John Knox Press, 1991
Louden, Bruce, Greek Myth and the Bible; Routledge, 2019
Wajdenbaum, Philippe, Argonauts of the Desert, Routledge, 2011
Ward, Keith, The Philosopher and the Gospels, Lion Hudson, 2011
Yosef ben Maityahu (Titus Flavius Josephus), various writings