Day 76, Mark 11 
It wasn't just Jesus'
closest disciples who believed that He was about to set up His kingdom in
Jerusalem (Luke 19:11). The crowds who lined His way from the Mount of
Olives also believed it, and they gave Jesus a king's welcome. But His
triumphal entry was anticlimactic. Jesus didn't overthrow the Jewish rulers or
the Romans. He did, however, according to Matthew's account, overthrow the
tables of the money changers. But He was soon on His way back to Bethany to
lodge for the night. It must have been a major disappointment for
many of Jesus' enthusiastic followers. I wonder how they would have reacted if
they had been told that it would be at least 2,000 years before the
messianic kingdom would begin?
The next morning,
Jesus and the twelve walked back from Bethany to Jerusalem, which would have
been crowded with Passover pilgrims. On the way there, Jesus cursed a fig tree,
"finding nothing but leaves" (11:12). Mark informs us that "it
was not the season for figs" (11:13).
Jesus wasn't expecting
to find figs; nor does Mark say that He was. Rather, He "went to see if
perhaps He would find anything on
it" (11:13). Fully-formed figs would not appear on fig trees for another
six weeks in Jerusalem. When fig leaves appear in late March, however, they are
accompanied by small knobs known as taqsh, that drop off before the real figs are formed.
Those taqsh are eaten by the poor and hungry. If leaves appear on a fig tree
unaccompanied by taqsh, there will be no figs that year either. So Mark's
report makes sense. Jesus was looking for taqsh, not figs.
Surely there was
something more to this story than Jesus' anger at a fruitless fig tree! I
suspect that His curse was symbolic of the divine curse that would come upon
Jerusalem for its fruitlessness. Jesus later told a parable about a landowner
who only wanted to receive his rightful fruit from those who tended his
vineyard. The vine-growers would not give him what he was due, even killing his
messengers and his son, and in the end, they were brought to an end (Mark
12:1-11). It was a foreshadowing of the doom that awaited fruitless Jerusalem,
and according to Luke's account, Jesus wept as He anticipated the future
holocaust of 70 A.D.:
When He
approached Jerusalem, He saw the city and wept over it, saying, “If you
had known in this day, even you, the things which make for peace!....For the
days will come upon you when your enemies will throw up a barricade against
you, and surround you and hem you in on every side, and they will level
you to the ground and your children within you, and they will not leave in you
one stone upon another, because you did not recognize the time of your
visitation" (Luke 19:41-44).
Jesus summed up the
message of the parable of the landowner by saying, "The kingdom of God
will be taken away from you and given to a people, producing the fruit of
it" (Matt. 21:43). God is looking for fruit in our lives as well (John
15:1-8).
The other message in
this incident of the cursing of the fig tree is one about faith in God. Jesus
said that whoever believes can move a mountain into the sea by his command. As
I mentioned when we considered this same incident in Matthew's gospel, we can
only have faith for what God has promised. Unless God reveals to you that it is
His will for a certain mountain to be cast into the sea, your commanding it to
do so would be ineffectual. (If you don't believe me, then I suggest that you
try to command a dirty plate to fly from your table into your kitchen sink!)
Nevertheless, there is no greater power available to us than that of faith in
God. So Jesus promised, "All things for which you pray and ask, believe
that you have received them, and they will be granted you" (11:24). Notice
that He said, "Believe that you have received them," not, "Believe
that you are going to receive them." There is a difference.
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