27: Ministry in Jerusalem
(Lk 19:28-20:47)
I.
The Basics
A.
Setting
As the Lord Jesus went up to Jerusalem, He entered the
final phase of His ministry. His first act was to cleanse the temple, and as a
result, He met the opposition of the religious leaders, who sought to destroy
Him and eventually succeeded in their plot. But through the confrontation, the
Lord challenged the old religious establishment and demonstrated His divine
authority. Thus, His activities and teachings in the temple served as an
important indication that the perfect spiritual temple, for which the earthly
temple foreshadowed, was ultimately fulfilled in Christ.
B.
Key Verse
“Now as He drew near, He saw the city and wept
over it” (19:41).
C.
Did You Know…?
1.
Bethphage (19:29): A village near the road going
from Jericho to Jerusalem.
2.
The temple (19:45): The outer court.
3.
Chief priests (19:47): The chief priests, the
highest Jewish religious leaders, were in charge of the temple.
4.
Give him some of the fruit (20:10): In
accordance with a kind of sharecropping agreement, a fixed amount was due the
landowner. At the proper time he would expect to receive his share.
5.
Chief cornerstone (20:17): either a capstone
over a door (a large stone used as a lintel), or a large stone used to anchor
and align the corner of a wall, or the keystone of an arch.
6.
Denarius (20:24): About a day’s wage.
7.
Sadducees (20:27): An aristocratic, politically
minded group, willing to compromise with secular and pagan leaders. They
controlled the high priesthood at this time and held the majority of the seats
in the Sanhedrin. They did not believe in the resurrection or an afterlife, and
they rejected the oral tradition taught by the Pharisees (Josephus, Antiquities,
13.10.6).
8.
Long robes (20:46): The teachers of the law wore
long, white linen robes that were fringed and almost reached to the ground.
II.
Observation
A.
Outline
(19:28-40)
(19:41-44)
(19:45-48)
(20:1-8)
(20:9-19)
(20:20-26)
(20:27-40)
(20:41-44)
(20:45-47)
B.
Key Words/Phrases
III.
Segment Analysis
A.
19:28-40
1. In what ways was this event
miraculous?
2. What is the significance of
riding on a colt? (cf. Zech 9:9).
3. What lessons can we learn from
“the Lord has need of it”?
4. Why did the Pharisees object to
the disciples’ praise?
B.
19:41-44
5. What did the people of
Jerusalem fail to know or see?
6. What can we learn about the
Lord Jesus from this paragraph?
C.
19:45-48
7. How had the people turned the
temple into “a den of thieves”?
8. What lessons can we learn from
the cleansing of the temple in regards to our lives and worship?
D.
20:1-8
9. What “things” (v. 2) was Jesus
doing that led to this confrontation?
10. What was the concern of the
chief priests and scribes?
11. What does their inability to
answer Jesus’ question tell us about them?
E.
20:9-19
12. What do these characters in
the parable represent?
12a. Owner of the vineyard
12b. Vinedressers
12c. Servants
12d. Beloved son
13. How does this parable relate
to the question on authority in vv. 1-8?
14. Explain the meaning of verse
18.
F.
20:20-26
15. How was the question on
paying taxes a trap?
16a. Explain the answer Jesus
gave.
16b. How did His answer correct
the misconception that lay underneath the question?
17. What are “the things that are
God’s”?
18. What can we learn here about
the social obligations of Christians and the reasons for these obligations?
G.
20:27-40
19. What point were the Sadducees
trying to prove with their question?
20a. How does the quotation in 37
show that God is not the God of the dead but of the living?
20b. How does this understanding
apply to resurrection?
H.
20:41-44
21. Why did Jesus pose the
question about Christ’s sonship?
I.
20:45-47
22. What sins was Jesus warning
the disciples against?
23. Have you felt the pressure to
pretend to be religious because people look up to you? How should you deal with
such temptation?