Easy
All things have been committed to me by my Father. No one knows the Son
except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and those to whom
the Son chooses to reveal him. Come to me all of you
who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and
learn from me for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for
your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light. (Matthew 11:27-30)
Jimmy and his son, Davey, were
playing in the ocean down in Mexico while his wife, daughters, parents, and a
cousin sat on the beach. Suddenly, a rogue wave swept Davey out to sea. Jimmy immediately
started to do whatever he could to help Davey get back to shore, but soon he,
too, was swept away by the tide. He knew that within minutes, both he and Davey
would drown. He screamed for help, but his family couldn't hear him. Now Jimmy's
a strong guy – an Olympic decathlete – but he was utterly powerless to prevent
the tragedy now looming only minutes, or maybe even seconds, away.
Meanwhile, his cousin, who understood
something about the ocean, saw what was happening and walked out into the water
where he knew there was a sandbar. He had learned that if you try and fight a
riptide, you’ll die trying. So, he walked to the sandbar, stood as close as he
could get to Jimmy and Davey, and then lifted up his hand and said, "You
come to me. You come to me." They did – and they survived.
Frankly, this passage from Matthew
has always baffled me. It’s one of those verses that sounds really nice and,
for a while, I get a lot of comfort from it. But then, when things get pushed too
far, I realize I have no idea what it means and, worse yet, that it doesn’t
even seem to be true – at least as far as I can see. Because if we say that
Jesus’ yoke is living in obedience to God as Jesus did, then we’re way up the proverbial
creek without a paddle. I mean anyone who has actually devoted themselves to
following God’s instruction figures out in pretty short order that God is
forever asking people to do things which are hard, if not impossible.
Abraham, leave your home and your
family. I’ll tell you where you’re going later, but just go now. (Genesis 12:1)
David, take a small rock and go kill
that giant. (1 Samuel 17:40)
Hosea, marry that woman who’s going
to cheat on you and redeem her with your love. Oh, yeah, and make sure everyone
knows about your humiliation so they can see a model of my love for them. (Hosea
1:2-10)
Jesus, give up your glory to live
among the fallen and then let yourself be tortured and killed. (John 17:1-5)
Paul, you just keep on preaching
until they kill you. And when you’re whipped bloody and imprisoned, be sure to
count it all glory. (Romans 8:18)
God’s ways are many things, but easy
and light? Uh, not so much. So what’s Jesus talking about?
Well, recall that Matthew, a Jewish
tax collector (writing to a thoroughly Jewish audience), tells us throughout
his gospel that Jesus spoke frequently about Jewish law and tradition. So,
Jesus’ comment about his yoke being easy was, in one sense, a capstone to his Religion
101 class found earlier in the Sermon on the Mount. (Matt. 5:1 – 7:29) But from
a broader perspective, this same discourse was really his commentary on the
Torah (the first five books of the Old Testament), and the whole of Jewish law.
For instance, in the Sermon on the
Mount, Jesus emphasized the need for forgiveness, reconciliation, and charity
since his teaching was actually an expansion of God’s command in Deuteronomy
6:4-5 to “Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. Love
the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your
strength,” referred to as the shema. But Jesus goes on to state that not
only are we called to love God unequivocally, but to love our neighbor as well,
whether friend or enemy, since they’re made in God’s image, too. (Matt.
5:38-48)
So, when Jesus uses the yoke
analogy, he’s commenting on Jewish law and tradition which uses the term “yoke" at least 40 times in the Old Testament. For instance, according to Jewish tradition, to be in a right relationship with God was to accept the yoke of heaven. But the prophets Jeremiah and Isaiah also tell us that
to be burdened with sin is to live under the heavy yoke of slavery. In other words,
for first-century Jews, the yoke of the law was actually a double-entendre: in its best
sense, it was an acceptance of the shema. But in its negative context, it was the
obligation to scrupulously obey all of the minor details of the Levitic and
Deutoronomic Law, as interpreted by the Scribes – some 620 Talmudic commands in
all!
It’s no wonder, then, that Jesus
openly railed against the Pharisees and their interpretation of the law as recorded by Matthew in Chapter 23:2-4: The teachers of the law and the Pharisees sit in Moses' seat. So you must obey them and do everything they tell you. But do not do what they do, for they do not practice what they preach. They tie up heavy loads and put them on men's shoulders, but they themselves are not willing to life a finger to move them. However,
to suggest, on the other hand, that Jesus is simply arguing that his approach
to the faith is easier than the Pharisee’s approach to the law is an
over-simplification.
Again, in the Sermon on the Mount,
Jesus interpreted the Law. But he actually went a bit further than that: Think not that I have come to abolish the law and the prophets; I have come not to abolish them but to fulfill them. (Matthew 5:17) So, in our
passage, Jesus is asserting two messianic claims: first, only the Son can
reveal the Father (Vs. 27), and that his yoke is easy. (Vs. 30) In other words,
Jesus is explicitly interpolating himself as the “yoke” – the way, the path, or the avenue to
the Father.
But then Jesus takes the yoke analogy
one step further. Since God is known through the Law (Romans 2:17-18), when
Jesus says his
yoke is easy he’s actually saying, “I am the Law, but the law that
I impose is not a heavy burden” because although “… the law was given through
Moses; grace and truth came through Christ Jesus.” (John 1:17) In other words,
the yoke is not the law. The yoke is his grace and the truth of his divinity.
OK, but then you begin to wonder if you’re
crazy thinking that it could be that simple. And it doesn’t help when people come
up to you with those sad, puppy-dog eyes asking in tones usually reserved for the
infirmed, “How are you doing?” “Fine,” you reply with a smile. “No, really. It
must be so hard. It’s OK not to hide behind a strong face all the time.” “Um,
well I have my moments, but really, I’m doing well. I’m just trusting God, I
guess.” “Sure. Well, if you ever need to talk ….” And then they pat you on the hand,
say “God bless,” and walk away. And that’s a best case scenario.
So you begin to wonder. “I thought I
was OK. Actually, I’m pretty happy. But maybe I’m just kidding myself. Maybe
I’m subjecting myself to some weird form of self-induced brainwashing when really
I should be majorly depressed and planning a trip to the doctor for some happy
pills. What if it’s not really God and I’m just CRAZY? Ahhhhhhh!” Well, that’s
what you say to yourself if you’re me.
The fact of the matter is that we
struggle with the yoke because it’s easy and light. We’re like oxen who’ve been
trained up under too much weight – always having to lean into it, tug and pull
and huff and puff at the exertion of carrying this heavy yoke. And then Jesus
comes along and gives us His. But it just feels wrong. “Trust? Really? Grace?
Are you kidding me? That’s too easy and too light. It can’t be right.” So we go
back to our old, heavy yokes. They’re painful, but hey, at least they feel like
they fit.
And then all of us who’ve taken back
our yokes (if we ever actually took them off in the first place) sit up at night
and worry just like everyone else. And we live just like everyone else, because
God can’t really think I’d be able to go there or do that – He knows what an
unreasonable burden that would be. That’s for saints and missionaries, not for
everyday Christians like me who’re just trying to stay out of trouble.
So here’s one last thought. Jesus says
that he is going to take away one burden in exchange for another. But how does
that help? I mean, a yoke’s a yoke, right? Well, the word “yoke” is an interesting
one. It can mean several things, like we’ve discussed. It can mean “oppression,”
or it can mean “being under the authority of something or someone.” But a yoke
is also something that joins together, like two animals together to plow the
field.
If you go to the actual Greek, the word
“yoke”’ is ζυγός which means a coupling
(figuratively), or servitude (as to a law or obligation). It derives from the
root word ζεύγνυμι, meaning to join, which appears
in Mark 10:9 where Jesus says,
… what God has joined together,
let no man put asunder. Sound familiar? Yeah, we hear that all the time at
weddings.
So, read Matthew 11:30 again – that to
be yoked with Christ is to be united with Him in the same way in which a
husband and a wife would be united to each other. In other words, taking on the
yoke of Jesus means to be united with Him. And in that sense, the yoke of Jesus
is our union with him.
Now that’s easy.
Grace,
Randy
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