Community of Grace
Preaching Ministry of Community of Grace - Amherst, NY
Community of Grace
Holiness from the Heart
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Micah Colbert
Mark 7:1-23
Would you pray with me this morning? Father, we thank you for your word. We thank you that Christ brings true holiness and inward purity. Father, I pray that we would pursue the way of Christ by faith as we submit to your word. Work in our hearts, I pray, that we would pursue a holiness from the heart. We ask in Jesus' name, Amen. I was very blessed as a young man to attend a very conservative Christian college. There were lots and lots and lots of rules. And so it was challenging at times to find creative ways of having fun. But we did find ways to have fun and for whatever reason, one of the ways that we thought would be something we could do for fun was to take various food items and rearrange them to surprise unsuspecting people who would grab those dishes. We would like specifically to take burritos. So on Thursday you had a burrito line at the school and that was kind of an exciting day. The burritos were mediocre, which was significantly better than most of the food that we ate. So lots of people would go into the burrito line looking for a beef and bean burrito. So on Thursdays, we would carefully take a burrito. We'd go back to our seats and then with surgeon precision, we would open the burrito up. We would scoop out all of the meat. The heart and soul of the burrito was carefully taken out so that it was only a shell of what it was supposed to be. Sometimes we would then just kind of seal it back up and place it carefully back in line. Other times if we were feeling particularly mischievous, we would fill it with less than desirable things. Replacing the beef and the beans with nasty green things like green beans and peas and broccoli and other such things that are not tasty. So we would take these burritos, we would again open them up, replace the good with something less than good, put them back in line and see what would happen to those who might unsuspectingly pick up that burrito. We were thinking that it was one thing when it was actually something entirely different. It looked like a beef burrito but it definitely was not. Now it's disappointing when we think something like a beef burrito is not an actually beef burrito. But it's far more dangerous when we take something as sacred and good and holy as God's word and we gut it out and replace it with something else. Jesus is going to in this text confront the common practice of that day butchering God's word and replacing it with man-made traditions in order to demonstrate that true holiness, true religion as God intends is a matter of the heart. True holiness is not simply a matter of appearance or performance, it's a matter of the heart. And to help us understand this, Christ first exposes the hypocrisy of heartless holiness in his confrontation with the Pharisees 1-13 and then in the remaining section he explains the need for a holy heart as he speaks with the crowds and with his disciples. So let's begin with the confrontation verses 1 and 2. Now when the Pharisees gathered to him with some of the scribes who had come from Jerusalem, they saw that some of his disciples ate with hands that were defiled, that is unwashed. For the Pharisees and all the Jews do not eat unless they wash their hands properly, holding to the tradition of the elders and when they come from the marketplace they do not eat unless they wash. And there are many other traditions that they observe such as the washing of cups and pots and copper vessels and dining couches. And the Pharisees and the scribes asked him, why do your disciples not walk according to the tradition of the elders but eat with defiled hands? Beginning in verses 1-2 we find a group of Pharisees and scribes, these were the religious leaders, the teachers of God's law, had been sent from Jerusalem to investigate Christ's activity in Galilee. And the goal was to find fault in Jesus so that they could discredit and delegitimize his ministry. The reality was that Christ had now become a serious threat to the religious establishment. His actions and his teachings were undermining their authority and contradicting their traditions. And the crowds were all about it. They were all about Jesus. They had never seen or heard anyone like this before. And as they would gather, Christ would teach them with authority, unpacking the true meaning and the heart of God's word. And the Pharisees were upset. So they arrive on the scene and they're looking for anything that they could find that would bring Jesus down. So they notice in verse 2 that Jesus' disciples ate without first washing their hands. Now you might think that seems kind of trite and pointless but the issue isn't simply hygiene. It's about the fact that the disciples were not following the tradition of the elders and therefore they were eating with defiled or unholy hands. They were not ceremonially pure according to their interpretation of the Old Testament Levitical law. And if Christ's disciples weren't pure, that means that Jesus as their master and teacher was also not pure. Now verses 3 through 4, Mark explains a little bit more about these different traditions. He says in verse 3, For the Pharisees and all the Jews do not eat unless they wash their hands properly, holding to the tradition of the elders. And when they come from the marketplaces, they do not eat unless they wash. And there are many other traditions that they observe such as the washing of cups and pots and copper vessels and dining couches. Throughout this text we read this word tradition six different times. You'll notice again how extensive and thorough and binding these traditions had become really encompassing and regulating all of life for the people of Israel. Now when we talk about the tradition of the elders, we're not simply talking about the kind of say family traditions that you and I might have. We're talking about teachings regarding the law that were passed down from generation to generation that were given initially to safeguard the people from breaking the law. To help them live according to the law, but over time these traditions from elders gone by had become as authoritative as the law itself. And if there was anything in the Old Testament law that the elders and the religious leaders thought was vague, you can be sure that they would develop a tradition that was clear, thorough and very specific. And the traditions as we read in verses three through four had a particular focus on washing and cleansing and defilement. They would wash the cups and the dishes. They would make sure that when they went into the marketplace, when they came back, that they would wash. There was this emphasis on external purity. So according to the traditions of the elders, the Jews would become unclean, defiled or unholy if they were exposed to things or people that the elders deemed as dirty or unholy. And so according to the traditions, if you want to be holy, stay away from everything that was considered unholy. If you want to be holy and you get in touch with anything that is unholy, immediately go wash so that you can be clean. If you want to be holy, it boils down to following the traditions. In their zeal to maintain these traditions about the law, here's the sad reality. They had abandoned the very heart and soul of God's law, which is to love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind and strength. Somewhere along the way, the purpose of the law had been abandoned. They replaced that which is good and holy and pure and true with that which is man made. So that their holiness, their spirituality was only a shell of the reality that we see in God's word. And so the Pharisees, seeing that Jesus did not regard the authority of their traditions, asked Christ a question. Verse 5, why do your disciples not walk according to the tradition of the elders but eat with defiled hands? This is not simply a question. This is somewhat of a backhand rebuke. Essentially, they're saying, Jesus, if you're not abiding by our standard, you're not clean, you're not holy. You have no right to do and say things that you're doing and saying. Here's the shocking reality in the very presence of the one who had come to fulfill the law. The one who was the Lord that they were called to love with all their heart, soul, mind and strength. They didn't even see who he was. Their attempts to keep the law left out the Lord of the law. And so notice Jesus confrontation beginning in verse 6. And he, that is Jesus, said to them, well did Isaiah prophesy of you hypocrites as it is written. This people honors me with their lips, but their heart is far from me. In vain do they worship me, teaching as doctrines the commandments of men. You leave the commandment of God and hold to the tradition of men. Friends, this is a stunning, harsh rebuke. You hypocrites. This is the only time the word hypocrite is used in Mark's gospel. In fact, this is the longest confrontation that we read of Jesus with the Pharisees in Mark's gospel. He says, you hypocrites. Why? You honor me with your lips, but your heart is far from me. He's quoting from Isaiah chapter 29, a passage where Isaiah rebukes the leaders of Israel because of their spiritual blindness. Outwardly they seem fine. Outwardly they look the part. But inwardly, like my burrito concoctions, they were thoroughly corrupt. Their worship was mere lip service. Their holiness, if you will, had become heartless. Their piety was simply a performance. There was no real heart shaping, life transforming relationship with God rooted in grace. You say one thing, but your heart is far from me. In vain you worship me, teaching as doctrines, as essential the commandments of men. And in doing so, you leave the commandments of God. Jesus exposes the hypocrisy. They claim to be models of holiness, but they are not holy. The focus is only on the outward, but there's nothing really going on on the inward. They claim to be teaching the way of God, but they were not walking according to the word of God. They were more loyal to their law than to the Lord, and their holiness completely contradicted the beauty and the goodness and the wisdom and the purity of God's ways and God's word. You hypocrites, Jesus says. In verse 8 he summarizes the hypocrisy of this heartless holiness in your supposed commitment to God, in your devotion supposedly to God. Ironically you leave, you reject, you replace the command of God in order to hold on to your own traditions. Now you might think, does this really happen? Is this happening today? Well we know from the Old Testament it was happening before Jesus' time. We know from Jesus' time it was happening then. During Paul's ministry it was happening, and today it still happens. For example, we can see that there are many supposed churches or Christians that exalt religious rituals and the external above the sacred scripture. And we recognize that, but the issue here isn't something that is only out there. It's also very much a problem that we face as well. We can fall prey to this very same kind of hypocrisy. So don't be deceived. We who have been saved by the grace of God can fall prey to the same temptation. Think about this, isn't it easier to kind of outwardly conform to the Christian standard and culture that surrounds you than it is to really cultivate a heart for holiness? Isn't it easier to do what others do instead of being transformed from the inside out by scripture? Aren't there times in our own zeal to pursue holiness that we take our application of scripture and make it as authoritative as scripture itself? So friend, we need to be careful. Because of our ongoing battle with pride, we can easily drift and fall prey to the hypocrisy of heartless holiness. In verses 9 through 13, Jesus not only exposes the hypocrisy here, but he also explains it in detail. Verse 9, he said to them, you have a fine way of rejecting the commandment of God in order to establish your own traditions. For Moses said, honor your father and mother, and whoever reviles father and mother will surely die. But you say, if a man tells his father or his mother, whatever you would have gained from me is Corban, that is given to God, then you no longer permit him to do anything for his father or mother. Thus making void the word of God by your tradition that you have handed down and many such things you do. Man made tradition always fails to get to the heart of God's commands. In theory, the traditions were given to fence people and to keep them from disobeying God's commands. But the reality was these man made traditions not only distorted the purpose of God's law, but they actually became a perverted way of getting around it. And Jesus gives us a specific example. He says in verse 10, honor your father and mother. This is good. This is beautiful. This is right. Whoever reviles father or mother must surely die. But the Pharisees and the elders had established this tradition of Corban. You say, Mike, I'm not sure what Corban is. What's that all about? Here's what Corban was about. Basically, the idea here is kind of a deferred giving. Because initially when we read Corban, it sounds good. Hey, you're going to give what you have to God. I mean, isn't that what we ought to be doing as God's people? But here's what was going on. A child could declare that whatever he intended to give to his parents to honor them and take care of them in old age would now be considered a gift given to God. So once the child died, whatever that gift was, whether it was the proceeds of his possessions would then go to the temple. But until that time, that child could basically maintain control over the gift. And so essentially what people were doing was they were using the idea of Corban as a formality to keep things for themselves instead of taking care of their parents. How heartless is that? And Jesus said, this example is not some kind of an outlier, but actually he says, you do many such things. You establish your own word and by doing so, you reject God's word. In fact, there's three ideas here that he says are the result of man's traditions. He says in verse 8, you leave the commandment of God. In verse 9, he says you reject the commandment of God. Then in verse 13, you nullify or make void the word of God by your traditions. Do you see the danger, not just the hypocrisy of this, but the danger of this? As the people of God, we recognize that life comes as we embrace the message and truths of the word of God by faith. For the believer, we know that it is the word that births faith, that sustains faith, that nourishes faith. This is why the Old Testament would tell us that man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes out of the mouth of God, the word gives guidance and direction, real holiness. True spiritual health is cultivated as we submit to the scriptures. This is why as the people of God, we are called to be men and women of the book, the word of God. And so here's the hypocrisy of heartless holiness. It replaces the life giving, heart shaping truths of scripture. Simply a mirage of external, empty, powerless tradition. It misses the mark. It's not true holiness because true holiness is not a matter of the hands. It's a matter of the hearts. So in verses 1-13 Christ exposes the hypocrisy of this kind of heartless holiness and he did this so that his followers, his disciples would embrace the true intent and purpose of God's law. To pursue a true holiness that comes from a cleansed heart. And so we move from the confrontation of verses 1-13 to two different conversations that Jesus has, one with the crowds and one with his disciples. Verses 14-16. After this confrontation Jesus called the people to him again and he said to them, hear me all of you and understand there is nothing outside a person that by going into him can defile him. But the things that come out of a person are what defile him. Again the question is, why do your disciples eat with defiled hands? Jesus says it's not about what is on the outside, it's about what's going on on the inside. Jesus says hear me and understand. This is a seriously important message that Christ gets across with a deep sense of urgency. Because he's addressing really the heart and soul of God's law. The heart and soul of true godliness or holiness and he's telling us that true holiness is a matter of the heart. It's not about what goes in, it's about what is coming out. Our sin problem is not simply external, it is internal. It's not outward, it's inward. The heart of man's sin problem is the problem of man's sinful heart. And that's what Jesus wants to address. This is why we need more than standards or rules or regulations or rituals or traditions. We need a heart transformation. Now Jesus doesn't just tell us we need this. But here's the good news. He provides this. In fact that's why he came. To write God's law on our hearts. To change and cleanse us from the inside out. Through his sinless life, through his sin bearing death, through his triumph over sin, death and hell in his resurrection. He forgives and frees us from sin. He gives new life, new birth, new hearts. He empowers us to pursue true holiness. A heart for God to love the Lord as we follow his word through the power of his spirit. The good news is Christ not only commands but he provides and empowers and enables. And through him, we who were dead in sin with impure hearts bound to our sin can experience freedom and cleansing and transformation from the inside out. If all you have are traditions, if your relationship with God is simply following a list of do's and don'ts, you have no real power over sin and its desires. You might be able to keep the outside clean and look good. But true holiness is a matter of the heart. He explains it to the crowds. Then in verses 17 through 23 he explains it to his disciples. Verse 17, and when he had entered the house and left the people, his disciples asked him about the parable. And he said to them, then are you also without understanding? Do you not see that whatever goes into a person from outside cannot defile him? Since it enters not his heart but his stomach and is expelled. Thus he declared all foods clean. And he said, what comes out of a person is what defiles him. For from within, out of the heart of man, come evil thoughts. Sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, coveting, wickedness, deceit, sensuality, envy, slander, pride, foolishness. All these evil things come from within. And they defile a person. The Pharisees thought what defiled what was going on in the hands. Jesus said defilement is about what's going on in the heart. Now in verse 17 things start to get really interesting. Because based on what we've seen so far from Mark's gospel, we would surely expect that the religious leaders and the crowds wouldn't really grasp Jesus' teachings. But even Christ followers, even those who were with him, who saw the miracles and heard him speak day in and day out, failed to grasp what Jesus was teaching. They failed to understand what true holiness is all about. You see, it's not about what's outside. It's a matter of the heart. Now, when the scripture speaks of the heart, to be clear, we're not simply talking about emotions. We tend to think of the heart in terms of emotions, but the scripture, when it uses the word heart, is talking about the inner man. The real you. The beliefs that actually impact your practices. Not the things that you say you believe, but the actual beliefs that affect the way you live. The values, the things that you love, the priorities, the passions that shape your behavior. The truth is all of our actions, good and evil, flow from the heart. Proverbs 4 23 says, guard your heart with all diligence, for out of it flow the issues of life. The heart of our problem is not circumstances, it's not people, it's a problem of our heart. And what Jesus is saying here is not novel. It's not new. It's the heart of true religion before God. We read in Deuteronomy 10, as Moses exhorts the people of God, he says, and now Israel. What does the Lord require of you? What is the essence of what God desires from you? But to fear the Lord your God, to see him for who he truly is. To walk in all his ways. To love him. To serve the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul. To keep the commandments and statutes of the Lord, which I am commanding you today for your good. Circumcised therefore the foreskin of your heart. Don't be content with merely externally going through the motions. Don't be content with simply trying to conform to the standard. Have a heart for God. David said, create within me a clean heart, O God, as he repented of sin and renew a right spirit within me. Friends, from Genesis to Revelation, it's always been about the heart. God is seeking for hearts that are set on him. True holiness is always a matter of the heart. So what comes out is ultimately a reflection of what's going on in. We look at the trials and the circumstances of life and in many ways those trials are like a hot thing of water and you put the teabag in the water and what happens? Everything that's in the teabag comes out. All of the circumstances of life are like that and when we put the heart in, what comes out is simply a reflection of what's really in. And Jesus says that true holiness is a matter of the heart. Now it's interesting to note, as we come to a conclusion, that this is the longest conflict section in Mark's gospel. Mark wanted his readers back then and he wants us today to understand that following Christ, pursuing a life that pleases God is always a matter of the heart. About loving God and letting his word shape our thoughts, actions, attitudes, motives, passions and pursuits. The reality is you might be here today and you have all the right doctrines. You know all the right things but there's no real heart devotion to Christ. Your Christianity is cold, calloused, calculated, no joy, no real inward love for Christ. Maybe you're here, you're doing the right thing but the truth is your heart is far, far away. Concerned about the cares and things of this life. Maybe you've slipped into thinking your relationship with God is about how well you're performing all of your Christian duties. Friend, you can do all the duties in the world and yet miss the heart and soul of God's commands. Somewhere along the way, you and I forget the true holiness is a matter of the heart. So would you take this time with me now to acknowledge and confess sin and ask God to renew your heart. That you from a heart renewed by his grace would afresh love him, love his people and pursue a real holiness from the heart. You take some time with me now to confess and ask God for his grace to renew your heart.