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Worship
A
Small and Unmiraculous Miracle
Michael Card
Guest Columnist
Jesus
Christ--the same yesterday, today and forever
Matthew
17:24-27: On their arrival in Capernaum, the tax
collectors for the Temple tax came to Peter and
asked him, "Doesn't your teacher pay the Temple
tax?"
"Of
course he does," Peter replied. Then he went
into the house to talk to Jesus about it. But before
he had a chance to speak, Jesus asked him, "What
do you think, Peter_*_? Do kings tax their own people
or the foreigners they have conquered?"
"They
tax the foreigners," Peter replied.
"Well, then," Jesus said, "the citizens
are free! However, we don't want to offend them,
so go down to the lake and throw in a line. Open
the mouth of the first fish you catch, and you will
find a coin. Take the coin and pay the tax for both
of us." (New Living Translation)
I
find it interesting that only Matthew, the tax collector,
chose to tell us the story of Jesus, Peter and the
collectors of the Temple tax. But it is an interesting
miracle for many other reasons. First of all, it
is so unmiraculous. In fact, if you look closely
you'll notice that the miracle itself isn't even
given. Matthew only tells us of Jesus' instructions
to Peter. There is no follow-up whatsoever. We are
left to assume that everything happened just as
Jesus said it would. (A safe assumption!)
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Michael Card's album A Fragile Stone from Songs4Worship.com!
His
familiar hometown, Capernaum, seems to have changed
as Peter and Jesus made their way back to his house,
their base of operations in Galilee. Peter was still
trying to cope with what Jesus had just revealed
to them; that he was soon to die. Jesus' promise
of resurrection might have provided a measure of
comfort to Peter, if only he or any of the others
had been able to grasp it. The last few days had
been a roller coaster ride for them all. First there
was the intensity of his confession, then the dazzling
Transfiguration of Jesus on the mountaintop. How
is a pious Jewish man supposed to recover after
seeing Moses and Elijah?
But
now the crowds were gone. What's more, the excitement
was missing too. They were, all of them, bone tired
from their long journey. They were emotionally exhausted
as well from all that Jesus had said about what
awaited him in Jerusalem in the weeks to come. As
far as we know it was to be their last time to be
in Capernaum together.
The
fact that the Temple tax collectors had come to
ask at all was still another indication that much
had changed in Capernaum, that Jesus' reputation
was beginning to erode. After all, this was a tax
from which Jesus should have been exempt, since
religious teachers were normally not expected to
pay the Temple tax. It was too great an emotional
leap for the tired fisherman to return from his
mountain top vision to the drudgery of taxes.
"Go
take your hand line and cast into the lake. The
first fish you bring up will have a coin in its
mouth. Use it to pay the tax for both of us. After
all, we don't want to offend them." Peter reached
behind the door and took his line and hook from
the peg where he always left them hanging. Without
a word he wandered down to the shoreline, puzzled
that after being called to be a fisher of men he
was now being asked to fish for fish once more.
"Since when does he not want to offend anyone!"
he muttered as he trudged down to the shore.
It
is an enigmatic story to say the least. The depressed
tone of the story can be read between the lines.
Things had indeed changed for Jesus and his disciples
in Capernaum. He is being treated in many ways like
a foreigner, being asked to pay a tax from which
he was clearly exempt. His statement about not wanting
to offend anyone I find to be perhaps the most miraculous
and mysterious part of the unmiraclous story.
I
cannot help but believe that in addition to leaving
out the miracle, Matthew chose for some unknown
reason to leave out the real reason for the strange
story of the coin in the fish's mouth. And that
is that once upon a time two tired servants of God
stumbled back home to find, no longer a flock of
the faithful, but demanding religious people waiting
for them at the door. Knowing that the least indiscretion
would only mean more conflict for the both of them,
one chose to exercise his awesome and unlimited
power to make appear out of nowhere a couple of
dollars to pay the fee the men at the door were
hounding them for. All this for the glorious purpose
that the two of them might share an uninterrupted
evening together of talk and meal fellowship since
in a few days one of them would be leaving that
place never to return.
A
small and "unmiraculous" miracle, or was
it?
That
the Lord of all would want to spend an uninterrupted
evening with his best friend, is that not miraculous?
"Pay the tax for you and me," Jesus says.
That Jesus would invite Peter to participate in
making the miracle happen... is that not amazing?
I believe Jesus, who is the same yesterday, today
and forever, is still about unmiraculous miracles.
I trust and believe that his desire is still to
spend time with me, a person he had called his friend.
So let's keep an eye out and look for these kinds
of small, amazing miracles. He is doing them all
around and in us everyday.
From
the Study is a monthly syndicated column by Michael
Card. For more information about Michael Card or
his new book and album, A Fragile Stone, go to www.michaelcard.com.
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