John 2:14-16 (HCSB)
Just trying to get a sense of the scene.
Had to have been noisy - the crush of people at Passover, and the animals.
Was probably aggravating to most everyone there. The pilgrims knew they were being ripped off by the merchants. Had to be at least one saying "What? These doves are 5 shekels on the other side of that wall, and you want 50?" And a merchant shouting back "You can't use those in here. You'll offend God."
Jesus taking it all in. Starting to make a whip out of cords. Maybe the first time macrame was used as a weapon.:)
It took some time to do that.
What was he doing? Continuing to watch? Praying to the Father? Was there a point where He had enough and went to work setting things right?
And that "He drove EVERYONE out..."
Does that mean the pilgrims as well? Did He see them as complicit in what was going on there? Through their acceptance of wrong they were aiding and abetting it?
If everyone's getting out of there, it looks to me like it happened in stages as He made His way around the large courtyard. Might have been that there was no one there at the moneychangers table so He flipped it up and spilled the coins. But apparently the dove sellers were still at work.
So then, did the temple authorities have the guts to approach Him in a now empty courtyard? (The term "Jews" there signifies those in opposition to Jesus and in authority.)
18 So the Jews replied to Him, “What sign ⌊of authority⌋ will You show us for doing these things?”
19 Jesus answered, “Destroy this sanctuary, and I will raise it up in three days.”
20 Therefore the Jews said, “This sanctuary took 46 years to build, and will You raise it up in three days?”
John 2:18-20 (HCSB)
Still mulling this part over.
Loving J Vernon McGee's quip.
I tell you, the Lord was rough. There is no question about that. I don't like the pictures we have of an anemic-looking Christ. The artists don't seem to realize who He was.—J. Vernon McGee's Thru The Bible
Wesley writes: both the sheep and the oxen - Though it does not appear that he struck even them; and much less, any of the men. But a terror from God, it is evident, fell upon them.
—Wesley's Commentary
Yep. You can have your Jack Bauer or Chuck Norris. For putting the fear of God into people, I go with... God.
Oh and don't miss this.
Jesus did not upset the cages of the pigeons. This would have trapped the hapless birds and caused them injury. Rather, He instructed the merchants to remove the doves.—Easy-To-Read Commentary Series, The
The same God whose heart is aflame with anger because of what men have done, is gentle and kind enough to care about pigeons.
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