We have already seen in John the problems the religious leaders had with Jesus for “breaking” the Sabbath. Actually, all he did was break the rules that they had added to God’s original commandment to keep the Sabbath.
Here again, we see another confrontation between Jesus and these leaders concerning the Sabbath.
This time, Jesus and his disciples were walking by a field, and because his disciples were hungry, they took some grain to eat of it.
By the way, it was perfectly acceptable to take grain from another person’s field back in those days, as long as you weren’t taking a sickle to it. (Deuteronomy 23:25)
The problem was not the picking of the grain, the problem was that the Pharisees considered this “work,” which was of course forbidden on the Sabbath.
But Jesus refutes this in two ways.
First, the priests always worked in the temple on the Sabbath, and were not considered guilty of sin.
Second, there are some laws that God considers higher than others. Namely, the preservation of life was considered more important than keeping the letter of the Sabbath law.
Even the Pharisees accepted this to some degree as I’ve mentioned before. (Doctors could save a person’s life on the Sabbath, but could only do enough to keep them alive until the next day, from where they could give full treatment to the patient).
And once again, Jesus quotes Hosea to them, saying,
If you had known what these words mean, ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice,’ you would not have condemned the innocent. (Matthew 12:7)
One mistake that people make about God is that they think he’s most interested in rules. That rules are the most important thing to him, and that he’s just waiting to blast us for every mistake we make.
God is far more interested in people than he is in rules.
But because the Pharisees didn’t understand this, they set up multiple rules around the laws God had made, and they were quick to condemn anyone who didn’t meet the standards they had set up.
But Jesus told the Pharisees,
The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath. (Mark 2:27)
I think you could say the same for all the rules God has set up. They were made for us. We were not made for them. God didn’t make rules solely for the sake of making us dance to them. He made them for our benefit.
And if we understand that, we can better understand the purpose for each rule, and what it means for our lives.
But if we fail to understand that, we’ll end up like the Pharisees, misunderstanding and misinterpreting the law of God, and condemning people who are innocent in his sight.
How about you? How do you see God’s rules? Are you seeing them as something God has set up just for the sake of setting them up?
Or do you see them as something God has set up for your benefit? Do you understand the whys for each rule?
If you do, you’ll be far less likely to unjustly condemn others for “breaking the rules.”
