âBut his mother told the servants, âDo whatever he tells you.ââ (John 2:5 NLT)
Even with John the Baptistâs hype, Jesus kept a low profileâuntil He attended a wedding in Cana with His mother, Mary, and His disciples.
Hospitality was an essential part of first-century Jewish culture. The more lavishly a person entertained, the greater his social standing grew. Weddings were the ultimate test of a personâs hospitality. So it wasnât unusual for wedding celebrations to last for days, with food and wine flowing all the while.
Running out of wine in the middle of a wedding celebration was a worst-case scenario. But thatâs what happened at the wedding Jesus attended. Mary realized that the host would face public humiliation and shame if word got out. So she asked Jesus to intervene.
Jesus was reluctant at first. âMy time has not yet come,â He told her (verse 4 NLT). He had not yet performed a public miracle. He knew that when word got out about His miracle-working, crowds would follow. And people would be less likely to focus on His teachings if they were just waiting for the next âwowâ moment.
Considering that Jesus hadnât yet performed any public miracles, itâs interesting that Mary believed He could do something in that situation. Sheâs the first person in Johnâs Gospel to put her faith in Jesus. âDo whatever He tells you,â she told the hostâs servants.
Jesus rewarded her faith. He instructed the servants to fill six water jars, each with a capacity of 20 to 30 gallons, with water. When the servants dipped into the jars, they found that it was wine of the highest quality.
That may have been the first clue for John and the other disciples that the rabbi they were following was something more than a rabbi.
A short time later, Jesus and His disciples traveled to Jerusalem for the Passover celebration. But when Jesus entered the temple, He saw that it had become a place of business. The Jerusalem temple was the center of worship for Jewish people throughout Israel. Many traveled long distances to worship and offer sacrifices there. But rather than bringing their own animals for sacrifice with them, many purchased them from merchants inside the temple complex.
Several merchants exploited the opportunity and turned the temple complex into a marketplace. Jesus had too much reverence for Godâs house of worship to allow it to be defiled like that. So He overturned tables, scattered coins across the ground, and chased the merchants out of the temple. And thoseâlike Johnâwho listened closely while Jesus disrupted business as usual at the temple, might have heard Him refer to the building as âmy Fatherâs houseâ (verse 16).
The Jewish religious leaders demanded that Jesus perform a miracle to prove that He had authority to take such drastic action.
ââAll right,â Jesus replied. âDestroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it upââ (verse 19 NLT). The religious leaders scoffed because they didnât realize Jesus was talking about His own body. But John and the other disciples realized it less than three years later when Jesus rose from the dead three days after being crucified.
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