Notes
on Mark 10.17-31
The
biographer Mark records the account of a man running up to Jesus as he was
going on his Way (this is a play on words for journey and way of life), falling
on his knees and imploring to apprentice to this Master in living life with a
sense of permanence.
Jesus
asks the man some questions, to gain a sense of what he has already learnt and
put into practice. Seeing the man’s heart for others, and wanting the best for
him too, Jesus instructs the man to exchange all he holds, give the money to
the poor, and join Jesus as his apprentice. The man is shocked and departed
with a sense of bereavement at an opportunity he felt unable to take hold of,
because he held the tenancy of many estates.
According
to the Torah, the land belonged to God. God was the owner, who distributed the
land as he saw fit. The people of Israel were tenants in possession of the
land, each allocated an ancestral portion, according to their tribe.
If
poverty forced you, it was possible to sell your tenancy to another member of
your tribe. You were not selling the land, which belonged to God, but your
tenancy rights, for a period of time. Essentially you were leasing out the use
of the land.
Every
fifty years, at the year of jubilee, tenant possession returned to the original
tenant or, if they had died, to their heir. The fellow tribesman who had
benefitted from the land received no payment. However, the right of redemption
meant that, if you were forced to sell your tenancy, but then your
circumstances improved, you had the right to redeem it back at any time before
the year of jubilee. In such circumstances you paid your fellow tribesman the
equivalent of the rent for the years still left on the lease (so, up to fifty
years).
Your
nearest relative also had the right to redeem the tenancy you had sold, at any
time. In such circumstances, they took on the administration of the land, until
the year of jubilee.
The
man who sought to be an apprentice of Jesus held many estates. In other words,
he had bought the tenancy rights of several members of his tribe, who had
fallen into poverty. This was a way, provided by law, for him to care for the
poor. At some point, he would have to surrender the tenancies he held (though
at this point in their history, the people were not counting strict fifty-year
cycles).
Jesus
instructs him to allow the nearest relatives, the kinsman redeemers, to buy
back the tenancies he held. This would release a significant sum of money
(especially where there were many years left on the lease) and Jesus instructs
him to give that money to those most destitute.
The
man has already acted to support those who have fallen into poverty, but Jesus
now asks him to divest of what he holds, to return simply to his own ancestral
portion, allocated to his family by God. For then, he will have a heavenly
storehouse, God’s storehouse.
It
is a radical act of trust, that God is good and will provide.
And
the man is unable to take that step.
But
the encounter Mark records reveals Jesus to be the one offering himself as
Redeemer, to take on the tenancy that the man finds himself unable to
administer, living a life with a sense of permanence as opposed to a fear of
loss or failure.
When
life is overwhelming, as it sometimes is, and as my children’s generation seems
to find it more often than not, Jesus still holds out the invitation.
No comments:
Post a Comment