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Kelly Flanagan's avatar

Dan, your uncertainty is beautiful. Perhaps the Godliest thing is not to figure out the "right" answer, but to be spaciousness enough to hold all of the unanswered questions and complexity in awareness?

Here's where I find myself landing on this this morning: fortunately, we will be judged by a Jesus who knows exactly what it's like to have spiritual ideals and human impulses all at once.

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Christy Lynne Wood's avatar

From my understanding, the money changers’ tables as well as the people selling animals for sacrifice were all set up in the court of the Gentiles. This was the furthest in that non-Jewish people could enter for worship of Jehovah, but it had been turned into an open air market. Imagine the sounds and smells. It was no longer a place of quiet contemplation or reverence.

Plus those selling and changing money were most likely taking advantage of people who had come to worship.

I believe that Jesus came to restore all people to their Creator regardless of race and I think this story is showing his heart for that purpose. He was upset about the dishonesty and the prevention of worship, and he was angry at the brokenness of our world keeping people from God. But he was about to change all that and this is a foreshadowing—when he died the veil to the Holy Place was torn in two again as a picture allowing everyone access to God.

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