March 15, 2025
Today’s Reading: Introit for Lent 2 – Psalm 74:1-3; antiphon: Psalm 69:9
Daily Lectionary: Genesis 15:1-21; Mark 5:21-43
For zeal for your house has consumed me, and the reproaches of those who reproach you have fallen on me. (Psalm 69:9)
In the Name + of Jesus. Amen.
The Lord our God is a zealous God. He often reminds us of that in the sacred Scripture. Being zealous can be sinful when it is disoriented by selfish ambition and disregard for others, but it can also be pious and just. Such zeal is the desire to guard and protect what is yours from all danger and harm. God is zealous because He does not want to lose His creation to the devil’s corruption.
Zeal can also consume God’s people. David wrote the 69th Psalm during a time of persecution and trouble. Open rebellion was upon the great king, but he did not want to lose that which God had won. “For zeal for your house has consumed me.” His lament and imprecatory prayer for God’s judgment was not from a selfish desire to get even with his enemies but that what God had won would not be lost to wicked people. His zeal was for the wood and metal and stone that housed the things of God, yes, but also for the household of God–the people of God.
This same Psalm applies to Jesus. In fact, it is, first and foremost, a song of Jesus and only secondarily a song of David. One Passover Jesus went to Jerusalem and found money changers in the temple. In fact, it was probably something He found every time He went to the temple; trading in sacrifices could be a lucrative business. On this occasion, though, Jesus does something uncharacteristic. “And making a whip of cords, he drove them all out of the temple, with the sheep and oxen. And he poured out the coins of the money-changers and overturned their tables” (John 2:15).
Perhaps the disciples were surprised by the normally demure Jesus’ outburst. But then they remembered the Psalm that gives us tomorrow’s antiphon. “His disciples remembered that it was written, ‘Zeal for your house will consume me’” (John 2:17). Jesus’ zeal was for the wood and the metal and the stone, yes, but it was also for that which the wood, metal, and stone housed–the Gifts of God for the people of God. The traders had turned the Gift into a work.
It was His zeal that ultimately got Jesus killed. Like David before Him, His own people rose up in rebellion and put Him to death. As in Psalm 74, when the wicked took hatchet and hammer and fire to the sanctuary of God (Ps. 74:6-7), the enemies of Jesus tore down the temple of His body. But there is a sign that God remembers His congregation, His people. “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up” (John 2:19).
In the Name + of Jesus. Amen.
Holy this temple where our Lord is dwelling; This is none other than the gate of heaven. Ever Your children, year by year rejoicing, Chant in Your temple. (LSB 916:2)
-Rev. Jacob Ehrhard, pastor of St. John’s Lutheran Church and School in Chicago, IL.
Audio Reflections Speaker: Pastor Jonathan Lackey is the pastor at Grace Lutheran Church, Vine Grove, KY.
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