(M, C)br...
Illustration
(M, C)
"... he ... watched the multitude putting money into the treasury." "The point Jesus makes is blazingly clear -- the gift which counts is the gift which costs. It is one of the many instances in which he contrasts God's measurements with man's. He makes no denunciation of gifts which come out of surplus and abundance. It is simply that true giving is to be measured relatively to what is left, not absolutely by the size. As he sat there among the alms boxes and watched people making their contributions, out of them all one widow stirred him and moved him to exclamation. Here was the real thing! To put the matter with stark concreteness, it was her next meal. The temple was full of the noise of coin dropping. The thirteen big receptacles, shaped like ear trumpets, made a loud clanging of metal on metal. Jesus' ears were attuned to the faintest noise of all, the falling of two small coins, the smallest in circulation, worth in purchasing power, about two cents ... Yet ... it has proved to be one of the world's mightiest financial transactions." (Interpreter's Bible)
-- Anton
"... he ... watched the multitude putting money into the treasury." "The point Jesus makes is blazingly clear -- the gift which counts is the gift which costs. It is one of the many instances in which he contrasts God's measurements with man's. He makes no denunciation of gifts which come out of surplus and abundance. It is simply that true giving is to be measured relatively to what is left, not absolutely by the size. As he sat there among the alms boxes and watched people making their contributions, out of them all one widow stirred him and moved him to exclamation. Here was the real thing! To put the matter with stark concreteness, it was her next meal. The temple was full of the noise of coin dropping. The thirteen big receptacles, shaped like ear trumpets, made a loud clanging of metal on metal. Jesus' ears were attuned to the faintest noise of all, the falling of two small coins, the smallest in circulation, worth in purchasing power, about two cents ... Yet ... it has proved to be one of the world's mightiest financial transactions." (Interpreter's Bible)
-- Anton
