Honouring thy parents

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MaryM

Well-known member
Nov 25, 2022
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#1
In Mark Chapter 7, V10 - 12.
What does Jesus mean? It is about honouring one's parents.

I think it is the difference between the law of Moses and the interpretation by the Pharisees of how to respect parents. Yet I find it hard to decipher.
 

Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
56,000
26,134
113
#2
He is saying they wrongfully allowed the parents to be neglected if what
resources were available to help them were for dedications to God.



Mark 7:13-15
:)
 

MsMediator

Well-known member
Mar 8, 2022
948
609
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#3
Basically, if your parents need the funds to survive use the funds on the parents instead of giving to the church, if you can only afford to do one or the other. In that situation, I also read that one is not obligated to give funds to the church, but should give in other ways.
 

Eli1

Well-known member
Apr 5, 2022
3,274
1,117
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#4
Basically, if your parents need the funds to survive use the funds on the parents instead of giving to the church, if you can only afford to do one or the other. In that situation, I also read that one is not obligated to give funds to the church, but should give in other ways.
100% agree.
Before helping strangers, we need to help our families first. Then our nearby community or communities and then strangers at large.
That's my view on it anyway.
 

JohnDB

Well-known member
Jan 16, 2021
5,627
2,211
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#5
Living a life of Kindness and love past the point of self sacrifice are primary with the Law of God...

So saying you can't be kind to your parents because you promised to give the church some money is a contradiction of the law violating all that it stands for.

Sure, the church needs money, but the parents needed the money more.

And where the son could do with a little less, the church a bit less then the parents could be taken care of without being a burden on society.

Jesus preached a LOT about money. Because how people handle money they earn demonstrates a LOT about their character. Some are generous. Some are stingy and miserly....some like expensive luxuries to the point of always being broke for necessities.
 

p_rehbein

Senior Member
Sep 4, 2013
30,209
6,548
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#6
I believe these two comments fully explain the verses from Matthew.

Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary
7:1-13 One great design of Christ's coming was, to set aside the ceremonial law; and to make way for this, he rejects the ceremonies men added to the law of God's making. Those clean hands and that pure heart which Christ bestows on his disciples, and requires of them, are very different from the outward and superstitious forms of Pharisees of every age. Jesus reproves them for rejecting the commandment of God. It is clear that it is the duty of children, if their parents are poor, to relieve them as far as they are able; and if children deserve to die that curse their parents, much more those that starve them. But if a man conformed to the traditions of the Pharisees, they found a device to free him from the claim of this duty.

Gill's Exposition of the Entire Bible
For Moses said,.... That is, God by Moses; for the following precept was spoken by God, and written by him on one of the tables of stone, and delivered into the hands of Moses, to be given to the children of Israel:
honour thy father and thy mother, Exodus 20:12, the sanction of which law is,

and whoso curseth father or mother, let him die the death, Exodus 21:17. As the former of these commands is to be understood, not only of honouring parents in thought, word, and deed, but also of providing for them, when in want and distress, through poverty and old age; so the latter is to be interpreted, not merely of wishing or imprecating the most dreadful things upon parents, which some may not be guilty of, and yet transgress this command; but likewise of every slight put upon them, and neglect of them, when in necessitous circumstances: and both these laws were broken by the Jews, through their tradition hereafter mentioned; See Gill on Matthew 15:4.