Joseph Francis Alward © Copyright 2003
Did Jesus curse the fig tree before he drove the merchants from the temple, or did he curse the fig tree after he drove the merchants from the temple? The answer depends on which gospel writer you believe. |
One gospel writer believes that Jesus cursed the fig tree, then went to the temple and drove out the merchants, but another gospel writer thinks the order of these events was reversed:
Mark: Jesus Cursed Tree Before Temple
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Mark |
Matthew |
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1. Enter Jerusalem |
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2. Drive merchants from temple |
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3. Leave Jerusalem |
1. Go to Bethany |
4. Go to Bethany |
2. Leave Bethany |
5. Leave Bethany |
3. Curse tree |
6. Curse fig tree |
4. Enter Jerusalem |
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5. Drive merchants from temple |
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6. Leave Jerusalem |
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7. Give faith moves mountains speech |
7. Give faith moves mountains speech |
Note that the Bethany and Jerusalem events are reversed in Matthew's gospel, compared to Mark's gospel. Both of these accounts cannot be true at the same time, so at least one of them is in error, or perhaps both of them are. In either case, the Bible is in error--again.
Why Did the Writers Have Jesus Curse the Fig Tree?
Bible writers believed that events prophesied in Scripture would be fulfilled with the coming of Jesus, so they had Jesus' disappointment with the fig tree be a metaphorical parable of his disappointment with Israel. The prophecy on which the writers based the fig-tree cursing incident is found in Jeremiah:
"I will take away their harvest, declares the LORD. There will be no grapes on the vine. There will be no figs on the tree, and their leaves will wither. What I have given them will be taken from them." (Jeremiah 8:13 NIV)
The message from Jesus is, just as Jeremiah predicted, Israel's vine is not yet ready to bear fruit for the Lord.