“Nothing like this has ever been seen in Israel.”
But the Pharisees said,
“He drives out demons by the prince of demons.”
There were many sheep that did not know exactly how to respond to Jesus on their own, but were primed to make a response. Yet their leaders, who should have been guiding them to Jesus as the promised messiah, were instead trying to direct them away from him, sowing seeds of doubt among them. Many of these sheep felt an internal pull toward Jesus. But the Pharisees did what they could to prevent them from responding to that impulse. This created feelings of trouble and abandonment in the sheep, leaving them at a loss as to what to do. We ought not take this depth of this inner conflict for granted. It made them second guess their own nascent faith in what God was doing in their midst. The Pharisees were, after all, the most obviously pious and religiously observant among them, at least in an external sense. They had expertise which should have helped them to recognize the messiah when he appeared. But rather than doing so, they concocted excuses for why Jesus could not be the messiah, however his apparent goodness and miraculous deeds made things seem. If Isaiah had proclaimed woe on those who called evil good (see Isaiah 5:20) than how deep was the darkness that was upon these Pharisees.
They made kings in Israel, but not by my authority;
they established princes, but without my approval.
With their silver and gold they made
idols for themselves, to their own destruction.
Because they refused to acknowledge the one sent into the world by God, the Pharisees had no alternatives except idolatry. In their case it was typically the idolatry of pride and position. They implicitly set themselves up as alternative authorities, rivals to Jesus, whose authority came from God. If only they had been humble they could have submitted their own transitory authority to Jesus, to be used as he wished, for the glory of his kingdom. But instead they used it to attempt to undermine the spread of that kingdom. From this we can learn that rejecting Jesus does not leave one in a morally neutral space, but rather reconfigures him into a servant of rival claimants. And we can see how all rivals to Jesus are ultimately pawns of the devil. They led to Pharisees to reject goodness itself, at least in many particular instances. The more consciously one rejects Jesus the more dangerous the result is likely to be, the more directly Satan can work through it to spread his own demonic kingdom. Idolatry might not seem a live option in our day. But it is, after a fashion, an option so prevalent as to be hard to avoid. All paths but the path of Jesus ultimately lead to it.
Then he said to his disciples,
“The harvest is abundant but the laborers are few;
so ask the master of the harvest
to send out laborers for his harvest.”
The sheep aren't supposed to solve these kind of big problems on their own. They are supposed to ask for help from the one who is himself their shepherd. But they are not then excused to simply sit back and watch things unfold from the sidelines. No. Rather, they themselves must then be open to being called, to themselves being the ones sent by Jesus to address the trouble and confusion of the whole flock. Obviously this pertains primarily to clergy. But we are none of us exempt. Jesus wants to call and to use all of us the help others in ways for which he has uniquely gifted each of us. We should do more than assess our skills and then go out and use them on our own initiative. The risk of being overly self-directed is ending up like the Pharisees, more lost than we began. Instead we want to be responsive, responsive to the call of the master of the harvest. He has better plans for the ways, times, and places we can use our gifts for his glory than we can come up with on our own or in steering committees. This sometimes leads to the risk of discernment paralysis where we never begin to act because we never achieve a sufficiently perfect clarity about how to act. But we aren't suggesting that we wait until we hear an audible voice or receive a message from an angel. We rather suggest that we be open to holy impulses, discerning them through prayer, our own wisdom, and the wisdom of wise elder sisters and brothers in the faith. In general, when something seems inspired by God and no one can recognize an obvious downside, we ought not be afraid to proceed. If it is something that seems wild, like traveling across the globe, it may well still be God, but we should subject it to additional scrutiny before we attempt it. But if we listen at all we will hear a call of some kind. How will we respond? Let us resolve to do so faithfully and zealously.
The house of Israel trusts in the Lord.
John B. Miller - Speak Lord I'm Listening

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