Jesus Is the Friend of Sinners, Part 1 (Mark 2:13–17) - He Calls People Like Levi
What We Have Learned of the Kingdom
The first time Jesus spoke in Mark's gospel, he said, "The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the gospel" (Mark 1:15). And, at this point in Mark's gospel, we have learned many introductory things about the kingdom of God Jesus said was at hand.
First, when he selected his first disciples, we learned that the kingdom centers around Jesus. They were to be with Jesus, imitate Jesus, and eventually be launched out into the world to do what Jesus did. He would make them into fishers of men.
Second, when he delivered a demon-possessed man in the Capernaum synagogue, we learned his kingdom collides with the unseen forces of evil that permeate our planet. He is stronger than that realm of darkness, and he came to set us free from its shackles.
Third, when he healed Peter's mother-in-law and many others, we learned his kingdom would ultimately end all the natural brokenness produced by sin. His cross and resurrection paved the way for all human illness and injury and death to be resurrected, made new.
Fourth, when he cleansed the leper, we learned his kingdom is one where spiritual uncleanness can be replaced with personal righteousness. Jesus makes way for humanity to find inner wholeness. He deposits his cleanness into his people.
Fifth, when he forgave and then healed the paralyzed man, we learned his kingdom is one that begins with forgiveness. Forgiveness is found in Jesus!
A Question About the Kingdom
This leaves us with a question: If this is what Jesus' kingdom is like, who gets to enter into his kingdom?
Now, all the early snapshots of Jesus' life help prepare us for the answer. He came and interacted with demon-possessed, physically unhealthy, and spiritually unclean—sinners in need of forgiveness.
But the passage before us today puts it bluntly. Jesus came for sinners. He will say, in our passage, "I came not to call the righteous, but sinners" (17).
Yay! This is where we all get to come into the story. Sinners of all stripes are loved by Jesus. But, there's a catch. To get into the kingdom, we have to know we're sinners. As long as we self-justify, self-excuse and self approve, we are like the Pharisees, outside the kingdom. We're going to see this play out in the episode before us.
Episode 2 of 5
Now, just a reminder, but this is the second of five stories where Jesus gets into trouble with the religious leaders. It began in our last episode. They didn't like that he imitated God when he dispensed forgiveness to the paralyzed man. Today, they won't like the company he kept.
Let's learn from this passage:
13 He went out again beside the sea, and all the crowd was coming to him, and he was teaching them. 14 And as he passed by, he saw Levi, the son of Alphaeus, sitting at the tax booth, and he said to him, "Follow me." And he rose and followed him. — Mark 2:13-14
Jesus Went Out Again
The episode begins with Jesus going out again beside the sea (13). Why does Mark say Jesus went out again?
Well, remember the last time Jesus was at Peter's house doing amazing things? It happened on his first massive day of public ministry in Capernaum. It started with healing Peter's mother-in-law but ended with large crowds coming to him after sundown. He served tons of people that day, healing and delivering until late into the next. Then, Mark tells us, the following morning, Jesus arose early, a great while before daylight, and went out alone to the wilderness for prayer (Mark 1:35).
Our episode today was a repeat of that first scenario—a practice Jesus followed. He went to Peter's house again. Everyone came from far and wide. He taught them the word. It was crowded. Then Jesus forgave and healed the paralytic. They were all amazed. Then, Jesus went out again for another moment of prayer with his Father.
This is a great pattern for life. Get alone with God to be recharged. Serve others. Then withdraw to be alone with God again. Repeat.
Levi the Tax Collector
But, as Jesus sought his Father, the crowd was coming to him (13). As they accumulated around Jesus, he was teaching them, continuing his earlier practice (13). It appears this teaching was given while he walked because Mark says as he passed by, he saw Levi, the son of Alphaeus, sitting at the tax booth (14).
Who is Levi?
First, we know he was a tax collector (14, Luke 5:27). Since he worked in Capernaum, a city at a major crossroads with the surrounding territories, he would've been involved in the taxation of various travelers using the Roman roads of that region. But he also would've been involved in the taxation of the local economy, especially transported goods. And, as much as we might chafe against our own tax system, we really shouldn't think of an IRS agent when thinking of Levi. Taxmen in that era made their living by gouging the people and charging more than Rome required, and many of them became quite wealthy in the process. It was sanctioned theft, backed by the full force of Rome.
And, because they were viewed as traitors in step with Rome, the Jewish community was unforgiving in their attitude towards tax collectors. They were expelled from the synagogues. Their presence could render a house unclean. Some rabbis even taught you could lie to a tax collector with impunity. So Levi was a social outcast.
The name we know him by is Matthew, which is perhaps an alternative name for Levi. It's also possible Jesus renamed Levi with the name Matthew. My guess, and this is speculation on my part, is that Matthew changed his own name.
Why would he do that? Well, he had an unsavory past, for one. But secondly, the original Levi was one of Israel's twelve sons, so an entire tribe was named after him. And when the people of Israel came out of their Egyptian slavery through the death of the firstborn, God said all the firstborns in Israel would belong to him. Then, as a way to satisfy that firstborn requirement, God said he would instead take an entire tribe, the Levites. They would serve by running the tabernacle and temple worship systems. They were set apart for God's service.
I wonder if Matthew, all during the years he was called Levi, thought to himself, I am not really living up to my namesake. I'm named after Levi, a gift to God, but I am serving myself. I am doing my own thing. When Jesus caught ahold of his life, I wonder if he began thinking, now I can truly be a gift to God. This is what the name Matthew means: "gift of God." After years of running from God, Levi was now a gift of God. Jesus had given him a new chance at life.
Jesus' Call / Levi's Response
But backup to this first day. Jesus saw Levi as he walked on by the sea. He said to him, "Follow me" (14). There was something Jesus saw in this man.
What would Levi do? Would he go? Would he resist Jesus? Mark says: And he rose and followed him (14). There was something in Jesus Levi wanted.
Now, when the four fishermen left their business to follow Jesus, they could (and did) return to that work. But when Levi left his trade, he could never return. Tax collecting in that time and place was a dishonest profession. Because it required usury and theft to make a living, it was inconducive to Christianity. When Levi left it, he left it for good.
Some careers are incompatible with the faith. Others are totally compatible. And, probably the most difficult of all are those careers that require great tact, discernment, and wisdom to operate in as a believer. If you are in one of those fields, my prayers are with you. I cannot imagine the challenges you face.
But it was clear for Levi. He could not continue as a tax collector and follow Jesus. Like Elisha, who sacrificed the oxen he plowed his fields with before he followed Elijah, Levi left it all and never looked back.
The Best Life
And this was the best decision of his life. I mean, let me put it this way. What would you rather be—a corrupt tax official forgotten by history or the most widely read author in history? That's what Levi became. The book he wrote, the gospel of Matthew, is likely the most widely read Bible book of all time. His life, formerly spent on Rome's kingdom and his own self-serving interests, became an exciting part of God's kingdom.
This is what Jesus does. He gives hope to the hopeless. He calls out to the outcast. He gives meaning to the meaningless. He includes the un-includable.
And Levi's inclusion in the apostolic group might have been a little awkward at first. He'd likely taxed all the fishermen among the twelve. Eventually, Jesus would call Simon the zealot, a man who'd spent his former life fighting against Rome's occupation (Matthew 10:4). But Levi had been in partnership with Rome's occupation.
But this is what Jesus does. He calls disparate and widely contrasting lives to come to him. Centered upon Jesus, those previously fractured relationships are healed. He is the healer of schisms, the conqueror of contentions. By his blood, we are one.
Don't be afraid to follow Jesus. It is the best life you could live. One example of this in Scripture comes from the life of Esther. Through God's sovereign hand, she became the queen of Persia (Esther 2). Hers was a life of power and prestige, festivals and fandom. But, though hardly anyone in the kingdom knew it, she was a Jew. When an anti-Semitic attitude began corrupting her empire, she became the spokesperson God wanted to use to spare the Jewish people from Persian persecution. As she considered whether she was up to the task, she finally concluded, "If I perish, I perish " (Esther 4:16). She became convinced there was nothing better than to live for God, even if it meant dying for God. And, through her actions, Jewish lives were saved, and she became something much more meaningful than the mere queen of Persia. She became Esther, the heroine of God's people. It was the best life she could live.
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For the entire Mark series, go here. Thank you.