I posted this sermon earlier, but it had a factual error.  This is the 
corrected version.  Sorry about the mess up.

Pr Rich Futrell


Intro
Today, we are following Jesus.  We walk behind Him, and He makes His way to the 
Temple to celebrate a festival.  For us, it is spring; for Jesus, the season is 
now winter.  So, Jesus chooses to make His way to the Temple to celebrate a 
religious festival God never commanded for His people. 

Main Body
Why would Jesus do this, for He didn’t need to do so to fulfill the Law?  God 
never commanded this festival to be part of His people’s lives.  But Jesus 
still goes, doing all for our salvation.  He chooses to celebrate the Feast of 
Dedication, even going above and beyond what God’s Law commanded.   

So, we must learn of the Feast of Dedication, to understand what Jesus is 
doing.  We find ourselves going back to the 167 BC.  The Greek-speaking Syrian 
general, Antiochus IV, occupies Israel.  He doesn’t care about Israel’s culture 
and religion, wanting to turn all the Israelites into cultural Greeks.  

Antiochus turns the Jerusalem Temple into a shrine for the Greek god, Zeus.  He 
sacrifices a pig on the altar to show he is the boss.  And if you think it 
couldn’t get any worse, he even insists that others call him Antiochus 
Epiphanes, which means “Antiochus, God revealed.”

When this was going on, a Jewish resistance leader arose, named Judah 
Maccabeus. He lived when hatred toward foreign rule grew and festered within 
the people—but a time when internal divisions also grew and deepened among 
God’s people.

Two sides formed around their understanding of Scripture.  One group tried to 
hold God’s Law above all else.  They called themselves “the holy ones,” 
Chasidim.  To make sure they didn’t violate the Law, they started traditions, 
demanding a greater, visible holiness, beyond what even God expected in His 
ceremonial Law.  

Of course, the Chasidim were right in some areas.  They believed in life after 
death, in heaven and hell, in the body’s resurrection, and in angels and 
spirits.  The Chasidim supported Judah Maccabeus.  They became his army of 
resistance fighters.  

The descendants of the Chasidim became the Pharisees.  For them, the 
Septuagint, the Greek-language Old Testament, was Scripture, including our 
Old-Testament reading from 1 Maccabees, as it was also for Jesus and His 
disciples.

The other group went by the name Zaddikim, “the righteous ones.”  The Law of 
Moses was the center of their lives, but not much else.  They denied many 
teachings of the Chasidim.  They didn’t believe in eternal life, the 
resurrection, or angels and spirits.  For them, only the five books of Moses 
were Scripture.  

The Zaddikim become bitter foes of the Chasidim.  Later, they will become most 
of the judges and priests in Jesus’ day.  You might think they sound like the 
Sadducees; if so, you’re right.  For the they are the theological ancestors of 
the Sadducees.

At first, Judah Maccabeus wanted to rid himself of his opponents among the 
Israelites.  So, he focused his efforts against the Zaddikim.  He 
succeeded—perhaps, too much.  For the Zaddikim suffered many losses and sought 
outside help.  They asked Syria to come and save them.  So, Syria responded, 
giving more war than the people wanted!

Syrian forces rushed in, but they came in under-equipped to destroy Judah 
Maccabeus and his followers.  The Syrians underestimated the tactical skills of 
Judah and the fighting valor of his men.  By the battle’s end, Judah had 
captured and killed the governor of Syria.

A couple of more attacks against Judah took place, all orchestrated by 
Antiochus Epiphanes.  Each attack, however, from this General, who claimed to 
be God, failed.  Following each failure of Antiochus, the followers of Judah 
grew more in number and zeal.  Soon his army became a 10,000-strong force of 
hardened, disciplined troops.

Frustrated, Antiochus sent an army to conquer the Israelites for good.  He grew 
tired of that pestering, tiny nation and wanted the problem to go away.  So, he 
gathered an army of 60,000 soldiers and 5,000 horsemen.  With these, he began 
his land campaign against them from the south.

With a force of only 10,000 soldiers, Judah met the Syrian army.  With such 
superior numbers, Syria should have sneezed Israel into defeat.  But Judah and 
his army remained, undaunted.  They triumphed, and with the victory, Judah 
Maccabeus now controlled the land.  Israel again became an independent nation.

Judah and his army enter Jerusalem in jubilation.  They surround the garrison 
fortress called “The Citadel” to cleanse the Temple.  They find weeds and 
shrubs growing in the courtyards, the priests’ quarters in ruins, and the 
entire Temple area in disarray. 

After clearing the area, they rebuild the Altar of Burnt Offering, replace the 
sacred vessels from their war spoils, and consecrate priests.  They celebrate 
an eight-day feast of dedication, or re-consecration, on the 25th day of the 
ninth month of Chislev, in 164 BC.  

Well, back to Jesus.  We now find ourselves almost 200 years later in the 
Temple.  Jesus is celebrating the Feast of Dedication, remembering Judah’s 
impressive victory.  We recall with joy how the imposter who claimed to be 
God—Antiochus Epiphanes—was put in his place.  

We are reminded of the Holy of Holies being restored, consecrated, and set 
apart.  We rejoice, for God still brings His forgiveness to His people through 
His Old-Covenant sacrifices.  The Feast of Dedication is a joyous celebration, 
remembering the defeat of wrong, the overthrow of a tyrant, who claimed to be 
God.  It also recalls the victory of right, where God again pointed His people 
to where He gives them His forgiveness.

Within the backdrop of what the Feast of Dedication brought to mind, some Jews 
ask Jesus a question. “Are you the Messiah?”  His answer: “I did tell you, but 
you won’t believe.”  Jesus then moves to make His driving point: “The Father 
and I are one.”

Jesus calls God His “Father”!  Anger now burns in the belly of many a Jew, 
considering such words to be blasphemy.  To have God as Your Father means you 
are equal to God (John 5:18).  Earlier, their ears distressed over Jesus’ 
words: “Before Abraham was, I am.”  Itching hands then found their stones to 
injure Jesus (John 8:58-59).  Now, at the Feast of Dedication, Jesus doesn’t 
imply He’s divine.  He states it, so no one misunderstands Him: “The Father and 
I are one.” 

Anger erupts!  Jesus claims to God during of the Feast of Dedication.  Those 
who believe, understand what Jesus means—He is the Messiah!  Those who don’t, 
explode in anger.  “Here’s this man claiming to be God like the pagan ruler, 
Antiochus, did.  This Jesus should be dead, just like Antiochus!”  Soon, rocks 
find themselves in willing hands, ready to harm Jesus.

They knew Jesus called Himself God.  Picking up rocks in anger, they lashed 
out.  “We aren’t stoning you for a good work, but for blasphemy, because 
You—being a man—make Yourself God.”

So, there Jesus is, saying He is God.  How should they understand His words?  
In this way: Antiochus Epiphanes was nothing but a fraud, who claimed to be 
God—but I am before you, as God and Messiah.  That was what Jesus wanted them 
to learn and take in, for He IS the Messiah, the Savior of the world.

Most responded in unbelief, not from faith.  Most believed Jesus was a phony, 
just as they thought of Antiochus Epiphanes.  They missed the teaching moment 
of the Feast of Dedication, which Jesus used to point to His divinity.  We do, 
as well.  For we don’t realize what Jesus was doing because we don’t know the 
story of Judah Maccabeus, having lost those books of the Bible when we 
transitioned from German to English.  

But Jesus isn’t finished, for He still needs to teach the people.  He takes 
those accusations of blasphemy against Him and turns it back to them.  “Do you 
say [to Me], ‘You are blaspheming’ to the One whom the Father set apart and 
consecrated?”

The Feast of Dedication remembers the Holy of Holies being re-consecrated.  
There, in such a setting, Jesus says He is set apart by the Father.  Jesus uses 
the same language used for setting apart an altar and dedicating it as holy.  
He IS the prophesied fulfillment of the Temple’s Holy of Holies.  Do you 
understand the connection Jesus is making?

Yes, even the Temple points to Jesus.  He said as much earlier in St. John’s 
Gospel.  Referring to Himself, Jesus told them, “Destroy this Temple and I will 
raise it up in three days” (John 2:19).  Jesus uses the Feast of Dedication to 
show that He surpasses and fulfills the feast He came to celebrate.  Yes, even 
a feast that God never commanded, started during the time of the Apocrypha, 
pointed forward to Jesus.

By faith, all becomes clear.  God the Father consecrates Jesus to be THE 
sacrifice.  He fulfills what the Feast of Dedication foreshadowed.  Jesus even 
goes above and beyond for our salvation, celebrating something God never 
commanded and even fulfilling it for our salvation! 

The Feast of Dedication remembers the Temple altar, rebuilt and dedicated, set 
apart to bring God’s people His forgiveness.  But that forgiveness would soon 
come in THE Sacrifice by the One, whom God the Father set apart and consecrated 
for such a purpose—Jesus!

Unlike Antiochus IV, Jesus was and is God.  Like Judah Maccabeus, whom some 
thought to be the Messiah, Jesus will die for His people.  Jesus, the real 
Messiah, will die on the cross for His people’s freedom from sin.  He will die 
to give them, and us, new life.  Even more, He will rise from death, making it 
so.  

Conclusion
Today, God gives us something much greater to celebrate than Judah Maccabeus 
purifying God’s Old-Covenant Temple.  We have a Feast of Dedication lasting our 
entire lives, an unending celebration of the Messiah, who still cleanses us by 
His holy blood.  

So, come now to receive the purification our Lord gives to you this day—Jesus 
Himself in His body and blood.  Jesus sets a feast before you, which dedicates 
you, once more, to God the Father.  Amen.
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