Her character: Though extremely poor, she is one of the most greathearted
people in the Bible. Just after warning his disciples to watch out for the
teachers of the law, who devour widows' houses, Jesus caught sight of her in
the temple. He may have called attention to her as a case in point.
Her sorrow: To be alone, without a husband to provide for her.
Her joy: To surrender herself to God completely, trusting him to act on her behalf.
Key Scriptures: Mark 12:41-44; Luke 21:1-4
Her sorrow: To be alone, without a husband to provide for her.
Her joy: To surrender herself to God completely, trusting him to act on her behalf.
Key Scriptures: Mark 12:41-44; Luke 21:1-4
Her
Story
With Passover approaching, the
temple was packed with worshipers from all over Israel. The previous Sunday,
Jesus had created a sensation as he rode down the Mount of Olives and into
Jerusalem, mounted on a donkey. A large crowd had gathered, carpeting the road
with palm branches and shouting: "Hosanna to the Son of David! Blessed is
he who comes in the name of the Lord! Hosanna in the highest."
Some of the Pharisees, scandalized
that Jesus was being hailed as Messiah, demanded, "Teacher, rebuke your
disciples!"
"I tell you," he replied,
"if they keep quiet, the stones will cry out."
Stung by his words, the teachers of
the law began to plot how they could break the law by murdering him at their
first opportunity..
Days later, after warning his
disciples to watch out for the teachers of the law who preyed on widows for
their money, Jesus sat opposite the temple treasury, in the Court of the Women.
The place was crowded with people dropping their offerings in one of the
thirteen trumpet-shaped receptacles that hung on the walls. But Jesus had eyes
for only one of them. He watched as a widow deposited two small copper coins,
less than a day's wages.
Quickly, he called to his disciples,
"I tell you the truth, this poor widow has put more into the treasury than
all the others. They all gave out of their wealth; but she, out of her poverty,
put in everything—all she had to live on."
No one else would have noticed the
woman. But Jesus, with eyes that
penetrated both her circumstances
and her heart, recognized the astonishing nature of her gift. Her gesture was a
sign of complete abandonment to God.
Without faith, she wouldn't have
offered her last penny, believing God would care for her better than she could
care for herself. But there is yet another, more subtle aspect to Her Story.
How easy it would have been for her to conclude that her gift was simply too
meager to offer. What need had God for two copper coins anyway? Surely they
meant more to her than they would to him. Somehow she must have had the grace
to believe in the value of her small offering.
Maybe God, in a manner of speaking,
did need what she had to offer. Perhaps her gesture consoled Jesus a short time
before his passion and death. She had given everything she had to live on;
soon, he would give his life.
The story of the widow and her two
copper coins reminds us that God's kingdom works on entirely different
principles than the kingdom of this world. In the divine economy, the size of
the gift is of no consequence; what matters is the size of the giver's heart.
Her
Promise
God's promise of provision is
nowhere more evident than in this story of the widow who gave all she had. She
had no one else to rely on—only God. That's true of us as well, isn't it?
Regardless of our financial situation, whether we are financially well off or
constantly skimming the bottom, we have no one else to rely on. Our true
security is not in our belongings or our bank accounts, but in God alone. And
he has promised to provide.
Today's devotional is drawn from Women of the Bible: A One-Year Devotional Study of Women in
Scripture by Ann Spangler and
Jean Syswerda. Visit AnnSpangler.com to learn more about Ann's writing and ministry.
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