1. Returning to Jerusalem and teaching in the Temple
Jesus and the disciples come back into the city from Bethany. This is the day the disciples notice the withered fig tree (Mark 11:20–21), which becomes a lesson on faith and judgment.
2. A series of confrontations with religious leaders
Tuesday is the day when:
- The chief priests, scribes, and elders challenge His authority.
- The Pharisees try to trap Him with questions about paying taxes to Caesar.
- The Sadducees challenge Him with a question about resurrection.
- A scribe asks about the greatest commandment.
3. Teaching through parables of judgment
Jesus tells several parables aimed directly at Israel’s leadership:
- The Two Sons
- The Wicked Tenants
- The Wedding Banquet
4. The denunciation of the scribes and Pharisees
Matthew 23 records Jesus’s “woes”—a blistering critique of hypocrisy, spiritual blindness, and religious showmanship. This is one of the most dramatic public confrontations of His ministry.
5. The Olivet Discourse
Leaving the temple, Jesus goes with His disciples to the Mount of Olives and delivers His longest prophetic teaching:
- The destruction of the temple
- Signs of the end
- The coming of the Son of Man
- Parables about readiness (Ten Virgins, Talents)
- The final judgment (Sheep and Goats)
6. The plot to arrest Jesus intensifies
While Jesus teaches, the chief priests and elders meet to plan His arrest “by stealth” (Matthew 26:3–5). Judas’s arrangement with them likely occurs late Tuesday or early Wednesday.
Why Tuesday Matters
Tuesday is the last day Jesus teaches publicly. It’s the day:
- His identity is unmistakably declared.
- His opponents are fully exposed.
- His prophetic mission is laid out in detail.
- The countdown to the cross accelerates.
3 comments:
I think one of the things we lost in the Reformation is an emphasis on holy times like these. Putting Holy Week into perspective.
It was good for me today to reflect on the happenings of another, long-ago Tuesday and to consider their part in the timeline within Jesus’ final week on earth--this “countdown to the cross,” as you say. Without the Gospel narratives, we would miss all the benefits of “being there,” as it were, and knowing of all the events that led up to Resurrection Morn--with each exchange, discourse, lesson, etc., executed with purpose and intention by our Savior. Because the events of that week were recorded for all posterity, we can share in the blessings of new life that Jesus offered.
As a Protestant by conscientious choice and leading, I praise God for full and Spirit-assisted access to the Gospel narratives of Christ’s last week on earth. Only now is “Holy Week” in true and proper focus for me.
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