When Jesus asks his own disciples, “Are you so dull? Don’t you understand?” in Mark 7:1–23, he is not scolding them for bad manners—he is exposing a much deeper confusion about what makes a person clean before God. In this episode, we step into Jesus’ confrontation with the Pharisees over handwashing, tradition, and ritual purity, and discover that the real issue is not dirty hands but divided hearts.
In this week’s episode, we explore:
- How Jewish traditions of ceremonial washing developed as a “fence” around the law, meant to protect holiness but often used to measure spiritual worth
- Why Jesus quotes Isaiah to call the religious elite “hypocrites” whose lips honor God while their hearts are far from him
- The example of “Corban” as a religious loophole that lets people talk piously about God while neglecting the basic command to honor father and mother
- What Jesus means when he declares that nothing outside a person can make them unclean—and how this overturns centuries of purity rules, even food laws
- How Mark’s aside, “In saying this, Jesus declared all foods clean,” signals the arrival of a new covenant focused on the heart rather than external boundary markers
- The sobering list of what actually defiles us: evil thoughts, sexual immorality, greed, envy, arrogance, and more—things that flow from within, not from our surroundings
- Why being “good at religion” can be spiritually dangerous when it becomes a way to avoid love, dodge repentance, or judge others by human standards
- Modern versions of “traditions of the elders”—from political alignment and worship style to parenting choices and spiritual practices—that we quietly use to rank one another
- How Jesus’ hard words about the heart are actually an invitation to come to him as the only One who can cleanse, renew, and reorient us from the inside out
After listening, you’ll have a clearer grasp of why Jesus is so fierce toward empty religion and so tender toward those who know they are unclean. You’ll be encouraged to examine the subtle rules and expectations that shape your sense of worth, to shift your hope from outward performance to inward transformation, and to bring your real heart—with all its mixed motives and hidden sins—to the Savior who came not to polish our image, but to make us truly clean.
Series: Questions Jesus Asked
Start Strong: A New Believer’s Guide to Christianity is available now wherever books are sold.
Support the show