Jesus's Path To The Cross: An 8-Day DevotionalSample
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Jesus Curses a Fig Tree
The fig tree is well suited to the kind of dry-farming horticulture used in the rocky soils of the eastern Mediterranean. The tree played such an important role in the regional economy that it was included in the list of species defining the “good land” into which God brought Israel (Deut. 8:7–8). Its large leaves provide welcome shade during the heat of summer (cf. John 1:48), and its fruit offers an exceptionally sweet taste to an otherwise relatively bland local diet. Like all orchard crops in the region, the fig tree is barren in the winter, puts out leaves in the spring, and produces a mature crop in late summer. What is unique about the fig tree, however, is that it produces two sets of figs each growing season. Early figs appear in early spring not long after the first leaves. They are small, hard, and not easily eaten. If a fig tree fails to bear early figs, either it is infertile or it will be unproductive later in the season, when the sweet, later figs normally appear. When, on the Monday before Passover, Jesus saw that a fig tree on the Mount of Olives had leaves but not early figs he cursed it (Matt. 21:18–19; Mark 11:12–14, 20–21). The tree’s appearance from a distance gave the promise of fruit, but its actual potential for fruitfulness was lacking.
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About this Plan
This 8-Day devotional pairs Scripture with study notes and images adapted from the ESV Archaeology Study Bible —all designed to help you enter into the story of Jesus’s final days and travel through Scripture on his path to the cross, learning more about the people and places he encountered along the way.
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