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Contradictions On
The Anointings Of Jesus
How Many Times Was Jesus Anointed?
by Troy Lacey
When we hear of alleged Bible contradictions, and then
carefully examine the passages in question, we find that they are not really
contradictions at all.
One such supposed contradiction is that the Gospel
accounts seem to indicate that Jesus was anointed before and after the
Triumphal Entry.
If the Gospels are recording a single event, then this
would indeed be problematic, but that is not the case.
In this article, we’ll examine the four accounts in
Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John and demonstrate that there was not a single
anointing of Jesus for his burial, but two or even three separate occasions of
a woman anointing Jesus, and the first one was not done as a memorial for his
burial.
The First Anointing
CHRONOLOGICALLY THE FIRST ANOINTING OF JESUS OCCURS IN LUKE 7:36–50.
Chronologically
the first anointing of Jesus occurs in Luke 7:36–50.1 This
account is different from the somewhat similar passages in Matthew, Mark, and
John.
Let’s review the facts as recorded in this passage:
·
This event occurred in the house of Simon the Pharisee who
lived somewhere in Galilee, probably Capernaum, Nain, or Cana.
From
the context, Capernaum appears most likely as Jesus had just healed the widow’s
son in Nain (Luke 7:11–16).
Then,
apparently shortly thereafter, John the Baptist’s disciples came to him (Luke 7:19–23, cf. Matthew 11:1–6), and afterward,
Jesus gave a brief discourse about John the Baptist (Luke 7:24–35, cf. Matthew 11:7–19).
And
in the Matthew account, he specifically upbraided Capernaum last (Matthew 11:23–30)
and it seems that at this time Simon the Pharisee invited Jesus and his
disciples to come for dinner.
·
John the Baptist was still alive, so this event apparently
occurred at least two years before the Crucifixion.
John’s
death is recorded in Matthew 14:10, Mark 6:27, Luke 9:9 sometime during
the first of the presumed three-year ministry of Jesus.
The
Bible does not tell us precisely how long the Lord’s earthly ministry lasted.
The
popular view of three years is based on the number of Passovers described in
John’s Gospel, but his ministry could have been shorter or longer than three
years.
·
The woman is noted as a sinner, possibly a euphemism for a
prostitute, and is also unnamed.
·
She apparently approached Jesus from behind, knelt down,
broke open the flask, and began crying. She wiped his feet with her hair, cried
while doing so, and then anointed Christ’s feet with the fragrant oil (no
mention is made of anointing his head).
·
None of the disciples objected at the cost of the ointment
at this anointing, but Simon the Pharisee was upset that Jesus would allow a
notorious sinner to touch him.
·
Jesus talked about and directly to this woman and forgave
her sins.
The Second Anointing—Just Before the
Triumphal Entry
The
next account chronologically is the one in John 12:1–8. It is quite
different from Luke’s account and very similar to Matthew’s and Mark’s in many
respects, but also different in some details.
Let's review the details as recorded in this passage:
·
This event apparently occurred in the house of Lazarus,
Mary, and Martha in Bethany.
·
It happened six days before the Passover (and a few days
before the Triumphal Entry) and fits well with the timeline of the Matthew and
Mark account which apparently occurred four days later in the same city.
·
The woman who anointed Jesus’ feet was Mary, the sister of
Lazarus and Martha.
·
Mary anointed and then wiped Jesus’ feet with her hair,
but there is no mention of her crying, either before or during the time she is
anointing Jesus’ feet with the spikenard oil.
·
It seems that only Judas was upset at Mary for this
perceived waste of money, and only because, secretly, he was a thief.
·
Apparently out of respect for Mary (and Martha and
Lazarus, whom they all knew) the other disciples did not dare speak up and
rebuke Mary, yet they did so four days later to an unknown woman.
It
may be that Judas grumbled about this “extravagance” for days and “poisoned”
the disciples’ perceptions, so that four days after the anointing, they began
to reason that it was wasteful, and verbally complained.
The Third Anointing — After the
Triumphal Entry and Just Before the Crucifixion
Both
the Matthew 26:6–13 and Mark 14:3–9 accounts are
the same and record the last anointing of Jesus chronologically.
Let's review the facts as recorded in these two passages:
THIS ANOINTING OCCURRED AFTER THE TRIUMPHAL ENTRY AND TWO DAYS
BEFORE THE PASSOVER, JUST BEFORE CHRIST WAS CRUCIFIED.
·
This event occurred in the house of Simon the Leper in
Bethany. Some have tried to reconcile the Matthew and Mark accounts with the
Luke account due to the host’s name being Simon.
But
a leper, or even a cleansed leper, would not have been accepted as a Pharisee,
so this is clearly a different Simon than the one in Luke’s account. Plus the
dates and cities are different, as mentioned above.
·
This is the only account where Jesus’ head (and not his
feet) was anointed. An unnamed woman broke an alabaster box of fragrant oil (in
some versions called “ointment”) and poured it on Jesus’ head. Mark identifies
it as spikenard.
·
It appears that the woman approached Jesus from the front
before she broke the box open.
·
Jesus talked about her but apparently does not speak directly
to her. He mentions that her act will be told as a memorial wherever the gospel
is preached.
For
those who have tried to reconcile this account to be the same as the one
recorded in John, it is highly unlikely that Jesus would not mention her name
or talk directly to her if this were Mary, the sister of Lazarus.
And
again, the circumstances here are different, the woman here anointed Jesus’
head, not his feet, and did not use her hair to do so.
·
Some of the disciples are upset over the cost of this, and
more than one vocally objected. Jesus had to rebuke them for their attitudes.
·
This anointing occurred after the Triumphal Entry and two
days before the Passover, just before Christ was crucified.
Another Possible Solution
Due
to the many similarities in the accounts by Matthew, Mark, and John, many
researchers prefer a different solution than the one proposed above.
They believe these three Gospels tell of the same event.
Consider the following similarities:
·
The ointment was apparently worth the same amount (300
denarii) in the accounts and some people in the room object to the act.
·
Matthew and Mark speak of the disciples being indignant
while John specifies that Judas voiced his objection.
·
The Lord’s response to the disciples and Judas is
practically the same in each account, although His response in John is shorter.
He tells them that they will always have the poor with them and to leave her
alone because her act is related to his burial.
According
to this potential harmonization, John correctly states that this event took
place in Bethany six days before the Passover.
Matthew and Mark do not specifically state when the event
took place.
In these two Gospels, it follows a discussion of the
plotting of the Jewish leaders to arrest and execute Jesus, a discussion that
was said to take place two days before the Passover.
According to this proposed solution, Matthew and Mark
parenthetically refer to the account of the anointing four days earlier before
resuming the narrative of Christ’s betrayal by Judas in Matthew 26:14 and Mark 14:10.
Gospel
writers were under no obligation to present details chronologically (except for
those areas where they reveal they are doing this), so this part of the
scenario is plausible.
However, this raises other difficulties. For example,
Matthew and Mark clearly state that this act took place in the house of Simon
the Leper, while John mentions that Martha took part in serving the meal, which
seems to imply that it took place at the home she shared with Mary and Lazarus.
Yet, it is possible that Simon the Leper invited Jesus and
his followers over for a meal and Martha assisted with serving the meal at his
place.
Also, this view would require that the Lord’s head and
feet were anointed during this time since Matthew and Mark speak of his head
being anointed while John focuses on the Lord’s feet being anointed.
Different Circumstances, Different
Dates, and Different Accounts
The
anointing in Luke is almost certainly a different event than the anointing(s) described
in Matthew, Mark, and John.
At least two plausible solutions to the alleged
contradiction have been detailed above. I think the first option makes better
sense, but either option shows that the passages do not contradict each other.
THE DETAILS OF ALL THREE ACCOUNTS DIFFER SIGNIFICANTLY, AND NOT
BECAUSE OF ANY CONTRADICTION, BUT BECAUSE THERE WERE LIKELY THREE DIFFERENT
ANOINTINGS OF JESUS.
If
the first option is correct, then Jesus was anointed twice before the Triumphal
Entry into Jerusalem and once afterward.
The three anointings took place in three different houses,
in two different cities, and the first event was probably about two years
before the last two events (which were four days apart).
The details of all three accounts differ significantly,
and not because of any contradiction, but because there were likely three
different anointings of Jesus.
Twice his feet were anointed, and at the last anointing,
his head was covered in fragrant oil of spikenard.
During
the last two anointings, Jesus mentioned that they were done for his burial,
but there is no such statement by Jesus in the Luke account.
Rather it seems that the anointing was done by the woman
as a love and thanksgiving offering, and Jesus forgave her sins.
Once again, the apparent contradictions melt away when the
passage or passages are studied in more detail, and in context.
In this case, the “contradiction” arises because the
anointing passages are conflated or forced into a single account when they
don’t belong together.
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