Showing posts with label Meditation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meditation. Show all posts
Friday, March 29, 2013
Last supper
I was going to begin writing a series of posts regarding why we need Comprehensive Immigration Reform, but being as it is the beginning of the Resurrection weekend, and because this fits in with what I will say in the future, I thought I would jot down a few thoughts that God has impressed upon me today and get to the other topic later on.
At the end of the gospels, we see Jesus eating his last supper with his disciples. During this supper, he institutes the bread and wine. A perfect picture foretelling his own sacrifice on behalf of all unworthy sinners. His death was the ultimate act of selflessness... dying on behalf of someone else. Some of us would possibly die for the sake of a close family member, or a spouse, but how many of us would die for our enemies? And just before Jesus breaks the bread and pours out the wine, he demonstrates another very tangible way of being selfless... of being a servant - by washing the disciples feet. Jesus did for others what they should have been doing for him. Two pictures of humility, service, love, and grace.
And yet, I often skim right over these two pictures and end up right where the disciples were a few minutes later - thinking and arguing about "who would be the greatest". They totally missed the point, and I often miss the point too. In fact, often my heart is so deceitful, I can serve someone and, upon reflection, find that my motive was to make me "the greatest"... just like the disciples were arguing about. Jesus didn't concern himself with being the greatest. He simply knew that he was the Son of the Greatest in the Kingdom, and that was enough. That should be enough for me.
Then Jesus says, "A new command I give to you, that you love one another: just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another." What does this love look like? Just like Jesus' love - a love so great, that he died for his enemies. A love so great that he suffered in the place of those who rejected (and continue to reject) him. A love so great that he served the very ones that he created to serve himself. When I think about this - I have to admit that I have so far to go. My love is childish, selfish, and pitiful. This world is dying to experience a love like this, and they are looking for it in all the wrong places. Jesus said, "By this all people will know that you are MY disciples, IF you have love for one another." The only way that the world is going to see Jesus, is if we demonstrate his love... by dying for our enemies, by suffering for those who rejected us, and by serving the ones who should be serving us.
Friday, February 08, 2013
Flee To God
What is the Christian response?? I read a doomsday article the other day, written by a Christian. The longer I read, the more my heart raced, and the more I became fearful. In the end of reading the article, I began to panic and think, “I need to take care of myself and my family. I need to move out of the city and into the country. I need to purchase tons of guns and ammunition. I need to buy gold and silver. I need to be self-sustaining. I, I, I.” After awhile, I settled down and pondered the Scriptures. This is what struck me: first of all, I should not live in fear, and I should not make decisions out of fear - that is not a Christian's response. Secondly, aside from the fear, there was really nothing sinful with those thoughts… they were wise/prepratory thoughts. But I would argue that this train of thought originates in this worldly kingdom and not of the Kingdom of God. These thoughts, taken to the extreme, take God and his great commission out of the picture. God did not say, “If you have a prospering economy, freedom of speech, and the right to bear arms, then go and make disciples of all nations.” No, he says, “Go (in whatever context you find yourself in – freedom, communism, socialism, dictatorship, Muslim, prison) and make disciples of all nations.” For me, as I read the Bible, God always sends his people to where the lost people are in order to see a harvest. God never tells us as Christians to flee, hide, or disassociate from the masses. In fact, his own incarnation is an example of what we as true Christians are to do: we are to boldly go where the lost are, we are to dwell among them, and we are to demonstrate through words and actions what is the Way, the Truth, and the Life.
Another example is Jeremiah; he was sent by the Lord to Jerusalem… a city which was about to go into siege, battle, famine, and complete economic and physical destruction.. talk about doomsday. I am sure wisdom would have told him to flee. But as he obeys God, the Lord says to him, “Behold, I make you this day a fortified city, an iron pillar, and bronze walls against the whole land, against the kings of Judah, its officials, its priests, and the people of the land. They will fight against you, but they shall not prevail against you, for I am with you, declares the Lord, to deliver you.” Wow, what words of commission; powerful words, empowering words, bold words, specific words just for him! And yet… isn’t this what the Lord Jesus said to us before he ascended into heaven? After he has told his disciples just what kind of world he was sending them into and that people would hate, mock, reject, and kill them for his sake, he says to them, “Go…” Go into the unsafe contexts, go to where the people are; go to the sinners, the lost, the forgotten, the marginalized, the victimized, and the victimizers, go to where your enemies are, go to where the poverty is, go where there is trouble, go to the sick, the diseased, the dying, go to the sinners and drunkards, go to the refugees, the orphans, the hungry. “Go and make disciples of all nations… teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.” As citizens of his Kingdom, God has placed a call upon all of us in all times… and it should compel us to do the opposite of what the world would do… to go to and dwell in the city, to immerse into the culture, to cultivate the tough issues; to be all things to all people so as to win some. We are as medics; we are to boldly run into danger to care for those that need salvation while at the same time everyone else is fleeing the battle. If we flee and protect ourselves, then what chance do the lost have? We are to give and receive nothing in return. We are to love when hated. We are to bless when cursed.
The kingdoms of this world are founded on security, physical prosperity, and pleasure, and the wisdom of this world is based on fear of the future. Jesus’ Kingdom is founded on the intangibles of trust, love, mercy, and joy, and its wisdom is based on hope in a secure future. Joy is far different from pleasure. Love and mercy are not prosperity. And trust is not our insurance-based security. Let us flee to God! He is our King, our Savior, our Provider, our Protector, our Ruler, our Healer, and our Confidence! And in fleeing to him, we may find ourselves in the most hostile environment on the planet.
Another example is Jeremiah; he was sent by the Lord to Jerusalem… a city which was about to go into siege, battle, famine, and complete economic and physical destruction.. talk about doomsday. I am sure wisdom would have told him to flee. But as he obeys God, the Lord says to him, “Behold, I make you this day a fortified city, an iron pillar, and bronze walls against the whole land, against the kings of Judah, its officials, its priests, and the people of the land. They will fight against you, but they shall not prevail against you, for I am with you, declares the Lord, to deliver you.” Wow, what words of commission; powerful words, empowering words, bold words, specific words just for him! And yet… isn’t this what the Lord Jesus said to us before he ascended into heaven? After he has told his disciples just what kind of world he was sending them into and that people would hate, mock, reject, and kill them for his sake, he says to them, “Go…” Go into the unsafe contexts, go to where the people are; go to the sinners, the lost, the forgotten, the marginalized, the victimized, and the victimizers, go to where your enemies are, go to where the poverty is, go where there is trouble, go to the sick, the diseased, the dying, go to the sinners and drunkards, go to the refugees, the orphans, the hungry. “Go and make disciples of all nations… teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.” As citizens of his Kingdom, God has placed a call upon all of us in all times… and it should compel us to do the opposite of what the world would do… to go to and dwell in the city, to immerse into the culture, to cultivate the tough issues; to be all things to all people so as to win some. We are as medics; we are to boldly run into danger to care for those that need salvation while at the same time everyone else is fleeing the battle. If we flee and protect ourselves, then what chance do the lost have? We are to give and receive nothing in return. We are to love when hated. We are to bless when cursed.
The kingdoms of this world are founded on security, physical prosperity, and pleasure, and the wisdom of this world is based on fear of the future. Jesus’ Kingdom is founded on the intangibles of trust, love, mercy, and joy, and its wisdom is based on hope in a secure future. Joy is far different from pleasure. Love and mercy are not prosperity. And trust is not our insurance-based security. Let us flee to God! He is our King, our Savior, our Provider, our Protector, our Ruler, our Healer, and our Confidence! And in fleeing to him, we may find ourselves in the most hostile environment on the planet.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)