HAS ANYONE HEARD OF JESUS LATELY?
Could I tell you a story?
“Is it a true story?” you ask.
Oh very much so. In fact it is a story which reveals the
truth which shall decide the eternal destiny of every human being. Now you may
think that this story is archaic and little difficult to believe, but I assure
you this story has changed lives for thousands of years. This is actually much
more than a story although it is a story. But this story has the power to reach
out and capture a soul and make that soul part of this very story. It is the
miracle of all miracles. And it does not matter what men think or how they
alter this story, the true story will live on throughout eternity. Yes, it is
that transcendent.
But this glorious story begins in an ignominious and
humble way. Even though the story revealed some peeks and shadows for thousands
of years, and even though this story began before the first atom came into
existence, the story itself
actually began in a tangible way in a seemingly obscure town just west of the
Sea of Galilee. It was called Nazareth. Could
there be any more insignificant place for this miraculous story to begin? There
would be no worldwide fanfare and no streets lined with worshipers. This story
began with a very young virgin from the loins of Judah and the angel Gabriel.
Mary was a sinner like all of us, but God had chosen her
to be the servant through which He would birth this story. And although Mary
would play a most prominent role in this story, it would not be about her at
all. She was the handmaiden of the Lord and was blessed by God in a sacred and
astounding way, but it still would not be about her. In fact, after many years
in which God had let the story unfold without much revelation, we see Mary at a
wedding feast. And her words were not about herself, no, she opens her mouth
and says, “Whatever He says, do it.” In fact, those words describe Mary’s
ministry completely.
But back to Nazareth. The angel Gabriel informs Mary that
she will be pregnant through the miraculous visitation of God’s Spirit. See,
who can even comprehend such a thing? I mean how does that work? Mary was a virgin
and she reminded Gabriel of that fact. And yet this frightened and probably
confused girl bows before this diving messenger and says, “Behold the handmaid of the Lord; be
it unto me according to thy word.” Do not exalt Mary for she is a servant and not a lord in this story, but
do not ignore her breathtaking example of servanthood.
And in just nine months the main figure of this story
comes forth through Mary. It is not hyperbole to say that this baby is really
not the main figure in this story, but He IS the story. And God does not give
much detail about this birth except to say “And she brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped
him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger; because there was no room
for them in the inn.” Yes, the Holy Spirit delicately draws a sacred veil over
the human details of the event and moves forward with the real story.
This baby looked like any other baby
however many things about His birth had prophetic significance that presented
His birth as something very special. To be honest at this point only some
shepherds and Mary herself had any inkling that something was happening and
that some divine story had taken flight. But the Author of this story had four
thousand years of prophetic rehearsal and now He was gently but determinatively
revealing a story that would change all of eternity. This baby came forth upon
the prophetic foundation already laid by God’s own mouth. But even the prophets
who were used to foretell this story did not know the glorious particulars inherent
in this story. Even the angels only knew a part.
But God this story would move on for decades, and with the one exception of being in the Temple, the story
shifts to when this baby called Jesus is now a man, or more accurately, a God
man. You see, I told you that this story is unlike any other. God has come as a
man. Just that truth would be enough to boggle the mind, but there is more.
Much more. And this Jesus reveals Himself initially at that same marriage feast
where His mother bowed to His Word. Jesus performs His first miracle by turning
water into wine. Many today have claimed that they can do what Jesus has done
and they present some cured headache or backache as evidence. But we all await someone turning water into wine. But this will never be done because Jesus is
not part of our story; we are part of His. We are not called to showcase our
own spiritual prowess; we are called to continually point to Him and attempt to
replicate His story through our lips and lives.
Now Jesus performed many miracles in
three years, so much so that many of them had to be cut out of the final historical
script. But after many miracles and many miraculous teachings Jesus arrives in
Jerusalem on Passover week when He is in His early thirties. Now if you haven’t
been paying attention this is the time to open your eyes and ears. This week
will be like no other week and in reality the entire story has been told up until
now just to get to this part. Buckle your seat belts because there will be some
unsettling images, some unexplained hatred, and two scenes that defy human
understanding. And everything will not be enhanced by visual effects or enhanced
stage lighting or screen writer’s hyperbolic license. This will be raw and
visceral and challenging and true.
The entire world was imprisoned by
sin which is the direct disobedience and rebellion toward the Creator God. But
God had instituted some observances and sacrifices that would provide a
temporary covering for sin. Some could be sacrificed daily while one was to be
observed on one day in the year. This system had been observed generally for
almost three thousand years. But as Jesus entered Jerusalem all of that would
change. At the end of the week all of what had been practiced by the Jews
because of God’s Word through Moses would be abolished through a better and
eternal sacrifice. No one knew. No one even suspected. The earthly Passover lamb
would give way for the Lamb of God which takes away the sins of the world. To
the natural understanding this is about to get wonderfully strange.
Through a string of self serving
events based upon fear Jesus is arrested and brought to trial. After He was interrogated
by Pontius Pilate He was sent to be scourged, or in other words, tortured. Here
is where it gets an R rating for violence. He was beaten unmercilessly. They
lashed His back with a whip made with sharp pieces of stone or iron. Over and
over and over again they lashed His back until it appeared as bloody raw meat.
He was made to wear a crown of thorns pressed down upon His brow. It was
painful in the extreme. He was blindfolded and punched in the face while they
mocked Him. Covered in blood and swelling all over, His beard was plucked from
His face. His face began to swell which only added to the repulsive spectacle.
He stood there at the beginning stages of death. As they placed a robe upon Him
they continued to mock Him holding back nothing.
“Now wait a minute” you protest. “Wasn’t
this the Son of God?” Yes, it was. He was God in the flesh and the incarnate
Creator of all that was, and is, and is to come. “So why then”, you ask, “is He
being beaten and tortured and why is He allowing such a thing?”
Ok, now I have your attention. This
is the part of the story where you must rely on the Spirit’s cliff notes. You
might be persuaded that this is a story about a martyr and you would be wrong.
You might think that this is a story about how any good deed doesn’t go
unpunished and you would be wrong. You might believe this is a story about how
wrong things can go and you would be wrong. Let’s go a little further and see
how it all unfolds. Remember this is a story unlike any other story ever told
and there are profound implications that penetrate much deeper than some
principle or some moral to the story. In fact we have entered the part of the
story which can only be fully understood through the ministry of the Spirit who
told the story.
Those that have tortured Him make Him
carry His own cross to the place called Golgotha. A black man is enlisted to
help Him. The Romans nail His hands and feet to that Roman cross. Many men were
tied to these kinds of crosses since spikes were expensive and the Romans crucified tens of
thousands, but the Scriptures had foretold the wounds in His extremities so the
Romans used spikes although they were unaware of any prophetic fulfillment. God
has His ways. They lift Him upon that cross and with a thump they allow it to
find the hole in the earth which will stand it up. And there He hangs,
struggling to breathe and beaten beyond recognition. But His pain has only
begun.
And here is where we must push the
pause button and receive divine illumination. There have been literally tens of
thousands of crucifixions at the hands of the Romans, so why is this one any
different? This one is so unique and unlike any other that to use the word “different”
is doing it an injustice. The word “unique”, although appropriate, still falls
far short of awarding this event, this cross, with the hallowed and sacred
essence it deserves. This man, this God, this Jesus is dying an excruciating
death and with each struggling breath He draws closer and closer to His last.
But look again. He is not just suffering within His own body. His pain is not
just emanating from His own nerve endings. These sufferings belong to the whole
world, and here He is willingly receiving the unfathomable punishment meant for
us all in His own human frame. He does not deserve it but yet He has embraced
this suffering before the worlds were spoken into existence.
This is where the story leaves the
understanding of the three dimensional and wanders into a realm unknown to
anyone heretofore. This battered frame, already worn out and bloodied beyond
measure, is taking upon itself the sins of the world. And although the Passover
lamb under Moses stood as a one year reprieve, this Lamb is paying for the
entire portfolio of man’s sins from Adam to the last sin which will ever be
committed. Anyone who genuinely wishes to understand this mystery quickly
understands his own limitations of complete understanding. Yes, we can
understand the words but to understand the depth, the eternity, the sacrifice,
the sufferings, and the glory of this redemption is beyond the scope of
complete human comprehension. And when a sinner, redeemed by this sacrifice,
suddenly realizes he cannot comprehend the magnitude of this crimson event,
well it is exactly that realization which drapes us with God’s glory.
What a story! From the innocence of
the baby in Bethlehem’s manger to the open massacre of that same person disturbs
our sensibilities. I mean what kind of a story is being told here?? What once
was a wonderful story of celebration and humanitarian deeds and the performing
of the miraculous, has now take a turn of violence and the macabre. This story
has become very, very dark. But that is where you would be deeply in error.
This Creator, this God, this Savior has now revealed the core of the story! It
is this cross to which the story had always pointed even though we could only
interpret the story in a finite and even self serving way. This torture, these
wounds, this blood, this cross, this death has always been God’s story to us
regardless of how ignorant we wish to remain. And the word “story” is now
painfully insufficient as a description for what we have witnessed. A
narrative? A report? A novel? A chronicle? No, God Himself has given His own
story a word which he desires us to use. The word is “gospel”. Yes, this is the
gospel. Amidst all the suffering and blood and gore and sweat this is good news!
This is the everlasting gospel which is to be preached to every creature. But
there is one chapter which also must be included.
Jesus died. God died. Just accept it
since it is beyond us all. And add on top of it all that Jesus died for you and
me. Receive it and believe it as if it were the gospel truth for indeed it is.
But Jesus did not stay dead. Death could never relax with the final victory and present
a dead corpse indefinitely. After three days death was vanquished and life came
once again into that dead frame and Jesus resurrected from the dead. I said Jesus
resurrected from the dead!!!!! Oh please do not let it be said that we have
grown so accustomed to those words that they are now stale and contemptibly familiar.
Oh please child of God, please rekindle the fire within you and rejoice! Jesus
has risen from the dead!! Oh halleluiah forevermore! Death has been defeated
and the Lord of Glory has crushed the serpent’s head! This is not just a dusty
old doctrine we pull out of a drawer once a year at “Easter”. This is our joy
our salvation and our life! At the cross we found life through His death and at the
resurrection we die through His life.
This is the gospel of the Lord Jesus
Christ. Have you heard of Jesus lately? Among all the many “issues” which
consume us and all the temporal worries that so often imprison us…have you
heard about Jesus lately? Well if you haven’t then take hold of your heart and
mind and walk once again into His story and wade into the waters of the gospel
until they wash you once again. You see, the gospel has been stretched across
the expanse of time altogether
I Pet.1: 24 For all
flesh is as grass, and all the glory of man as the flower of grass. The grass
withereth, and the flower thereof falleth away:
25 But the word of the
Lord endureth for ever. And this is the word which by the gospel is preached
unto you.
Amen and amen.
7 comments:
Bravo Brother! Great job! Keep up the good work for the glory of God! Lead the lost Brother!
it took me all day to finish reading this post because I could not stand the pain and even now between the sobs I am not rejoicing, but broken and convicted, and sad and amazed. It is beyond comprehension and I feel like I have to do something to say thank you or make it up to Him somehow and at the same time my heart breaks for those, including my own children who can reject what Jesus did for them, for me, for all.
Broken, so very broken. I have to stop writing. Sorry
Cherie c.
Brother Rick,
I have a question about your comment "God died". Why would you say that since God is life and cannot die? I personally wondered why you said that and my wife said she had a problem with the comment. I know that you are a brother in Christ and I just wanted to here what you were thinking on that statement. I would appreciate your response. Have a blessed day!
Brother Rick,
Thank you for the post. It is needed to wake us up once in awhile. I did have one comment/question on why you would say, "God died"? When I and my wife read this, I got an uncomfortable feeling in my spirit. I don't feel like you ment it in the vein of "Jesus died Spiritually" like the Copeland's believe, but it did not sit well with us. Could you explain what you were meaning when you wrote that statement?
Thank you and God Bless!
brother Bill
Bill - Thank you for your comments. Perhaps my phrase was a little hyperbolic however in the strctest sense it was true, however God still lived while God died. A mystery. Of course I reject anything Copeland and the like would teach.
For Bill and Rick: German theologian Jurgen Moltmann published a book in 1974titled "The Crucified God." Heavy reading, but Moltmann is confronting the theological climate of the post-war years, humanism, and You may try to find the jacket description on Amazon or somewhere--good stuff. "Moltmann unveils a naked cross, unrespectable, even "irreligious," shorn of the roses of religious tradition..."
Victoria
Let's praise the Holy One who laid down His life for us, that we can rejoice in God's gracious loving gift of access to His holy presence. Notice that to the words of Psalm 31:5, ‘into your hands I commit my spirit’, Jesus adds the word, Father. Right to the very end Our precious Lord Jesus is still trusting His heavenly Father. And right at the very end Jesus knows that His spirit is safe in the hands of Father God.
Yes, after many hours of crucifixion agony, Jesus takes hold of the words of Psalm 31:5 and says, “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit.” What a triumphant Savior, King and Lord!
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