Holy Week 2018 | Good Friday: It’s Friday

The only reason we can call it “good” is because something good happened for us.

Good Friday. The only reason we can call it “Good” Friday is because something good happened for us. It was not a good Friday for Jesus.

But, Jesus accepted the darkness that was to fall upon him so that we might have a chance to experience the radiant light of God’s glory. I am thankful for Jesus’s obedience.

I hope that you consider that Jesus had to pass through this dark night for us.

As we contemplate the coming of Sunday remember… remember that the path to resurrection went right through the doorway of a tomb.

Holy Week 2018 | Maundy Thursday: The Lord’s Supper

Over the years I have grown to love and cherish coming to the Lord’s Table. It is a wonderful time because it allows all who have believed in Jesus to remember and be reminded of the Gospel.

On the Christian calendar, also called the liturgical calendar, the Thursday before Easter is called Maundy Thursday. It is the day where we remember the final meal that Jesus had with his disciples. Just before Jesus was arrested and sentenced to crucifixion, he had one last supper with the men he had called. And during this meal, he imparted some final thoughts about what his life, ministry, and ultimate sacrifice would mean for them. The disciples did not fully understand it all, but they remembered, which Jesus asked them to do.

Over the years I have grown to love and cherish coming to the Lord’s Table. It is a wonderful time because it allows all who have believed in Jesus to remember and be reminded of the Gospel. The simple ritual we participate in does not have to be robbed of meaning just because it is done regularly. This revelation has impacted my perspective of Communion.

Experience has taught me that the reason certain events or activities lose the impact they once had is because we forget the reason it is important. I think the Lord’s Supper has suffered such a fate in many churches. We treat it as something that we MUST do rather than something we are ALLOW to do. Not all get to eat at the table. There are some who have rejected the grace God reveals through the re-enactment of what Jesus did.

This is the secret we must bring back into the open in our churches. When we gather at the Lord’s Table we are there by invitation and not by right. We do not deserve a seat. We have been given one. We are not owed the grace the elements of bread and wine convey, they are precious gifts that we must receive.

I remember the first time I participated in a Communion service where the method of intinction was used. This is the practice where there is one loaf of bread and one cup of wine/juice. Each person comes up and is given a peace from the common loaf and then the bread is dipped into the cup. If you have never done communion this way it can be odd at first. But, after having participated in hundreds of services with this method I prefer it now. The imagery of one body being shared by the church has become both powerful and unifying.

What really sold this practice to me was the realization that came after one of my pastor’s shared how to properly receive the bread. He said something like this:

“In the same way that we receive God’s grace through faith, we receive the bread from the one who serves it to us. And we received with our hands together in front of us. We do not reach out to snatch it out of their hands. It is given.”

That idea, of enacting the process of Grace being given rocked my understanding of what God was doing in my life. It’s like I finally understood what it meant to receive and accept God’s grace.

I am not asking you to agree with me. I am merely sharing with you what I have learned about this beautiful rite we have been given by Jesus. One that I believe we should do as often as we are able.

Holy Week 2018 | Wednesday of Holy Week: The Gospel

The Gospel is the most wonderful message every conceived. It exposes the human problem and at the same time reveals the divine solution. There is no more wonderful message.

The Gospel is the most wonderful message every conceived. It exposes the human problem and at the same time reveals the divine solution. There is no more wonderful message.

There have been many things I have learned on my journey with Jesus. But, in all my learn I have not learned enough. With each day I am astounded by how beautiful God’s grace is. It is glorious and awe-inspiring.

I really don’t have the words to do justice here. I will not try. What I will say is that the more I look at this divine reality I become more convinced of its power and purpose. And that is really what I want to say.

If people who do not yet know the Gospel; have not yet believed the Gospel; have yet to feel the effects of the Gospel, would just give it a fair chance, I believe they would be surprised at its effects. We come to Jesus with too many demands and even more prejudgments. We come to Jesus and we demand out of selfish impulses rather than receive what he offers. It’s quite a remarkable state of affairs.

What many do not understand is that the resurrection that Christians celebrate on Easter morning is the climactic moment in the divine drama. A drama being played out in the history of the world. The Gospel did not begin on resurrection morning. And it did not begin when Jesus entered into the human experience. It began long before.

What I mean is that the Gospel began at creation. The Gospel marches through the story of the nation of Israel and King David’s regal lineage. The Gospel is present in on every page penned by every prophet ending with John the Baptist. And it passes through events surrounding Jesus crucifixion, touching every person who has ever believed in the name of above every name. The Gospel is still alive because it is alive in me and in you if you believe.

As we reach the middle of Holy Week I would encourage you to consider your role in this Gospel drama. What role have you played? What role are you playing? And possibly most important, what role do you desire to play in the time you have left on this earth? Do not take it for granted. Seize the moment God has given to you, to each of us, to be Gospel people to a world that desperately needs some Good News!

Holy Week 2018 | Tuesday of Holy Week: Glory

There is coming a day, when we will not be as we are right now.

As I have gotten older, one of the characteristics of God’s nature has become more interesting. I say it this way because when I think about this attribute, I know that I don’t have anything I can compare it to. That is, I have never experienced it and I won’t until I stand before him. That characteristic is “Glory.”

In the Old Testament, the glory of God was described as hovering over the tabernacle that Moses built. It was evidence of God presence. It was proof to the Hebrews and the surrounding nations that God was with this people. It has been described as light, power, radiance, heat, and fire. It may be all of those things or none at all. The craziest thing about this glory is that no person has ever experienced in its fullness.

Moses asked God to show his glory. But God knew that this would be the end of Moses. So he offered this instead, God put Moses in a small opening in the side of a mountain, covered it with his hand to protect Moses and then allowed Moses to look at his “back” when he passed. I’m going to tell you right now, that doesn’t make any sense. What did Moses see? Better still, what did God show him?!

The apostle John says something interesting in his first letter. It’s in chapter 3.

Beloved, we are God’s children now, and what we will be has not yet appeared; but we know that when he appears we shall be like him, because we shall see him as he is. (1 John 3:2)

What I love about this passage is that it appears to confirm what God told Moses. A regular, un-transformed human being cannot look at God’s glory because it would destroy them. But, there is coming a day, when we will not be as we are right now. Where we will be changed and resemble Jesus in his resurrected form. And, on that day, when that transformation has taken place we will be able to “see him as he is.” I don’t know about you, but I look forward to that day. I hope you do too!

Holy Week 2018 | Monday of Holy Week: Salvation

God, as a manifestation of who he is, sought a way to save that which deserved damnation.

God’s glorious grace is seen in the Cross of Calvary. On that instrument of suffering and death, the Son of God purchased the salvation of all who would believe. In a moment of pure love, the blood of Christ dripped and redeemed that which was thought lost for all time.

The remarkable mystery of salvation is that any of us is saved at all. God was not obligated to save. But he was compelled to do it. There is a difference. And obligation is imposed upon us by an outside force. But that is not what God did. God is good. He is gracious. He is loving. In all that he does, he is just. What this means is that God, as a manifestation of who he is, sought a way to save that which deserved damnation. That is a paradox. These two seemingly contradictory realities find their resolution in Jesus.

As we look forward to Resurrection Sunday, I am stunned yet again at the wonderful grace of God. God is so much better than we could ever fathom. He is more glorious than we could ever describe. He is kinder than we could ever deserve. But, I am so thankful that he is who he is in spite of who I am.

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