What is readiness? I found myself at home tonight watching hope for haiti now with my wife and seeing kid after kid on my t.v and then hearing that even before the earthquake, orphanages in Haiti turned away 80 kids a month.... or 2.3 a day for those who don't like math.... devestating numbers.... I sat there and thought out loud, "we should adopt a kid from Haiti." Our collective response was to say we weren't ready.
The point of this post is not to debate whether or not I'm getting a child... It's readiness. What is it? Is it a choice? A state of being? A moment where everything clicks and feels right? Or is that just what I want it to be? Where has the life of faith gone? Where has dependency on Christ gone? Where has the willingness to trust that God will provide for His little ones gone? Why are there so many questions in a row that I don't have the answers to? Instead I sit here, pondering, hoping that somewhere in the middle of these troubling questions I find justification for the way things are.
When I say I'm ready, it often looks like I've worked out in my brain all the available scenarios for a given choice that I will make and they work out acceptable to me. Since when was that the governing factor for my life?
What does being ready look like to you? I believe there is wisdom in readiness. I also believe that God asks us to trust Him for wisdom. I'm troubled..... cause I don't know if I'm ready. I don't know if that really matters.
Friday, January 22, 2010
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Jesus as the bread of life
"This is my body, broken for you. Do this, in remembrance of me" (Mark 14)
It's a statement that I've always looked at specifically in the context of communion. Jesus was stating to his followers that the passover meal they were about to share was symbolic of his sacrifice. But that was where it ended, with the cross, the grave, the resurrection, and the ascension. Jesus, & the gospel writers, had let us in on an incredibly intimate moment with Jesus & His disciples, that was about to become relevant for all of mankind. But Jesus, as the Bread of Life changes everything.
A friend of mine told me in discussion of this topic, "Jesus doesn't do anything by accident." With that in mind, there are connections between this feast of the passover and other moments in Christ's life that scream out to be recognized.
Jesus feeds the 5000. Here again, Jesus is the one who breaks the bread. He's the one that distributes it, and His distribution..... is abundant. It never runs out and in fact is excess of what is required. It's more than enough. Fastforward to the passover feast. Jesus is breaking the bread, He is distributing the bread and the message from the past is added to the symbolism of the moment. Jesus, never runs out. His body, is not only sufficient, it is abundant. It never runs out, and like the physical abundance of bread, Jesus' life points to the abundance of His body being broken. It's what leads Paul to write that Jesus' sacrifice was "once for all" (Hebrews). The grace that covers a multitude of sins is figurative in the bread. It covers a multitude of sins because the point was never that 5000 got fed. The point was that there was abundance. Jesus provision didn't scrape by and tide people over until they got home to have a snack. It provided a filling, and then some. 12 basketfuls were left over. It's a declaration that He is greater than what is about to come and given the connection between these moments, it's a subtly prophetic act that He is greater than the breaking of His body. He not only will overcome sin with His sacrifice, but He will also overcome the physical and spiritual death associated with His sacrifice. He is abundant, more than enough and in this moment, it's a promise to His disciples.
Jesus as the affirmer. It's one of the last recorded Biblical events that we have of Christ on earth in the Gospels. Peter and the boys are out fishing, trying to forget what happened, their dreams crushed, shattered. They are fishing and Jesus shows up in the shore. They race to Jesus, peter swims, to find him with fish and some bread. It's the encompassing of these moments again. Jesus is restoring Peter, but He's also affirming the promise. He's tying the pieces together and bringing revelation to His disciples. The bread and the fish, a common meal with dramatic ties to a highlight in the disciples lives with Christ. If we had witnessed the feeding of the 5000, no doubt it would be the same for us. Christ is assuring Peter and the disciples before there is ever the reinstatement of Peter that His body is still enough. It hasn't run out and it won't run out. Again, Jesus is in control. It's a reconnection to the moment of their deepest intimacy with Christ. The time when everything seemed poised to explode into glory and Christ is taking them there again with a shifted perspective. It's no longer about Israel's return to empirical glory. It's about the return of God's creation to Himself. Again the disciples find themselves picked up from their dejection, reminded of the past and are placed into the present. Jesus has become far greater than the earthly King they had hoped for. He has become the savior, the provider of forgiveness and grace, abundant life. He has become exactly what they need.
So, in my remembrance of Christ, when I take part of His body and His bread, my perspective has, like the disciples', forever been altered. No more is it just a moment of intimacy with my God. It's a promise, a declaration, a reinstatement, an affirmation, abundance and the glory of Christ's return and His creation's return to Him. It's new meaning to the Bread of Life.
It's a statement that I've always looked at specifically in the context of communion. Jesus was stating to his followers that the passover meal they were about to share was symbolic of his sacrifice. But that was where it ended, with the cross, the grave, the resurrection, and the ascension. Jesus, & the gospel writers, had let us in on an incredibly intimate moment with Jesus & His disciples, that was about to become relevant for all of mankind. But Jesus, as the Bread of Life changes everything.
A friend of mine told me in discussion of this topic, "Jesus doesn't do anything by accident." With that in mind, there are connections between this feast of the passover and other moments in Christ's life that scream out to be recognized.
Jesus feeds the 5000. Here again, Jesus is the one who breaks the bread. He's the one that distributes it, and His distribution..... is abundant. It never runs out and in fact is excess of what is required. It's more than enough. Fastforward to the passover feast. Jesus is breaking the bread, He is distributing the bread and the message from the past is added to the symbolism of the moment. Jesus, never runs out. His body, is not only sufficient, it is abundant. It never runs out, and like the physical abundance of bread, Jesus' life points to the abundance of His body being broken. It's what leads Paul to write that Jesus' sacrifice was "once for all" (Hebrews). The grace that covers a multitude of sins is figurative in the bread. It covers a multitude of sins because the point was never that 5000 got fed. The point was that there was abundance. Jesus provision didn't scrape by and tide people over until they got home to have a snack. It provided a filling, and then some. 12 basketfuls were left over. It's a declaration that He is greater than what is about to come and given the connection between these moments, it's a subtly prophetic act that He is greater than the breaking of His body. He not only will overcome sin with His sacrifice, but He will also overcome the physical and spiritual death associated with His sacrifice. He is abundant, more than enough and in this moment, it's a promise to His disciples.
Jesus as the affirmer. It's one of the last recorded Biblical events that we have of Christ on earth in the Gospels. Peter and the boys are out fishing, trying to forget what happened, their dreams crushed, shattered. They are fishing and Jesus shows up in the shore. They race to Jesus, peter swims, to find him with fish and some bread. It's the encompassing of these moments again. Jesus is restoring Peter, but He's also affirming the promise. He's tying the pieces together and bringing revelation to His disciples. The bread and the fish, a common meal with dramatic ties to a highlight in the disciples lives with Christ. If we had witnessed the feeding of the 5000, no doubt it would be the same for us. Christ is assuring Peter and the disciples before there is ever the reinstatement of Peter that His body is still enough. It hasn't run out and it won't run out. Again, Jesus is in control. It's a reconnection to the moment of their deepest intimacy with Christ. The time when everything seemed poised to explode into glory and Christ is taking them there again with a shifted perspective. It's no longer about Israel's return to empirical glory. It's about the return of God's creation to Himself. Again the disciples find themselves picked up from their dejection, reminded of the past and are placed into the present. Jesus has become far greater than the earthly King they had hoped for. He has become the savior, the provider of forgiveness and grace, abundant life. He has become exactly what they need.
So, in my remembrance of Christ, when I take part of His body and His bread, my perspective has, like the disciples', forever been altered. No more is it just a moment of intimacy with my God. It's a promise, a declaration, a reinstatement, an affirmation, abundance and the glory of Christ's return and His creation's return to Him. It's new meaning to the Bread of Life.
Saturday, January 9, 2010
In You, I'm Found
Is it possible that who we really want to be is found in Christ?
There's the obvious of our identity, but there is the person that inwardly, each of us desires to be. It's built into the uniqueness and make-up of who we are as people, and all of us are aspiring towards being this better version of us. Whether that's the better husband, the better father, the better friend, co-worker.... It's found in Christ.
It's found in Christ.... and with that is found the peace of finally ceasing our endless striving. We become the peace of Christ when we find ourselves in Christ. It's like the person that we have been searching for is found in our presence with Christ. It's not a matter of looking up and saying "There I am, I finally am found in Christ", but it is choosing to be found in Him. It's telegraphing our hiding spot in a game of hide and seek. It's telling people that they know where to find us. It eliminates pride in being self made people, and it is evidenced by the God-given fruits of His Spirit in our lives.
We have a choice.... we have the ability to allow ourselves to be found in Christ. It doesn't have to be a mystery anymore and it allows us to Be Still.... and know that He.... is God.
There's the obvious of our identity, but there is the person that inwardly, each of us desires to be. It's built into the uniqueness and make-up of who we are as people, and all of us are aspiring towards being this better version of us. Whether that's the better husband, the better father, the better friend, co-worker.... It's found in Christ.
It's found in Christ.... and with that is found the peace of finally ceasing our endless striving. We become the peace of Christ when we find ourselves in Christ. It's like the person that we have been searching for is found in our presence with Christ. It's not a matter of looking up and saying "There I am, I finally am found in Christ", but it is choosing to be found in Him. It's telegraphing our hiding spot in a game of hide and seek. It's telling people that they know where to find us. It eliminates pride in being self made people, and it is evidenced by the God-given fruits of His Spirit in our lives.
We have a choice.... we have the ability to allow ourselves to be found in Christ. It doesn't have to be a mystery anymore and it allows us to Be Still.... and know that He.... is God.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)