Good Morning All,
Romans 8:34; “Who is to
condemn? Christ Jesus is the one who died—more than that, who was raised—who is
at the right hand of God, who indeed is interceding for us.”
I remember one of those brain teaser
problems a few years back. It was a list
of about 25-30 instructions. Most of
them were silly and embarrassing; things like “stand on one foot and sing
‘Twinkle, Twinkle.” The trick was that
the first instruction told you to read ALL the instructions before you did
anything else. Instruction #22 told you
to only follow instructions 1, 22 and the last one which told you to sit
quietly. Those who read and followed the
directions would sit quietly. Those who
chose just to start doing the list did anything but sit quietly; they would
sing and dance and twirl around.
Sometimes, we read the Bible like
this. We do not read it all the way through,
and we only see parts of it. We tend to
focus on the death of Jesus. We tend to
focus on his suffering and then his dying.
While this is a significant event, the Son of God dying in your place,
it is only part of the story. We really should
not separate Good Friday from Easter, but we do. We should look at the time from Good Friday
until Easter morning as one continuous event.
Jesus’ death is important but so is his resurrection.
Jesus’ resurrection is the sign that Jesus’
words are true and are valued and accepted by the Father in heaven. It is also the preview to our future when
Jesus returns. We get a glimpse of our
perfected bodies. The resurrection gives
us hope. The resurrection reveals to us
what God’s promise to us looks like.
The resurrection of Jesus also means that he
is not dead but that he lives in heaven, with the Father, and pleads and
intercedes for us. We often ask others
to pray for us, but do we ever stop and realize that Jesus is also praying for
us? What a comforting thought this
should be!! The Son of God prays for you
all the time.
So, as we look with joy at what Jesus has
done for us. We look not only at his
death but at the death and resurrection, together as one great mercy given to
us. Through this event we have the
forgiveness of sins and the promise of the resurrection. Through this event, we ca live with the
certainty of our life eternal.
So, do not stop with “Jesus died for me!”
but continue on with “Jesus rose for me that I might have life!” Because it is by his glorious resurrection
that we have the promise sealed by his blood and given to us by the
Father. This makes this event joyful and
worth celebrating. Jesus lives and he
lives so that you and I may have life and have it abundantly.
Father of all good things;
grant to us your Spirit that we may live in the wonders of your mercy. Keep us alive in your grace. Guide us to rejoice in the living Savior who
reigns with you. Be with those who are
lost and suffering. Be with those who
are in pain. Comfort them and give to
them the hope of life eternal. In Jesus’
precious name we pray, amen.
God’s
Peace,
Pastor
Bret
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