Good
Morning!
Isaiah
53:3;” He was despised and rejected by people. He was a man of sorrows,
familiar with suffering. He was despised like one from whom people turn their faces, and we didn’t consider him
to be worth anything.”
I was listening to some news
program yesterday and I heard that phrase again; you remember the phrase from
the height of the 2008 economic meltdown- vulnerable. I never remember that
word being used in any business or economics class I took in college, but I
hear all the time now; this bank or business is vulnerable. I think it is a
polite way to say the bank or business is about to go “toes up”.
Vulnerable is a very
inclusive word. If the star player of a team has to miss a game; it is said to
be vulnerable. If a boxer has broken ribs during a boxing match; that side is
vulnerable. If an army doesn’t have enough troops in one part of a battlefield;
it is vulnerable. People are vulnerable.
We usually say someone
is vulnerable if there is a chance that their feelings might get hurt or they
might experience some emotional pain. It is as if being exposed makes you
somehow weak. That is usually how we view vulnerable; you are weak. Actually,
we as Christians, should view being vulnerable in a different light. For us,
being vulnerable means that we have the love of Christ in our heart.
As we look at our verse,
Jesus was definitely vulnerable; he was capable of being hurt. He came to the
world to offer redemption and forgiveness. He just laid it out there for us and
how did the world respond- with rejection, with anger, with violence, with
complete hatred. Yet Jesus, in his love, endured it for us out of love. This is
what true love is about; it is loving those who are viewed as unlovable. It
might be the man who sexually assaulted his children, or the mother who drowned
her children, or the alcoholic who finally killed someone in a drunken car
crash. How do we love them? Showing any form of compassion for them would make
us vulnerable; vulnerable to the righteous indignation of those who see the law
and the law only.
In God’s grace, these
are offered forgiveness. In God’s grace, we are offered forgiveness. “Well, I’m
not like them!” Yeah, we are we rejected
Jesus because we didn’t consider him worthy.
We didn’t love as he first loved us. It is tough. How do you love
“monsters”? You hate the sin, just as God does, but you love and forgive the
sinner, just as God does. Does this make us vulnerable? Of course, it does, but
we are God’s redeemed children we have received far more mercy than we have
ever deserved, and we have a chance to show some mercy to those around us. Maybe
not a murder but how about the kid that everyone makes fun of, how about the
old couple who seem to have little to live on, how about the newly divorced
mother or father, how about the guy who lives in the nursing home far from his
family? There are many ways to show God’s love, all make us vulnerable but all
show love.
Dear Jesus, you are
vulnerable, make us vulnerable as well. Move us to love the unloved and to
bring hope to the lost. In your precious name we pray. Amen
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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