Good Morning!
1 Peter 2:24;
“He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree, that we
might die to sin and live to righteousness. By his wounds you have been
healed.”
It
all started at a tree. Trees on the high
plains of South Dakota are rare. If they
are here, someone put them here. Away
from the creeks, streams and rivers, there are very few indigenous trees; the
probability is that someone planted the tree.
Sort of like how God planted the
trees in the Garden of Eden. “And out of
the ground the Lord God made to spring up every tree that is pleasant to
the sight and good for food. The tree of life was in the midst of the garden,
and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil” (Gen. 2:9). So, the trees began to produce food and
beauty and shelter and a peacefulness that only exists in a garden.
Yet we know the rest. A serpent, the devil actually, whispered, and
deceived Adam and Eve and soon death, sorrow, pain, sadness and all the
troubles of the world showed up and the trees that once gave only food, shelter
and beauty now gave spears, arrows and ways to provide death. Wars are fought over the territory that trees
now occupy, and trees are often used as shields or walls to protect or hide
behind to fight. The value of trees has
shifted.
Soon empires and rulers began to use trees
in despicable ways by using them as instruments of hideous deaths. Some would impale their victims running a
spike through the lower bowel region and exiting through the collarbone
region. The goal was to miss all vital
internal organs so death would be slow and painful. Some empires and rulers preferred to hang
their victims from a cross shaped tree and let them slowly die of asphyxiation. The crueler ones would use nails to add to
the pain and the suffering. Trees had
come from things of beauty and of nurturing to things of death and terror.
It was this kind of tree that Jesus used to
win the victory. On the cross, he crushed
the head of the serpent that poisoned the first tree of life. Now Jesus has made this second tree the new
tree of life for us. With his blood we
are cleansed. With his blood we are
redeemed. So, as we look at this tree we
should not be consumed by guilt. We
should not respond out of guilt thinking that we somehow owe God and can repay
him. Rather, we should look at the cross
and see God’s unimaginable love and his unfathomable mercy. Rather than guilt we should feel thankful,
joyfully, exuberantly thankful. We
should experience a rebirth of desire, desire to serve God.
For God invites us by his love to come into
his kingdom and to serve him with love.
He calls upon us to see the beauty of this once hideous tree. He calls us to cling to this cross so that we
might always know of his mercy.
Father, we give you thanks for the redemption which
you have so freely given to us because of what Jesus has done for us upon the
cross. Lead us to see the cross with
hearts filled with thanksgiving and joy.
Let us see the cross as your great gift to us. In the precious name of Jesus we pray, amen.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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