I am getting so excited. I am about ready to re-launch Good News! with a new format and lots of new helps and information.
By now you're probably wondering if I'll ever be back, but I will be--SOON! Thanks for being patient.
Tuesday, July 16, 2013
Sunday, June 16, 2013
Some Decisions Made
I am happy to announce that I am going to be resuming my blog.
I do thank the many of you who left comments or who emailed me to express your thanks for the blog. Your kindness was much appreciated.
But I am not going to begin immediately. I have been doing a lot of reflection and study lately and I am going to take this opportunity to revamp the blog to make it more helpful, and when I resume it will have two parts. One part will be spiritual and scriptural insight and the other will be life-coaching on how to implement the principles of Walking in Truth! (The change from Living to Walking is one of the first changes.)
I am very excited, but the next few weeks are filled with family. (Our Johnson Camp is being held in St. George this year and my children are coming in from all over the United States to spend a week or two together.) So stay tuned and I'll let you know when I'm ready to launch again.
In the meantime, if any of you have stories of how living the principles of Truth have helped you, please either email them to me or leave a comment here. Let's help each other!
I do thank the many of you who left comments or who emailed me to express your thanks for the blog. Your kindness was much appreciated.
But I am not going to begin immediately. I have been doing a lot of reflection and study lately and I am going to take this opportunity to revamp the blog to make it more helpful, and when I resume it will have two parts. One part will be spiritual and scriptural insight and the other will be life-coaching on how to implement the principles of Walking in Truth! (The change from Living to Walking is one of the first changes.)
I am very excited, but the next few weeks are filled with family. (Our Johnson Camp is being held in St. George this year and my children are coming in from all over the United States to spend a week or two together.) So stay tuned and I'll let you know when I'm ready to launch again.
In the meantime, if any of you have stories of how living the principles of Truth have helped you, please either email them to me or leave a comment here. Let's help each other!
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
An Explanation
I can't believe a whole month has gone by since I last posted. Life got very busy for me and at the same time readers of Good News! dropped off dramatically so that very few people were dropping by each day. Because of both things I took a break to try and decide what to do. At this point I am still weighing the options. I will let you know soon whether I have decided to stop writing Good News! or whether I am going to reformat and try to do some new things that would be beneficial. If you have any suggestions let me know!
I do thank those of you who were concerned about why I wasn't posting. I appreciate it very much.
I do thank those of you who were concerned about why I wasn't posting. I appreciate it very much.
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Hooray for the Truth!
I'm still alive! Besides the bathroom remodeling it is the end of the semester and yesterday I taught three classes and graded over 150 student journals. It is a fun thing to do because most of the students write things that are interesting to read, but it is also a tedious thing to grade that many journals in one day. But I got it done in record time! I went to work yesterday at 6:30 a.m. and came home at 9:00 p.m. It was dark when I left home and dark when I returned home, but I know that somewhere in between those dark walks to and from the car there was sunshine. (My office has no windows!)
I've been so busy, but have been waiting excitedly to share a scripture with you. It is a verse that talks about the Pit of Illusion which the Book of Mormon calls vain imaginations. (See 1 Nephi 12:18 and Roman 1:21.) This verse is found in Helaman 16:22;
"And many more things did the people imagine up in their hearts, which were foolish and vain; and they were much disturbed, for Satan did stir them up to do iniquity continually; yea, he did go about spreading rumors and contentions upon all the face of the land, that he might harden the hearts of the people against that which was good and agaisnt that which should come."
That pretty well sums up the opposite of Living in Truth and what it means to live in the Pit of Illusion. It is foolish and vain and people who dwell in the Pit are disturbed, or as I call it vexed, all of the time.
I might be busy, but today I'm celebrating the fact that I don't have to dwell in the Pit of Illusion. I know how to Live in Truth! Three cheers for Truth!
I've been so busy, but have been waiting excitedly to share a scripture with you. It is a verse that talks about the Pit of Illusion which the Book of Mormon calls vain imaginations. (See 1 Nephi 12:18 and Roman 1:21.) This verse is found in Helaman 16:22;
"And many more things did the people imagine up in their hearts, which were foolish and vain; and they were much disturbed, for Satan did stir them up to do iniquity continually; yea, he did go about spreading rumors and contentions upon all the face of the land, that he might harden the hearts of the people against that which was good and agaisnt that which should come."
That pretty well sums up the opposite of Living in Truth and what it means to live in the Pit of Illusion. It is foolish and vain and people who dwell in the Pit are disturbed, or as I call it vexed, all of the time.
I might be busy, but today I'm celebrating the fact that I don't have to dwell in the Pit of Illusion. I know how to Live in Truth! Three cheers for Truth!
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Beginning, Middle, End
I'm in the middle of a remodel job in my home and I've decided I missed my calling in life. I've enjoyed getting bids from contractors, lining up work crews, and making all the decisions about what goes where and when. But it has kept me busy so I've been a little sporadic with the Good News! I hope you haven't given up on me.
I did discover something fun the other day that I've been eager to share. The word for truth in Hebrew is transliterated as emeth and in Hebrew it consists of three letters. I had known that before, but what I didn't realize is that the three letters are the first letter of the alphabet, the exact middle letter of the alphabet (thirteen letters before and thirteen letters after), and the last letter of the alphabet. Jews teach that the word itself testifies that truth must be the beginning, the middle, and the end of all things.
When Living in Truth it is a good thing to remember--truth must be our beginning, our middle, and our end!
I did discover something fun the other day that I've been eager to share. The word for truth in Hebrew is transliterated as emeth and in Hebrew it consists of three letters. I had known that before, but what I didn't realize is that the three letters are the first letter of the alphabet, the exact middle letter of the alphabet (thirteen letters before and thirteen letters after), and the last letter of the alphabet. Jews teach that the word itself testifies that truth must be the beginning, the middle, and the end of all things.
When Living in Truth it is a good thing to remember--truth must be our beginning, our middle, and our end!
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Skip and Sway
Last night, tired after teaching three classes ending at 6:40 pm, I walked out of the building to go to my car which was parked about 150 yards away and found the skies weeping profusely. I don't know what the sky was so sad about, maybe how cold it had turned, but I had to navigate to my car without an umbrella or other fixtures with which to protect myself from the tears.
But I Live in Truth and the Truth was that it was raining. Weeping skies are something I can't change so I had two choices. I could get all grumpy and ornery and fill myself with the pain that is better known as self-pity or I could live with the rain. Like I said, I Live in Truth so there was really only one thing to do and I did it. I started humming, "I'm Singing in the Rain" not at all like Gene Kelly does it, but you might recognize it if you heard it. (I'm not a singer!) Then the magic happened. The music began to dance in me so that I found myself skipping, swaying and splashing my way to the car, arriving wet but in very good spirits.
The water dried shortly after I arrived home, and I am still laughing about my dance to the car. Oh what a beautiful life Truth is!
But I Live in Truth and the Truth was that it was raining. Weeping skies are something I can't change so I had two choices. I could get all grumpy and ornery and fill myself with the pain that is better known as self-pity or I could live with the rain. Like I said, I Live in Truth so there was really only one thing to do and I did it. I started humming, "I'm Singing in the Rain" not at all like Gene Kelly does it, but you might recognize it if you heard it. (I'm not a singer!) Then the magic happened. The music began to dance in me so that I found myself skipping, swaying and splashing my way to the car, arriving wet but in very good spirits.
The water dried shortly after I arrived home, and I am still laughing about my dance to the car. Oh what a beautiful life Truth is!
Monday, April 8, 2013
Formula For A Satisfied Soul
There
is an amazing promise found in the writings of Isaiah: “If thou draw
out thy soul to the hungry, and satisfy the afflicted soul; then shall
thy light rise in obscurity, and thy darkness be as the noonday: And
the Lord shall guide thee continually, and satisfy thy soul in drought,
and make fat thy bones: and thou shalt be like a watered garden, and
like a spring of water, whose waters fail not” (Isaiah 58:10-11).
Most words here are translated very well, but the meaning is a little clearer when you know that in the first verse the word darkness could have been translated gloominess. What this says to me is that when we reach out to help and assist the poor and the afflicted, the Lord will heal our poverty and afflictions. But the most important promise is that when we help others, the Lord will guide us at all times and feed our hungry souls even in times of dire distress so that we won't be gloomy. His Living Waters will flow to us continually.
These verses are encouraging to me because they are doable. All of us have the capacity to reach out to others. We can give a smile, a note of appreciation, a hug, a meal, or whatever we have because we all have something to give. And in return for giving what we have, the Lord gives us more. He will “guide thee continually.” What a great blessing!
Most words here are translated very well, but the meaning is a little clearer when you know that in the first verse the word darkness could have been translated gloominess. What this says to me is that when we reach out to help and assist the poor and the afflicted, the Lord will heal our poverty and afflictions. But the most important promise is that when we help others, the Lord will guide us at all times and feed our hungry souls even in times of dire distress so that we won't be gloomy. His Living Waters will flow to us continually.
These verses are encouraging to me because they are doable. All of us have the capacity to reach out to others. We can give a smile, a note of appreciation, a hug, a meal, or whatever we have because we all have something to give. And in return for giving what we have, the Lord gives us more. He will “guide thee continually.” What a great blessing!
Thursday, April 4, 2013
Seeing By the Truth
picture by AndrĂ© Kutscherauer © 2011 http://www.ak3d.de/all/selfillumination-1/ |
We are doing some bathroom/kitchen remodeling in our home and at times electricity goes out, water is unavailable and chaos is everywhere all the time.
Yesterday the new lights were finally installed in my kitchen and as I turned them on for the first time last night my whole kitchen looked new. The wood of the cabinets was brighter, the stone on the counter tops looked like I had just polished it, but all that was different was the lighting. This make me think of a quote from my friend, C.
S. Lewis; "I believe in Christianity as I believe that the
sun has risen: not only because I see it, but because by it I see
everything else."
Like my kitchen with new lights, when we Live in Truth (also known as Light) the world looks different. Truth illuminates the world so that we
see things that we've never noticed before and we see them more clearly and distinctly. When we are deep in the Pit of Illusion there is
little light so that the things we are trying to see are distorted and blurred and indistinct. Life doesn’t make sense.
Teachings of the gospel don’t make sense. We don’t see any meaning to
life or what we are doing because we can't see clearly.
But
when we Live in Truth that Truth sheds its Light on all aspects of our
lives so that meaning is apparent, beauty is illuminated, and the gospel
message becomes clearer. When we Live in Truth we see everything around
us as it really is and that brings peace to the heart and joy to the
soul.
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
It's All About Love
Today in my New Testament class we discussed the three epistles of John, known in the New Testament as 1 John, 2 John, and 3 John. 1 John is one of my all time favorite chapters of scripture for two reasons. The first is that it is all about Living in Truth. For example, "The darkness is past, and the true light now shineth" (1 John 2:8). In my own words, when you are Living in Truth the bad things of the past are over, you don't need to think about or dwell on them, and today the true light shines. If you step out of the dark past, you are walking in light. The best part is that you can step out of that dark past anytime you want and the light is waiting for you.
The second thing I love about 1 John is that it is all about love. I never read this without feeling that some unseen power has risen from the page, wrapped arms around me and is hugging me tightly while whispering reassuring words of comfort in my ear. Verses like, "Beloved, let us love one another; for love is of God; and every one that loveth is born of God, and knoweth God" (1 John 4:7). and "We have known and believed the love that God hath to us. God is love; and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God, and God in him" (1 John 4:16), and "There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear; because fear hath torment. He that feareth is not made perfect in love" (1 John 4:18).
If you are every feeling discouraged, down, dismayed, depressed or any other negative feelings read 1 John 1-5 and let the words wrap you in love.
The second thing I love about 1 John is that it is all about love. I never read this without feeling that some unseen power has risen from the page, wrapped arms around me and is hugging me tightly while whispering reassuring words of comfort in my ear. Verses like, "Beloved, let us love one another; for love is of God; and every one that loveth is born of God, and knoweth God" (1 John 4:7). and "We have known and believed the love that God hath to us. God is love; and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God, and God in him" (1 John 4:16), and "There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear; because fear hath torment. He that feareth is not made perfect in love" (1 John 4:18).
If you are every feeling discouraged, down, dismayed, depressed or any other negative feelings read 1 John 1-5 and let the words wrap you in love.
Monday, April 1, 2013
Easter Morning
While soldiers
guarded the sepulcher in which the body of Jesus Christ lay, the earth
violently shook, two angels descended from heaven, rolled away the
stone, and sat upon it. Overcome with fear the soldiers fell to the
ground as if dead.
"Holy Women Near the Tomb" by Maurice Denis |
At the
invitation of the angels the women then looked inside the sepulcher and
when they had seen that it was empty the angels instructed them to go
tell Peter and the disciples that the Lord had risen. The women returned
quickly and told all they had seen. But most of the men took it as idle
talk and refused to believe the women.
However, Peter
and John hurried to the sepulcher and when they arrived Peter stooped
down to look inside and saw that the linen clothes were lying
undisturbed, but the napkin which had been about Jesus’ head was folded
in a place by itself. The sight must have startled him. If the body had
been stolen the linen would have been taken with the body or at least
strewn about the room in disarray, but instead it lay where it had been
and the napkin neatly folded. What could it mean? Perplexed Peter and
John returned to their homes.
Overcome with
sorrow, Mary stayed in the garden, and still weeping, peered inside the
tomb one more time. There she saw the two angels, one sitting at the
head and the other at the feet where the body of Jesus had lain. Seeing
her sorrow, one said to her, “Woman, why weepest thou?” (John 20:13.
"Jesus Appears to Mary" by Gregg Olsen |
As she spoke,
she turned back and saw Jesus standing in the garden, but with tears
filling her eyes she didn’t recognize Him. “Why weepest thou?” he asked
her.
Thinking He was
the gardener she begged of Him, “Sir, if thou have borne him hence,
tell me where thou hast laid him, and I will take him away.”
Jesus
responded, “Mary,” and at the sound of the familiar voice calling her
name her grief turned instantly to joy and she cried, “My great Master.”
“Hold me not,”
Jesus cautioned, “for I am not yet ascended to my Father: but go to my
brethren, and say unto them, I ascend unto my Father, and your Father;
and to my God, and your God” (John 20:17).
Mary did as
instructed and thus dawned the greatest day in the history of the world.
Many mighty miracles followed as graves opened and the resurrected
bodies of the saints came forth to minister to believers.
Jesus also
appeared to many other people and the world rejoiced in the fact that
the great enemies of life, spiritual and physical death, had been
defeated. Because He loved us so much, Jesus Christ saved us.
He is risen!
He is risen!
Saturday, March 30, 2013
The Crucifixion
Crucifixion was designed to cause death but to do so at the slowest,
most torturous pace. The agony was intense as wounds tore and bled, and
muscles and joints pulled from tendons and sockets. But that is not what
caused death. The strain of hanging by the arms eventually caused
asphyxiation as the person lost the ability to breathe.
That day on Calvary two others were executed alongside Jesus. One of them joined the Jewish leaders in deriding Jesus and cried out, “If thou be Christ, save thyself and us” (Luke 23:39). But the other rebuked the first saying, “Dost not thou fear God. . . .We receive the due reward of our deeds: but this man hath done nothing amiss.”
Then to Jesus he said, “Remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom.”
Many of the women who had followed Jesus were sorrowing at the cross including Jesus’ mother. When Jesus saw her there he said,, “Woman, behold thy son!” Then to John he said, “Behold thy mother!”
At noon darkness fell over the land, and for the next three hours the sun was hid. Finally after three hours of suffering, Jesus cried out, “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?”
John tells us that then, knowing all things were now accomplished, Jesus said, “I thirst.”
In response someone dipped a sponge into a pot of vinegar, put the sponge on a hyssop reed, which would have been about three or four feet long, and lifted it to Jesus’ mouth. After He had sucked from it Jesus said, “It is finished. Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit” (Luke 23:46). Then bowing his head, as the Greek text says, Jesus breathed out his last breath and delivered up His spirit.
Meanwhile at the temple the new course of Levites were performing the sacrificial rituals and at this same moment the trumpets announced that the ritual service was one-third over. Inside the Holy Place the veil separating it from the Most Holy Place ripped in two. The symbolism of this incident is beautiful. Before only the High Priest, representing Jehovah, could enter the Most Holy Place which contained the throne of God, and he was only allowed in once a year on the day of Atonement. With the veil rent, the way back to God was now open for all mankind. But there is something more. Josephus tells us that according to the Rabbis, the veil was a handbreadth thick. It was woven of 72 twisted plaits, each consisting of 24 threads (24 ply yarn!). Josephus, who tends to exaggeration, also informs us that the veil was so large it required 300 priests to lift it into place. But at the moment of Christ’s death it miraculously ripped in two from top to bottom.
Wanting the ordeal to be over before the Sabbath began, the Jewish leaders implored Pilate to expedite the crucifixion. Under orders, then, the soldiers broke the legs of the two thieves so that they could no long push themselves up by the small platform at their feet and would suffocate. But when they came to Jesus, He was already dead. Seeing this one of the soldiers thrust his spear into the Savior’s side and blood and water gushed out. This is significant in that it indicates that instead of dying by asphyxiation, Jesus’ heart literally ruptured making the cause of death a broken heart.
After the death of Jesus, Joseph of Arimathaea asked Pilate for the body and he and Nicodemus lovingly anointed Jesus with myrrh and aloes, wrapped Him in linen burial clothes and spices, and placed him in a never before used sepulcher over which was rolled a stone.
On Saturday the Jewish leaders, remembering that Jesus had said that after three days He would rise again, asked Pilate to place a guard at the sepulcher for they feared someone would steal His body and then claim Jesus had risen. Pilate consented, saying, “Ye have a watch: go your way, make it as sure as ye can” (Matthew 27:65). Given permission, the Jewish leaders sealed the stone door and set soldiers to guard the tomb.
But soldiers would not be enough to secure this tomb.
That day on Calvary two others were executed alongside Jesus. One of them joined the Jewish leaders in deriding Jesus and cried out, “If thou be Christ, save thyself and us” (Luke 23:39). But the other rebuked the first saying, “Dost not thou fear God. . . .We receive the due reward of our deeds: but this man hath done nothing amiss.”
Then to Jesus he said, “Remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom.”
Many of the women who had followed Jesus were sorrowing at the cross including Jesus’ mother. When Jesus saw her there he said,, “Woman, behold thy son!” Then to John he said, “Behold thy mother!”
At noon darkness fell over the land, and for the next three hours the sun was hid. Finally after three hours of suffering, Jesus cried out, “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?”
John tells us that then, knowing all things were now accomplished, Jesus said, “I thirst.”
In response someone dipped a sponge into a pot of vinegar, put the sponge on a hyssop reed, which would have been about three or four feet long, and lifted it to Jesus’ mouth. After He had sucked from it Jesus said, “It is finished. Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit” (Luke 23:46). Then bowing his head, as the Greek text says, Jesus breathed out his last breath and delivered up His spirit.
Meanwhile at the temple the new course of Levites were performing the sacrificial rituals and at this same moment the trumpets announced that the ritual service was one-third over. Inside the Holy Place the veil separating it from the Most Holy Place ripped in two. The symbolism of this incident is beautiful. Before only the High Priest, representing Jehovah, could enter the Most Holy Place which contained the throne of God, and he was only allowed in once a year on the day of Atonement. With the veil rent, the way back to God was now open for all mankind. But there is something more. Josephus tells us that according to the Rabbis, the veil was a handbreadth thick. It was woven of 72 twisted plaits, each consisting of 24 threads (24 ply yarn!). Josephus, who tends to exaggeration, also informs us that the veil was so large it required 300 priests to lift it into place. But at the moment of Christ’s death it miraculously ripped in two from top to bottom.
Wanting the ordeal to be over before the Sabbath began, the Jewish leaders implored Pilate to expedite the crucifixion. Under orders, then, the soldiers broke the legs of the two thieves so that they could no long push themselves up by the small platform at their feet and would suffocate. But when they came to Jesus, He was already dead. Seeing this one of the soldiers thrust his spear into the Savior’s side and blood and water gushed out. This is significant in that it indicates that instead of dying by asphyxiation, Jesus’ heart literally ruptured making the cause of death a broken heart.
After the death of Jesus, Joseph of Arimathaea asked Pilate for the body and he and Nicodemus lovingly anointed Jesus with myrrh and aloes, wrapped Him in linen burial clothes and spices, and placed him in a never before used sepulcher over which was rolled a stone.
On Saturday the Jewish leaders, remembering that Jesus had said that after three days He would rise again, asked Pilate to place a guard at the sepulcher for they feared someone would steal His body and then claim Jesus had risen. Pilate consented, saying, “Ye have a watch: go your way, make it as sure as ye can” (Matthew 27:65). Given permission, the Jewish leaders sealed the stone door and set soldiers to guard the tomb.
But soldiers would not be enough to secure this tomb.
Friday, March 29, 2013
It's Good Friday
As Jesus awoke the sleeping disciples saying,
“Rise up, let us go; lo, he that betrayeth me is at hand” (Mark 14:42),
Judas, leading a great multitude entered the garden. What we usually
don’t realize is how great that multitude really was. The gospel writers
tell us that the group consisted of the chief priests, scribes, elders,
the captain and officers of the Jews temple police force, and a band of
Roman soldiers armed with swords and staves and carrying torches and
lanterns. Like all things in New Testament scholarship, how many men
were in a band of soldiers is debated, but it is safe to assume there
were at least 150 which shows how much the chief priest fear Jesus. In
addition, it is Passover week and the city is crowded with people who
hearing the commotion would have followed out of curiosity. One senses
the irony as hundreds of angry men stomped through the night led by the
light of their torches in order to capture the Light of the world! (See
Isaiah 50:11.) As they approached Jesus, Judas cried out “Hail, master!”
and kissed Jesus.
Jesus responded, “Judas, betrayest thou the
Son of man with a kiss?” (Luke 22:48). Then turning to the crowd He
asked, “Whom seek ye?”
They responded “Jesus of Nazareth.”
Jesus answered, “I am he” (John 18:6). But you will notice in your scriptures that the word he
is italicized. This means that the word is not in the original Greek
manuscripts but is a word the King James translators added to make
things clearer. However, in this case it hides the meaning. What Jesus
says to them is simply, “I am” which was considered to be the name of
God. As Thomas Aquinas explained, the title I Am referred to the “being
of all things.”
Something extraordinary happens as Jesus
pronounces, “I am.” At those words the entire multitude stepped backward
and fell to the ground which indicates to me that there must have been a
power or spirit that accompanied those words as if to give the people
one last chance to understand and repent. Instead they arrest Him, but
as He surrenders His love is manifest as He asks that His disciples be
set free.
At this point Peter drew his sword and
lashing out cut off the ear of a servant of the high priest named
Malcus. “Put up thy sword,” Jesus says to Peter. Then turning to Malcus
he touched his ear and healed him. But even that fails to soften the
angry mob. Now, turning Himself over to the mob Jesus said, “This is
your hour, and the power of darkness” (Luke 22:53).
After His arrest Jesus was taken to the
palace of the chief priest Caiaphas, and his father-in-law Annas, and
tried for the crime of blasphemy. The fact that they were trying a man
during the night and many other details of the proceedings were illegal
under their own laws, but that did not stop them. A unanimous decision
was reached (also illegal) and the crowd began to spit on Jesus and make
a game of covering His face, striking him, and then crying out,
“Prophesy unto us, thou Christ, Who is he that smote thee?”
Outside as Peter waited, a maid who also sat with him at the fire suddenly proclaimed, “This man was also with him.”
But
Peter answered, “Woman, I know him not.” Two more times people
recognized Peter as a follower and both times Peter again denied knowing
Jesus. After the third denial the cock crew and Peter remembered that
the night before Jesus had told him, “Before the cock crow, thou shalt
deny me thrice.” At the realization of what he had done, Peter went out
and wept bitterly.
As the day began to dawn, Jesus was taken
to Pilate because the chief priests wanted Him executed under Roman law.
As they delivered Jesus up to Pilate in the Praetorium, the official
residence of the Roman governor, they refused to enter the judgment hall
themselves lest they be defiled. Curious about this man he had heard so
much about, Pilate began the examination by asking, “Art thou the King
of the Jews?” (John 18:33).
Jesus replied, “Sayest thou this thing of thyself, or did others tell it thee of me?
Sarcastically
Pilate replied, “Am I a Jew?” and explained that it is the chief
priests that have told him these things. As the trial goes on Pilate
persisted, “Art thou a king then?”
Jesus finally answered, “For this cause came I into the world. . . . Everyone that is of the truth heareth my voice.”
At this Pilate asked, “What is truth?” But without waiting for an answer sent Jesus to be judged of Herod.
Herod is equally as curious to see Jesus
and questioned Him intensely, but Jesus refused to answer Herod. So
Herod and his men mock “the King” by arraying him in a gorgeous royal
robe and send Him back to Pilate.
Pilate can see that Jesus has committed no
crime and is reluctant to pass judgment, but the Jewish leaders incite
the crowd and insist on Jesus’ death. In a last attempt to free Jesus,
Pilate offers the people a choice. There is to be a prisoner released to
celebrate the Passover. Do they want Barabbas who is accused of murder
and sedition set free or Jesus? The name Barabbas in Hebrew means “son
of the father” and an early Christian scholar named Origen claimed that
Barabbas’ given name was Yeshua, which in Greek is Jesus. Whether that
is true or not the irony remains. The Jewish leaders chose to free the
guilty “son of the father” who had destroyed lives, and condemn the
innocent “Son of the Father” who would give them life.
Pilate, still unconvinced of the Savior’s
guilt pleaded with the crowd, but fearing rioting from the crowd that
refuses to relent, Pilate washes his hands as a symbolic gesture that he
does not agree with this verdict, but proclaims Jesus as guilty and
condemns Him to be crucified with the words, “Shall I crucify your
King?” and the people shout back, “We have no king but Caesar” (John
19:15).
Once again the soldiers mock and
torture the Savior as they carry him to prison. Clothed in the purple
royal robe, they now place a crown of thorns upon his head and salute
him saying, “Hail, King of the Jews!” as they smite and spit upon Him.
Tired from being awake all night, fatigued
from the atoning agony, and wounded from the scourging He had received
Jesus began the walk to Calvery with the beam of the cross upon His
back, but He had no strength left for the task and so a man, Simon a
Cyrenian, was pulled from the crowd and forced to carry the cross. Once
on the hill, Jesus was nailed to the cross beam, it was lifted into
place on the permanently installed post, His feet were nailed to the
post and He was crucified with a placard placed atop the cross that read
in three languages, “This is the King of the Jews.” The Jewish leaders
asked Pilate to change the placard to read, “He said, I am King of the
Jews.” But Pilate refused to change it saying, “What I have written I
have written.”
As the soldiers jeered and reviled while
carrying out their duties, Jesus looked down upon them and said,
"Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do" (Luke 23:34).
Totally clueless as to the eternally significant event taking place at the top of the cross, the soldiers at the bottom of the cross made four piles of His clothing, but instead of ripping the royal coat into four pieces they cast lots to see who would win it. Thus they went home that day rejoicing over their spoils unaware of the great gift of life that had been given them.
Totally clueless as to the eternally significant event taking place at the top of the cross, the soldiers at the bottom of the cross made four piles of His clothing, but instead of ripping the royal coat into four pieces they cast lots to see who would win it. Thus they went home that day rejoicing over their spoils unaware of the great gift of life that had been given them.
The crowd continued to jeer and mock. “Thou
that destroyest the temple, and buildest it in three days, save
thyself, and come down from the cross.” And the chief priests cried out,
“He saved others; let him save himself, if he be Christ, the chosen of
God.”
(To be continued tomorrow)
Thursday, March 28, 2013
It's Maundy Thursday
As the days of the last week of His life go by, the Savior’s
love for His disciples and for us becomes even more evident. On what has become
known as Maundy Thursday He sends His disciples to prepare
a room where they can celebrate the Passover meal together. At the appointed
time Jesus begins the meal by saying, “With desire I have desired to eat this
Passover with you before I suffer.” The Greek translated as desire has
more intensity than the King James translators give it. The Greek work
indicates an eagerness and would have been better translated, “With great desire.”
It is difficult to determine the exact time line of what
next occurs. John is the only writer to report the washing of the apostles’
feet, but He tells us that it was before the feast. If that is so, then the
evening begins with Jesus removing his outer coat and girding himself with a
towel, in other words He clothes himself as a servant would be clothed, and
taking a basin of water He washes the feet of His disciples and wipes them with
the towel.
When He is finished He asks, “Know ye what I have done to
you?” and then answers His own question, “Ye call me Master and Lord, for so am
I. If I then have washed your feet, ye also ought to wash one another’s feet.”
After this Jesus takes the cup of wine, gives thanks and the
last legitimate Passover
meal
begins and during its course is transformed into the first Sacrament of the
Lord's Supper.
But then Jesus grows troubled in spirit and says, “Verily, verily, I say unto
you, that one of you shall betray me.” One can imagine the emotions that then
afflicted the disciples. Those that loved Him were grieved and bewildered, and
asked, “Is it I?” And the one who did not love Him, filled with guilt and fear
that he was about to be denounced, tried to play the part of the loving and
hypocritically imitated their concern, “Master, is it I?”
Jesus responded, “That thou doesn’t, do quickly.”
At these words Judas left. John reports this by saying,
Judas “went immediately out: and it was night.”At least it was for Judas; he
had left the Light of the world and entered darkness.
With Judas gone, Jesus proceeds to teach His disciples.
Under the law of Moses the command has been to love others as you love
yourself. But Jesus now says, “A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love
one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one another. By this shall
all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one to another” (John
13:34-35).
Foreboding feelings must have permeated the evening and
caused uneasiness among the participants, but Jesus always aware of what is
needed, comforts them by saying, “Let not your heart be troubled: ye believe in
God, believe also in me. In my Father’s house are many mansions: if it were not
so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you” (John 14:1-2). In
other words,
Don’t worry. Trust me. I will always take care of you.
Jesus goes on to teach them the things that will guide and
comfort them after He is gone; the same things that will bring us peace and
comfort. He says, “I am the way, the truth, and the life.” “If ye love me, keep
my commandments.” Then He explains that he is going to send another Comforter,
the Holy Ghost, and assures them as the KJV reports, “I will not leave you
comfortless” (John 14:18). But the Greek manuscripts say, “I will not leave you
orphaned.”
With love so deep and sincere that these thousands of years
later one can still feel the emotion as if it were being spoken directly to the
reader the Savior then says, “Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you;
not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled,
netiher let it be afraid” (John 14:27).
The time in the Upper Room ends by singing a hymn which was
most likely the Hallel. Then they left and walked north-eastward, passing the
Temple Mount, crossing down the Kidron valley, and finally ascending the Mount
of Olives until they reached the Garden of Gethsemane. But His teachings do not
end. As they walk, He continues to exhort them. “Abide in me, and I in you. As
the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine: no more
can ye, except ye abide in me . . . for without me ye can do nothing” (John
15:4-5). And again, “Love one another, as I have loved you” (John 15:12). “When
the Spirit of truth is come he will guide you into all truth” (John 16:13). And
finally, to prepare them for what is about to happen He says, “Verily, verily,
I say unto you, That ye shall weep and lament, but the world shall rejoice: and
ye shall be sorrowful, but your sorrow shall be turned into joy” (John 16:20).
“These things I have spoken unto you, that in me ye might have peace. In the
world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the
world” (John 16:33).
After this Jesus lifts up his eyes to heaven and prays a
marvelous prayer for the disciples and for you and me. It has become known as
the Intercessory
Prayer or
the Great
High Priestly Prayer.
I cannot do this justice by condensing it. Read John 17 as the Savior of the
world prays to the Father for you and ends with these words,
“And I have declared unto them thy name, and will declare
it; that the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them, and I in them”
(John 17:26).
Finally the Savior and His followers arrive at Gethsemane,
which means oil press. Jesus instructs most of the disciples to sit while He
takes Peter, James and John further into the garden. At this point Jesus begins
to be “sore amazed” as Mark reports, but again the Greek here is much more
intense. The Greek words mean “terrified surprise or astonishment.” You and I
know the consequences of sin. We’ve felt the guilt, the heavy darkness, the
anguish, and the depression that are brought on by sin, but Jesus Christ had
never before felt such feelings. This was new to Him—astonishing in its
intensity and darkness. Thus as the sins of the world press upon Him in this
place called “Oil Press” he cries out, “Father, if thou be willing, remove this
cup from me: nevertheless not my will, but thine, be done” (Luke 22:42).
But the agony continues until the anguish and pressure is so
intense that blood presses through His flesh and great drops fall to the
ground.
He had instructed His disciples to pray, but instead they
have slept. Three times during this ordeal He returned to them and instructed
them, but the first two times, though they try, they fall asleep again. Thus
the third time when He returns He says, “Sleep on now, and take your rest: it
is enough, the hour is come; behold, the Son of man is betrayed into the hands
of sinners” (Mark 14:41).
Like all days, this first Maundy Thursday came and went. But unlike any
other day, this Thursday contained more love, concern, guidance, and admonition
than any Thursday before or since. In it Jesus Christ commands us to love, but
more than that He shows us love as He bears our sins so that
"With his stripes we are healed" (Isaiah 53:5).
The entire day can be summed up in four words that you
should repeat often this day and always:
Jesus Christ loves me.
(The full account can be found in Matthew 26; Mark 14; Luke
22; and John 13-17)
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
More About Easter Week
Wednesday is the only day of Easter week that is not reported on by the
gospel writers. But there are a few other things I’d like to point out
today. First of all, in all the four Gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke and
John), one-sixth of the text is used to describe the twenty-four hours
beginning with the last supper and ending with the burial of Jesus. This
means that if every day in the life of Jesus were this complete we
would have 180 volumes as large as our whole Bible (Vincent 1:433). Oh,
how Matthew, Mark, Luke and John wanted us to understand the
significance of the Atonement of Jesus Christ.
There are also many things I left out that happened on Tuesday. One I can’t neglect and that is the story of the Widow’s mite. We are told that Jesus was in the treasury which was a hall in the temple where gifts were deposited in thirteen receptacles shaped like trumpets. Jesus watched as one by one rich men paraded through the hall and cast their gifts into the trumpets, but then a poor widow cast in two meager mites. Not wanting this to go unnoticed by his disciples, Jesus made a point of it. “Of a truth,” He told them, “This poor widow has cast in more than all of the others. For they gave a little from their abundance, but she has given all she has.”
In contrast to this story we find another account concerning money. It
was also on Tuesday that Judas set into motion the plot to kill Jesus.
There is much irony in the very name Judas, for it means “he shall be
praised.” We are told that Judas had become offended because of the
Savior’s words (JST Mark 14:10) and so he went to the chief priests and
asked, “What will ye give me if I deliver Jesus unto you?” And they
agreed on a price of 30 pieces of silver.
Scholars and others have purported many estimates of what those 30
pieces of silver are worth in today’s money. I’ve found reports of
anywhere between $7.20 to $40,000. This tells us that no one really
knows for sure, but the fact that the chief priests later use the money
to buy a plot of ground to be used as a cemetery tells us that it was a
substantial amount of money. What is more important is that the 30
pieces of silver is fulfillment of a prophecy made in Zechariah 11:12 in
which we are told, “So they weighed for my price thirty pieces of
silver,” which in those days was the price that under the law of Moses a
man must pay to a neighbor if the man’s animal caused the death of the
neighbor’s slave. In other words, 30 pieces of silver was considered the
monetary worth to replace a slave.
The symbolism of this slave metaphor is profound and in many Bible
stories this symbolism foreshadows the “selling” of Jesus. For example,
it was Judah, one of the twelve sons of Jacob, who proposed and sold his
brother Joseph as a slave, and now it is Judas who proposes and sells
his brother Jesus for the price of a slave.
After the crucifixion, Judas regrets what he has done and returns the
money to the chief priests saying, “I have sinned in that I have
betrayed the innocent blood” (Matthew 27:4). But the chief priests
refuse (you can almost hear them laughing in derision) to accept the
money for the temple treasury because it is “blood money” and would
profane and desecrate the temple. The irony here is mind boggling. They
are too pious to accept “tainted ” money, but have no qualms about
murdering Jesus.
When they refuse the money, Judas throws down the silver, leaves the
temple, and hangs himself. So the chief priests are left with the money
and since they won’t put blood money in the treasury, they buy the
potter’s field. Of this part of the story Zechariah prophesies, “Cast it
unto the potter: a goodly price that I was prised at of them”
(Zechariah 11:13).
Pondering these stories leads all of us to the question,
“What is Jesus worth to us?”
Discovering the answer to that question is what Easter week is all about.
Tuesday, March 26, 2013
The Savior's Teachings on His Last Tuesday
Tuesday of that last week of the Savior's life began as Monday had with
Jesus and his followers passing by the fig tree. Peter, seeing the withered
tree, said to Jesus, “Master, behold, the fig tree which thou cursedst is
withered away.”
And Jesus responded, “Have faith in God.” And went on to explain that with faith whatsoever they prayed for would be given, but that when they prayed they should forgive others.
And Jesus responded, “Have faith in God.” And went on to explain that with faith whatsoever they prayed for would be given, but that when they prayed they should forgive others.
Upon reaching the temple, Jesus’
authority was challenged by the chief priests and elders, but Jesus sidestepped
the challenge and went on teaching the people in parables. As he told them of the wicked
husbandmen who killed the master’s son in order to take over the vineyard, you
would think the priests would have recognized themselves, but they were too busy
plotting and thinking up questions they think will make Him look bad.
One of them asks, if they should pay tribute to Caesar. In response he asks them to show him a coin. They produce a penny and he says, “Whose image is this?”
“Caesar’s.”
He answered, “Render therefore unto Caesar the things which be Caesar’s, and unto God the things which be God’s” (Luke 20:25).
The Sadducees and Pharisees continue to ply him with questions, each hoping that Jesus will say something to incite the Romans, or the crowd, or give them cause to arrest Him. The Sadducees, who don’t believe in an afterlife, ask about marriage in the next life. And a lawyer asks the famous question, “Which is the great commandment in the law?” Undaunted, Jesus turns this into a teaching moment instructing them to love God and to love one another.
In this way He continues teaching with parables but then laments over the fate of Jesusalem. Then once more drawing on the familiar words of the Hallel, Jesus testifies of his own death. But instead of repenting they argue with Him even about that. His response is simply, “I came not to judge the world, but to save the world.” (John 12:47).
Sorrow can’t help but fill one’s heart as we read these accounts knowing that Jesus Christ is offering them the greatest gift ever offered to mankind and yet their pride and selfishness blind them so that they reject Eternal Life in exchange for satisfying their vanity.
At this point Jesus leaves, but his disciples follow him and ask several questions concerning the temple. This speech is found in Matthew 24, Mark 13, and Luke 21, and is called the Olivet Discourse or by some the Little Apocalypse. He explains that there will be false Messiahs and that destruction awaits Jerusalem and warns them to beware and to watch themselves at all times. He then goes on to teach them the parables of the ten virgins and the talents and finishes by telling them they will be eventually be judge for their actions. And what will be the criteria? As always His instruction is simple and easy to understand: “Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.”
This brief retelling doesn’t begin to capture the depth and breadth of Jesus’ final teachings to the people on that Tuesday before His death. He knows what is coming and in love makes His last pleas for the people to repent and follow Him. But blinded by their sin the majority of the people refuse. Thus the irony begins to unfold; He will suffer and die to redeem the very sin they are at that moment committing if only they will repent.
One of them asks, if they should pay tribute to Caesar. In response he asks them to show him a coin. They produce a penny and he says, “Whose image is this?”
“Caesar’s.”
He answered, “Render therefore unto Caesar the things which be Caesar’s, and unto God the things which be God’s” (Luke 20:25).
The Sadducees and Pharisees continue to ply him with questions, each hoping that Jesus will say something to incite the Romans, or the crowd, or give them cause to arrest Him. The Sadducees, who don’t believe in an afterlife, ask about marriage in the next life. And a lawyer asks the famous question, “Which is the great commandment in the law?” Undaunted, Jesus turns this into a teaching moment instructing them to love God and to love one another.
In this way He continues teaching with parables but then laments over the fate of Jesusalem. Then once more drawing on the familiar words of the Hallel, Jesus testifies of his own death. But instead of repenting they argue with Him even about that. His response is simply, “I came not to judge the world, but to save the world.” (John 12:47).
Sorrow can’t help but fill one’s heart as we read these accounts knowing that Jesus Christ is offering them the greatest gift ever offered to mankind and yet their pride and selfishness blind them so that they reject Eternal Life in exchange for satisfying their vanity.
At this point Jesus leaves, but his disciples follow him and ask several questions concerning the temple. This speech is found in Matthew 24, Mark 13, and Luke 21, and is called the Olivet Discourse or by some the Little Apocalypse. He explains that there will be false Messiahs and that destruction awaits Jerusalem and warns them to beware and to watch themselves at all times. He then goes on to teach them the parables of the ten virgins and the talents and finishes by telling them they will be eventually be judge for their actions. And what will be the criteria? As always His instruction is simple and easy to understand: “Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.”
This brief retelling doesn’t begin to capture the depth and breadth of Jesus’ final teachings to the people on that Tuesday before His death. He knows what is coming and in love makes His last pleas for the people to repent and follow Him. But blinded by their sin the majority of the people refuse. Thus the irony begins to unfold; He will suffer and die to redeem the very sin they are at that moment committing if only they will repent.
Monday, March 25, 2013
The Savior's Last Monday
On
the last Monday morning of the Savior’s life, He and His disciples were
on their way to Jerusalem when the He saw a fig tree along the
path. Under the law of Moses trees growing “in the way” were common
property and anyone could freely partake of the fruit. In addition this
fig tree was full of leaves and fig trees normally produce fruit before
leaves. Being hungry, the sight of a fig tree with leaves meant food,
but when Jesus approached the tree He discovered it had no fruit and
said, “Let no fruit grow on thee henceforward for ever” (Matthew 21:19)
and the fig tree withered away.
For many this story is difficult to understand. Why would the Savior curse the tree just because it had no fruit? There are several answers. First, the fig tree that has leaves but no fruit is a symbol of hypocrisy just as people who create a self-image of righteousness but produce no righteous “fruits” are hypocrites. Thus by cursing the tree Jesus warns of the fate that awaits the impenitent and the hypocrites. Second, it was a witness to all who beheld the miracle that Jesus had power not only over life but over death. They had seen him give life by raising Lazarus from the dead, but now they saw that He also had the power to take away life. The lesson had to be taught, but Jesus teaches it in the kindest way possible by performing it on a tree and not a human being. Third, it teaches those who had eyes to see some important things about faith. On the morrow He will instruct his followers more about faith and this experience will help them understand what He is going to teach. It is also a foreboding of what is about to occur in His own life as He is about to die.
After cursing the fig
tree, Jesus moves on to the temple and as He approaches discovers that
it is polluted with moneychangers and animal vendors. Imagine the scene.
Thousands of people have come from far away to celebrate Passover and
to perform the rituals that are part of Passover. In order to do that,
they need to offer animal sacrifices in the temple, but traveling with
animals is cumbersome so they come intending to buy their sacrificial
offerings when they arrive. To accommodate them the enterprising vendors
have set up their stalls not just as close to the temple entrances as
they can, but in the temple compound. Men are shouting for people to buy
from them, and their competitors are shouting louder and longer to get
attention for their wares. Animals are bleating, bellowing, and cawing.
Animal waste is filling the air with noxious smells, and all around is
the chaos and confusion of an outdoor market in the height of tourist
season. But wait, there is more! The temple would not accept Roman
coinage because Roman coins which portrayed the image of Caesar were profane. Thus eager moneychangers are
on hand to change Roman coins for the “holy” temple coins, and of course
they add to the ruckus in an attempt to attract customers so that they
can also make a nice profit. In short, the sounds, sights, smells and
feel at the temple that day was anything but reverent and holy.
The interesting thing
about this story is that Matthew, Mark, and Luke all record how Jesus
chases away the vendors, but not one of them depicts Jesus as angry. The
anger is something we readers assume. But think about it. There are
probably scores of vendors and moneychangers at the temple and yet not
one of them fights back. If He attacked them with anger it would
normally incite anger in them and cause them to fight back. But instead they seem to leave without putting up a
fight. Could it be that because of the composed way He
disperses them, their own hearts are inflicted with guilt and they leave?They know what they are doing is wrong.
During the first year of
Jesus’ ministry He cleansed the temple and at that time declared to the
people, “Make not my Father’s house an house of merchandise” (John
2:16). This time, at the end of His ministry, He calls the temple His
house saying, “My house shall be called the house of prayer” (Matthew
21:13). But the next day, Jesus will condemn the people for their
wickedness and because of that relinquish the temple with the words,
“Behold, your house is left unto you desolate” (Matthew 23:38). This is
fulfillment of Jeremiah’s prophecy, “But if ye will not hear these
words, I swear by myself, said the Lord that this house shall become a
desolation" (Jeremiah 22:5).
About forty years from
the time Jesus proclaimed that the temple had been polluted and was no
longer His house, the Roman general Titus invaded Jerusalem and
destroyed the temple so completely that there was not one stone left sitting upon another.
This is amazing when one considers that some single stones of the temple
were about 67 feet long and 7 feet high and 9 feet wide. The pillars
supporting the porches were 37½ feet high. But a temple from which the
people have evicted God, cannot stand.
That Monday, those many
years ago, was memorable. Because the people refused to believe in Christ and bear the fruits
of righteousness, their beloved temple, like the fig tree, was destroyed.
Sunday, March 24, 2013
It's Palm Sunday
On the last Sunday of the Savior’s mortal life the disciples brought to
Him the donkey they had obediently obtained. As we talked about
yesterday, the riding of a donkey was symbolic of the fact that He was
King, but instead of a fine saddle of leather, gold and jewels that the
king of the land would have had, this donkey was outfitted in humble
cloaks from off the backs of the disciples—a gesture of love and esteem.
This being the beginning of Passover week, Jerusalem was crowded with
local Jews and thousands who had traveled from lands far away in order
to celebrate Passover at the temple. Word that Jesus, the man who had
raised Lazarus from the tomb, had come to Jerusalem spread quickly among
them and curiosity impelled a great multitude to gather to see for
themselves. Therefore, as Jesus rode down the Mount of Olives, crossed
the wadi Kidron, and then began the assent to the Temple Mount, people
thronged the streets to greet Him. Overcome with emotion many took off
their cloaks and laid them on the ground to make a path for Him. Others
cut palm branches, a symbol of victory, and waved them as He passed. And
those that followed Him and those He approached all began to cry out
saying, “Hosanna to the Son of David: Blessed is he that cometh in the
name of the Lord; Hosanna in the highest” (Matthew 21:9). Hosanna means
“save now,” and these words are part of the Hallel which was used in the
temple during sacrificial rituals to help the people remember that the
animal sacrifices they were offering were a semblance of The Sacrifice
that would occur when a Messiah atoned for the sins of mankind.
The Hallel consists of Psalms 113-118, which are recited not only during sacrificial rituals but on many other joyous occasions. The Hallel was traditionally recited as part of morning prayer services, and during the first night of Passover was part of evening prayers. Reading these six Psalms will help you feel the meaning of Easter, but there is one verse that is particularly poignant to me and illustrates the irony of what is occurring. Sunday the crowd praises Jesus and through word and actions proclaims Him their king, but on Friday they will cry out, “We have no king but Ceasar” (John 19:15). And in the Hallel we read, “The stone which the builders refused is become the head stone of the corner” (Psalm 118:22).
As the crowd shouts “Hosanna!” the Pharisees call on Jesus to rebuke the disciples for such blasphemy. But Jesus answers them, “If these should hold their peace, the stones would immediately cry out!”
As the procession slowly drew near to the city, Jesus wept, and said, “If thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy day, the things which belong unto thy peace! But now they are hid from thine eyes” (Luke 19:42). There is much debate over the meaning of the word Jerusalem, but some have said it means “Founded peaceful.” If that is the case, the Savior’s sorrow is even more meaningful. The city was intended as a place of peace and refuge for the House of Israel, but men had turned it into a place of iniquity. Thus great destruction, pain, and suffering await the inhabitants and Jesus prophecies of that impending doom while weeping. (Luke 19:42-44).
But the message is for all of us. God will save us from destruction. Even the stones of the earth know that. And the Savior was given us to “found us peaceful” in the midst of this world of chaos and iniquity. This is the promise that is ours—this “belongs to our peace” if we will lay down our cloaks on the path of righteousness and follow the Savior crying, “Hosanna to the Son of David: Blessed is he that came in the name of the Lord.”
The Hallel consists of Psalms 113-118, which are recited not only during sacrificial rituals but on many other joyous occasions. The Hallel was traditionally recited as part of morning prayer services, and during the first night of Passover was part of evening prayers. Reading these six Psalms will help you feel the meaning of Easter, but there is one verse that is particularly poignant to me and illustrates the irony of what is occurring. Sunday the crowd praises Jesus and through word and actions proclaims Him their king, but on Friday they will cry out, “We have no king but Ceasar” (John 19:15). And in the Hallel we read, “The stone which the builders refused is become the head stone of the corner” (Psalm 118:22).
As the crowd shouts “Hosanna!” the Pharisees call on Jesus to rebuke the disciples for such blasphemy. But Jesus answers them, “If these should hold their peace, the stones would immediately cry out!”
As the procession slowly drew near to the city, Jesus wept, and said, “If thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy day, the things which belong unto thy peace! But now they are hid from thine eyes” (Luke 19:42). There is much debate over the meaning of the word Jerusalem, but some have said it means “Founded peaceful.” If that is the case, the Savior’s sorrow is even more meaningful. The city was intended as a place of peace and refuge for the House of Israel, but men had turned it into a place of iniquity. Thus great destruction, pain, and suffering await the inhabitants and Jesus prophecies of that impending doom while weeping. (Luke 19:42-44).
But the message is for all of us. God will save us from destruction. Even the stones of the earth know that. And the Savior was given us to “found us peaceful” in the midst of this world of chaos and iniquity. This is the promise that is ours—this “belongs to our peace” if we will lay down our cloaks on the path of righteousness and follow the Savior crying, “Hosanna to the Son of David: Blessed is he that came in the name of the Lord.”
Saturday, March 23, 2013
Easter is Fast Approaching
If we had as much written about every
week of the Savior's life as we do about the last week of His life, we’d fill
the Library of Congress with just those books. So this week, the week before
Easter, I'm going to recount what we know about each day.
Six days before Passover, on the day
before the Triumphal entry (which is today), Jesus arrived in Bethany at the
home of the siblings Mary, Martha, and Lazarus. He often stayed with them and
his great love for them was made evident when He raised Lazarus from the dead
probably a couple months before this time. (See John 11:43.) When He arrived a
supper was made for him, and as we know, Martha was chief caretaker at that
event. It is easy to imagine her bustling around making sure everyone is
comfortable and has enough to eat. She must have been the consummate hostess.
But while Martha showed her love for the Savior by taking care of His physical
needs, Mary expressed her love by taking a pound of ointment of spikenard,
which we are told was “very costly” and anointed Jesus’ feet. The word spikenard
in Hebrew is nard and means “light.” In Greek the word for spikenard
means “pure and genuine.”
The amount of ointment is amazing.
Think of a pound of butter. No wonder John tells us that the house was filled with
the beautiful scent of the ointment. In a day when the stink of unwashed
bodies, rotting food, waste, and debris constantly accosted people, the fact
that this sweet scent filled the air must have been unforgettable. But instead
of enjoying the aroma Judas Iscariot, was displeased. “Why was not this
ointment sold for three hundred pence, and given to the poor?” (John 8:5), he
asked. A pence was a day’s wages for the common working man, which makes Judas’
concern understandable if one is only looking at the materiality of the
event.
But the Savior responds, “Let her
alone; against the day of my burying hath she kept this. For the poor always ye
have with you; but me ye have not always” (John 12:7-8). And Mark reports that
he says,“For verily she has come beforehand to anoint my body to the burying.
She has done what she could: and this which she has done unto me shall be had
in remembrance in generations to come, wheresoever my gospel shall be preached;
Verily I say unto you, Wheresoever this gospel shall be preached throughout the
whole world, what she hath done shall be spoken of also for a memorial of her”
(JST Mark 14:8-9).
The Savior’s words indicate that Mary
knew what was coming. She knows He is going to die and is anointing Him in
preparation for that death, but besides the anointing we are told that Mary
wiped his feet with her hair. The reverence, the awe, the love of that
gesture sink deep into my heart. This is an event filled with significant
symbolic meaning. In great reverence she anoints the Light of Life with
spikenard (a symbol of light) and wipes the ointment onto His feet with her
hair (anciently a symbol of life). In doing so, she is symbolically proclaiming
that He will die, but His death will give light and life to you and me.
Word spread quickly that Jesus
was in the area and large groups of people began to assemble. John tells us
that they came not only to see Jesus but to see Lazarus, the man who had been
dead and buried but raised from the tomb. Despite why they came, once they had
seen Jesus many went away believing in Him, and marveling at the things He had
done. This irritated the Chief Priests so much they counseled together how they
might put both Jesus and Lazarus to death and thus end all this talk of
miracles and messiahs.
As the Chief Priests went about their
devious plotting, Jesus walked over the mountain into Bethphage and the Mount
of Olives, and from there he sent two disciples into the nearby village
to bring back an ass that no one had ever sat upon. He told them that
as soon as they entered the village they would see the colt tied by a door.
Jesus warned them that as they loosed the colt, they would be asked, “Why
do ye this?” and they were to simply answer, “The Lord hath need of him.” Upon
hearing this, the man would readily agree to send the colt with them.
The disciples did as Jesus commanded and everything happened exactly as He told them it would.
The interesting thing about this account is that Jesus knew exactly where the colt would be found and even the words that would be spoken. Looking back on this experience after the crucifixion, the disciples could not help but understand that this was part of the plan that would bring about His death. He knew, when He asked them to go for the colt, what lay ahead for Him.
But there is more to learn from this account. An ass had specific symbolism that is important here. Horses were used by soldiers for warfare, but asses and mules were gentler animals and thus symbols of royalty. While history often shows us kings who are selfish and proud, the intent has always been that a king should be someone who loves, protects, and cares for his people. Thus by His choice to ride an ass, Jesus proclaims to all who have eyes to see that He has come not as a warrior who will save them from Roman bondage, but as a King who will save them from the bondage of sin. And just as the colt had never been ridden before, this type of King had never been known before.