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The Greatest Miracle! (If I only remember to think of it!)

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Thoughts which draw me to Jesus, and to His cross

Put this altar outside the curtain which hangs in front of the Covenant Box. That is the place where I will meet you.  Exodus 30:6 GNT

Contemplation is that wisdom which makes man the friend of God, a thing which Aristotle thought to be impossible. For how, he said, can a man be God’s friend? Friendship implies equality. That is precisely the message of the Gospel:

But you may argue that the statement of Paul is too awful, when he says, whosoever eats the bread and drinks the cup of the Lord unworthily, eats and drinks judgment unto himself, and is guilty of the body and the blood of the Lord. Dear friend, you must not consider yourself so much from the standpoint of worthiness or unworthiness of your person as from that of your need, which makes the grace of Christ necessary. If you recognize and feel your need, you have the requisite worthiness and preparation.

It is not hard to see myself as a servant, a slave of God. And I resonate with Paul, as he refers to himself as a doulas – a fully owned slave. Not that I am a particularly good one, I am stubborn, and I don’t follow directions all that well. But God can use us, often despite our thoughts and actions.

That is amazing…

But Merton’s words this morning, I know they are based in scripture (John 15:15), they are still tough for me to work through. A “friend of God?”, even contemplating on that leaves me shaking my head for a while. My mind comes up with 1000 reasons Jesus wouldn’t befriend me. He has to love me, but “friends”? That seems too much, too overwhelming!

Yet that is what God wanted from the beginning, as He walked through the garden with Adam and Eve. That’s what the meetup with God was about at the Ark of the Covenant, and the wonder of the mercy-seat, where blood would cover the sins of Israel.

All done so we could know God is with us, as a friend. That is what Job sought as well,

I want someone to plead with God for me, as one pleads for a friend.  Job 16:21 GNT

And as it would be seen at the Ark of the Covenant, it would really be seen at the cross. As Jesus would tell the Father to forgive us..

He pleaded for His friends would be forgiven, to be restored to Him.

It is not a bad thing we struggle with this idea, though. That is where Luther’s quote come into play. We need to know Jesus makes this friendship possible! Even as we realize our sins have damaged it, for the moment. We can’t assume we deserve it. We know better. But we can rejoice in His actions to make it real, to make it true.

But He does all this, so we can be friends.

Amazing! This is the greatest miracle in all of scripture.

But Merton was right, we need to contemplate; we need to think through and work through and struggle with this thought. But we need to – it is true.

Thomas Merton, The New Man (London; New York: Burns & Oates, 1976), 12.

Martin Luther and John Sander, Devotional Readings from Luther’s Works for Every Day of the Year (Rock Island, IL: Augustana Book Concern, 1915), 400–401. 

The Great Apocalypse in upon us!

Devotional/Discussion thought of this day:

 50 Jesus again gave a loud cry and breathed his last. 51 Then the curtain hanging in the Temple was torn in two from top to bottom. The earth shook, the rocks split apart, 52 the graves broke open, and many of God’s people who had died were raised to life.   Matthew 27:50-52 (TEV)

In the midst of the most horrifyingly beautiful scene in all of scripture, as Jesus dies, crucified as he takes upon Himself all of the sin, all of the injustice, all that is wrong in you and I, and all of humanity, Matthew gives us one odd detail.

A curtain is torn in two, ripped apart in the temple.

And to those gathered in this Holy Place, what is behind the curtain is revealed.  It is unveiled.  It is an apocalypse – the unveiling, the revealing.

We fear that word for some reason, but what it means is simply that – the revealing, in this case, what is behind the curtain.  And the answer was nothing.  There was no ark of the covenant, no mercy seat, just an empty room, where blood people counted on to cover their sins, was poured down the drain.  Their sacrifices were revealed to be vain, and for those who trusted in their offerings, in the work of the priests who knew the truth, all of the empty liturgy that they took such pride in, and in the temple built to Herod’s glory, they realized their faith was misplaced.

But their cries for mercy, their prayers were answered, none the less.

For there was something else revealed – a few miles away, on another mountain, not just a apocalypse, but the Apocalypse, the power that caused the earth to shake, the rocks split apart – and God’s people who had died to rise.

God was revealed in all of His glory, the depth of His love for us unveiled, the greatest apocalypse man had ever known, even though they didn’t recognize it.

For it was God there, on the cross,  Jesus the one annointed, chosen, humbled, crucified, for the joy that awaited Him, the love so manifested so overwhelming.  He would die, for us, so that we would never be bound by sin, so that we would become the children of God, the prodigals returned home.  For that apocalypse, that revealing of the love of God, was described in another place,

12 Because we have this hope, we are very bold. 13 We are not like Moses, who had to put a veil over his face so that the people of Israel would not see the brightness fade and disappear. 14 Their minds, indeed, were closed; and to this very day their minds are covered with the same veil as they read the books of the old covenant. The veil is removed only when a person is joined to Christ. 15 Even today, whenever they read the Law of Moses, the veil still covers their minds. 16 But it can be removed, as the scripture says about Moses: “His veil was removed when he turned to the Lord.” 17 Now, “the Lord” in this passage is the Spirit; and where the Spirit of the Lord is present, there is freedom. 18 All of us, then, reflect the glory of the Lord with uncovered faces; and that same glory, coming from the Lord, who is the Spirit, transforms us into his likeness in an ever greater degree of glory2 Corinthians 3:12-18 (TEV) 

The veil that was torn in two, the veiled that was removed unveiling Christ, unveiling His Love, Unveiling His Grace…

He Has Risen, and we with Him…

Let’s Boldly go – as our Savior has gone!