Showing posts with label Jesus Christ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jesus Christ. Show all posts

Friday, March 24, 2017

Trusting God - an example from real life


•The life of faith

Six years ago, a planetary scientist and the director of a major astronomical observatory told his audience in University Heights, Ohio (my summary): “Looking at the world through science – whether through astronomy or quantum physics or biology – at bottom the universe is about relationships and that fact scares some people.” If we turn to Holy Scripture, the Bible portrays the creation of humanity as God’s desire to create a walking partner (explained shortly). Thus at bottom, the spiritual life is also about relationships.

In God’s relationship with the first man and woman (whose environment was described as a garden), they encountered God “walking in the garden in the cool of the day” (Genesis 3:8). The idea of walking together implies companionship, dialogue, mutual delight, and a shared responsibility for their surroundings.

Despite the fact that the first human couple sinned and strained the relationship between God and humanity, early on “people began to call on the name of the Lord” (Gen 4:26). Enoch “walked with God” (Gen 5:22-24), Noah “walked with God” (Gen 6:9) and Abraham “walked with God” (Gen 24:40). How can we walk with the Invisible One? The Book of Hebrews tells us (11:6,8-9 NLT):

[v 6] It is impossible to please God without faith. Anyone who wants to come to him must believe that God exists and that he rewards those who sincerely seek him. . . .

[v 8] It was by faith that Abraham obeyed when God called him to leave home and go to another land that God would give him as his inheritance. He went without knowing where he was going. [v 9] And even when he reached the land God promised him, he lived there by faith—for he was like a foreigner, living in tents.

Therefore, faith is believing in the existence of God (v 6), following the instructions from divine revelation (v 8) and trusting in the Lord as God (v 9). We would hasten to add, in the history of God’s dealings with humanity, God sent the eternal Word who was at his side into the world as Jesus Christ. Jesus said, “Believe in God, believe also in me” (John 14:1).

What does “trust in God” and “believe in Jesus” look like in real life? My wife and I are good friends of a couple who have three sons. Last week we attended the wedding of their oldest son. At the rehearsal dinner for the wedding, the mother gave this reflection. These are her exact words (used with permission):

Proverbs 3:5,6 says, “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, lean not to your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge Him and He will direct your paths.”

This was one of the earliest passages of scripture I had committed to memory. I believed it and knew it well. But as with most biblical truths, it’s far easier to acknowledge truth than to actually live it. This verse, along with countless others, teach the follower of Christ to commit or give over our fears and worries to Him. But yet ... why do we insist on hanging on to them? Simply put, I think it’s lack of trust, or still wanting to be in control.

What mother doesn’t pray for God to provide a godly wife for her son? This mom certainly did. When her son made it through four years of undergrad and then another two years of grad school emerging still a single man, she began to get a bit more frantic. So naturally, she prayed more earnestly. But to no apparent success. Finally it occurred to her, why not just give the whole thing over to God? Let Him take care of this marriage business. So she prayed, “Lord, I trust You to find the right wife for my son. I give up being the one to try and find her. I just pray what’s most important in my son’s life, that he loves You with all his heart, soul and mind and that he seek first You and Your kingdom.”

A very short time after committing my son’s future to God, both my husband and I received a phone call from our son. Remarkably he began the conversation ... “So .... there’s this girl I like...” Within the next few months they were courting, attending a sibling’s wedding and then planning their own wedding! 

This mom can only stand in awe at such a gracious God, and once again proclaim the verse she declares so often, “Now unto Him who is able to do exceedingly, abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that works in us.” Ephesians 3:20

Friday, January 9, 2015

Comes now a smiling New-Born Year

• The seasons of our lives

In western North Carolina along I-40 between Hickory and Asheville – in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains – there is a town of 16,800 people established in 1784. It’s called Morganton. On December 26 there my family made a rest stop and there I picked up the local newspaper. A music columnist – a pensive, wistful middle-aged man and local DJ – wrote:

• Life at a practical level

[Next week on New Years Eve, together we’ll raise a toast to another year gone by and sing Auld Lang Syne.] Perhaps there’s a lot to look forward to in a new year, but it’s the kind of song that reminds you that while we are letting go of the struggles, we are also letting go of the joys, too. Turning the pages of our lives is the mixed blessing that we are getting older and that time continues to roll on by. I can never tell if I’m sad or if I’m celebrating. . . .

We all join in together singing so strong, but we know that the passage of time makes us vulnerable to life and to ourselves. In a few days, we’ll sing it again and toast ourselves right on through the transition into a new year. We’ll toast the days gone by when we sing, and we’ll admit that we can’t let go unless we hold onto each other:

And there’s a hand my trusty friend!
And give me a hand o’ thine!
And we’ll take a right good-will draught,
for auld lang syne. [1]

Like the Old Testament writer, Ecclesiastes (the practical philosopher), this music columnist has a melancholy streak and desires to see life as it is, “life under the sun,” life at a practical level [2]. Among the observations of Ecclesiastes is a poem set to music by Pete Seeger in the late 1950’s. When issued by the American band, The Byrds, this song (now titled Turn! Turn! Turn!) reached #1 on the Hot 100 chart on December 4, 1965. Ecclesiastes noted:

      For everything there is a season,
      and a time for every matter under heaven:
      . . . a time to plant, and a time to pluck up what is planted;
      . . . a time to break down, and a time to build up;
      a time to weep, and a time to laugh;
      a time to mourn, and a time to dance;
      . . . a time to keep, and a time to cast away;
      (Ecc 3:1,2b,4,5b ESV)
 
• Life at an all new level

Yes, life has its seasons. Yes, life exhibits melancholy – the struggles and the joys. And, yes again, life is about each other and “a little help from our friends.” But the music columnist is forgetting something really important, and fortunately it was pointed out by a second man in another column in the same newspaper on the same date. Six and a half years ago, in a public ceremony, the second man was described this way: “He’s been an icon in our community for decades. He did so much for civil rights in this county [Burke County, NC].” [3] As you can tell by his participation in the civil rights movement, this second man has also experienced the seasons of life, the struggles and the joys, life in community, and “a little help from our friends.” And, interestingly, this second man has written for this small town newspaper for 62 years! From the vantage point of a long life, this is (in part) what he said:

We live in a common bundle. We do carry with us the capacity to help or to hurt. . . . Let me call your attention to the life of Jesus. He lived and suffered as we now do, and died while he was still a young man. His friends betrayed him. The officials lied about him. He suffered just as we suffer, but he bravely faced his death, and in the process, he won the victory for you and me. . . .

You need not troubled by the storms. . . For Jesus paid the price for the sins of the world. He was wounded for our transgressions, bruised for our iniquities, and by his stripes, we are healed. Jesus is the way, the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through the Son. Jesus washes away all our sins. [4]

God has come and met us in the seasons of life, in our melancholy, in our struggles and in our joys, in our attempts at life in community and in our seeking a little help from our friends. He has come through the humanity of Jesus. God the Father now calls us to a life truly worth living through his Son, Jesus Christ the Lord: forgiveness of sins and failings, help in our struggles, lasting joy in our happinesses, and eternal friendship with God our Creator who has now become God our Savior.

• The life of Abraham Lincoln and his seasons of faith
How does an eternal relationship with our Creator and Savior work out in the seasons of our lives?

A Sunday evening address by F.W. Boreham wonderfully captures how the search for eternal relationship with Christ finally ended in fulfillment in the life of Abraham Lincoln [5]. Boreham sees three stages in the development of Lincoln’s faith and describes each with a biblical metaphor. First, Lincoln climbed Mount Sinai with Moses. It began at a revival-style camp meeting that had gone on for several days with increasing fervor. At the final meeting the kneeling multitude sprang to its feet and broke into a chorus of shouts. A young man and a young woman separately leaped up and started singing the same song. A week later they were married and eventually became the parents of Abraham Lincoln. His father had the sad task of burying his mother when Lincoln was only nine. And father and son carried the coffin from their desolated cabin to its lonely resting place in those woods. But during those nine years his mother had a lasting impact on him. Says Boreham:

He never forgot that mother of his. ‘All that I am,’ he used to say, ‘my angel-mother made me!’ And the memory that lingered longest was the thought of her as she sat in the old log-cabin teaching him the Ten Commandments. Many a time afterwards, when he was asked how he had found the courage to decline some tempting bribe, or to resist some particularly insidious suggestion, he said that, in the critical hour, he heard his mother’s voice repeating once more the old, old words: I am the Lord thy God; thou shalt have no other gods before Me [Exodus 20:1]. He treasured all through life her last words:

I am going away from you, Abraham, and shall not return [she said]. I know that you will be a good boy, and that you will be kind to your father. I want you to live as I have taught you, to love your Heavenly Father and keep His commandments.

      Keep His commandments!’ It was thus that, in infancy, Abraham Lincoln climbed Mount Sinai. . . . As a result somebody said of him that he was the most honest lawyer west of China. . . . This phase of his spiritual pilgrimage was augmented; it was obliterated. Christ comes into the soul not to destroy, but to fulfil, the law. Lincoln’s earliest impressions imparted to his character a severity that contributed materially to its grandeur. [6]

Second, Lincoln climbed Mount Carmel with Elijah. On Mount Carmel, Elijah learned that his loneliness in the midst of unscrupulous foes mattered little as long as the God who Answers by Fire was with him (1 King 18). Lincoln learned the same lesson when, in 1860, he left his home in Springfield, Illinois as President Elect to travel by train to Washington, DC and assume the presidency. At that time, Lincoln received an American flag from one of his admirers. On its silk folds, beautifully worked in, he read these words:

      Be strong and of good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee whithersoever thou goest. There shall not any man be able to stand before thee all the days of thy life. As I was with Moses, so shall I be with thee. [from Joshua chapter 1.]

Lincoln traveled that train with two great missions in mind. The immediate mission was to preserve the Union; the remote mission was to abolish slavery. For both causes he was prepared to die. He learned of plots to assassinate him before he ever reached Washington. Says Boreham:

      But he never wavered; the words on the flag were constantly in his mind. At every wayside station [along the train route] crowds gathered to greet him. And [spiritual biographer] Dr. Hill points out that, in addressing each of these groups, he declared emphatically that he was going forth in the name of the Living God. . . .
      In accepting the Presidency, Lincoln was very sure of God. It meant two things to him. It meant that he would be protected, sustained, directed, and prospered in his lofty enterprise . . . But it meant more. He was intensely, almost painfully, conscious of his own disqualifications and disabilities. He was a back-woodsman on his way to the White House! But he believed that —according to the promise on the flag—God was with him. Like Moses, he would be clay in the hands of the divine Potter; and, by those Unseen Hands, he would be moulded and shaped and fashioned. [7]

Last, Lincoln climbed Mount Calvary with the Apostle John and, along the climb, Lincoln passed through Gethsemane, the Garden of Anguish. Boreham notes:

Mr. H. C. Whitney says that, during the war, Lincoln’s companions would leave him by the fireside at night and find him still there—elbows on knees and face in hands—when they came down in the morning. ‘Father,’ he would moan again and again, ‘Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me!’ [Matthew 26:39] . . . . The greatest grief of his life was the death of his son. As the boy lay dying, Lincoln’s reason seemed in peril. Miss Ida Tarbell has told the sad story with great delicacy and judgement. When the dread blow fell, the nurse and the father stood with bowed heads beside the dead boy, and then the nurse, out of her own deep experience of human sorrow and of divine comfort, pointed the weeping President to her Savior.
      The work that this private sorrow began the public sorrow completed. Lincoln had long yearned for a fuller, sweeter, more satisfying faith. ‘I have been reading the Beatitudes,’ he tells a friend, ‘and can at least claim the blessing that is pronounced upon those who hunger and thirst after righteousness.’ He was to hunger no longer. A few days before his death he told of the way in which the peace of heaven stole into his heart. ‘When I left Springfield,’ he said, not without a thought of the flag and its inscription, ‘when I left Springfield, I asked the people to pray for me; I was not a Christian. When I buried my son—the severest trial of my life—I was not a Christian. But when I went to Gettysburg, and saw the graves of our soldiers, I then and there consecrated myself to Christ.’ From that moment, Dr. Hill says, the habitual attitude of his mind was expressed in the words: ‘God be merciful to me, a sinner!’ [Luke 18:13] With tears in his eyes he told his friends that he had at last found the faith that he had longer for. He realized, he said, that his heart was changed, and that he loved the Saviour. The President was at the Cross! [8]

President Lincoln lived to see peace, Union and emancipation become triumphant. In the words of Frank W. Boreham:

His last hours were spent amidst services of thanksgiving and festivals of rejoicing. One of these celebrations was being held in Ford’s Theatre at Washington. The President was there, and attracted as much attention as the actors. But his mind was not on the play. Indeed, it was nearly over when he arrived. He leaned forward, talking, under his breath, to Mrs. Lincoln. Now that the war was over, he said, he would like to take her for a tour of the East. They would visit Palestine—would see Gethsemane and Calvary—would walk together the streets of Jeru——!
      But before the word was finished, a pistol-shot—the ‘maddest pistol-shot in the history of the ages!'—rang through the theatre. And he who had climbed Mount Sinai with Moses, Mount Carmel with Elijah, and Mount Calvary with John, had turned his pilgrim feet towards the holiest heights of all. [9]

Footnotes
[Title]
Comes now a smiling New-Born Year
To fill to-day with goodly cheer—
        An infant hale and lusty.
Upon our door-sill he is left
By Daddy Time, of clothes bereft
        Despite the season gusty.
If he be Churl or doughty Knight,
A Son of Darkness or of Light
        No man can tell, God bless him!
But be he base or glorious
Time puts it wholly up to us
        To dress him!
—John Kendrick Bangs (1862-1922), “The New-Born Year,” The Cheery Way: A Bit of Verse for Every Day (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1920), p January First.

[1] Jonathan Henley, “The vulnerability in another ‘Auld Lang Syne,’” The News Herald (Morganton, NC), December 26, 2014, pp D1-D2

[2] Minos Divine, Ecclesiastes or the Confessions of an Adventurous Soul (London: Macmillan and Co., 1916), p 27: “The melancholy man is always in danger of missing any good which redeems the ills of life. . . . This book [of Ecclesiastes] is a story of triumph over temperament. . . . There is an unmistakable note of joy in all the ‘still sad music’ of this book.”

[3] Julie N. Chang, “Gospel fest named to honor the Rev. McIntosh,” The News Herald, posted Monday, October 6, 2008. http://www.morganton.com/community/gospel-fest-named-to-honor-the-rev-mcintosh/article_373d18f4-0a5b-5569-841a-315397b1b716.html?TNNoMobile

[4] W.F. McIntosh, Jr. “Who can you trust in today’s society?” The News Herald (Morganton, NC) December 26, 2014, pp B1-B2.

[5] F.W. Boreham, “Abraham Lincoln’s Text,” Chapter 2 in A Temple of Topaz (New York: The Abingdon Press, 1928), p 22-32. http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/009977820

[6] Ibid., pp 26-27.

[7] Ibid., pp 28-29.

[8] Ibid., pp 30-31.

[9] Ibid., pp 31-32.

The pics were taken by the author at Biltmore Estate, Asheville, NC on 12/27/2014: Cedric's Tavern in Antler Village; Christmas bow and wreath near Cedric's Tavern; walkway with lights, Antler Village.

Friday, August 22, 2014

One God in Three Persons - Luke tells it like it is

• Come to the waters of the Jordan and see.

Don’t drink the water! In early August that warning went out to the 400,000 people in greater Toledo, Ohio’s fourth largest city. Toxins probably from algae on Lake Erie had fouled the water supply. Residents were ordered not to brush their teeth with or boil the water, because that would only increase the toxin’s concentration.

The governor of Ohio declared a state of emergency and state agencies worked to bring water and other supplies to the area while also assisting hospitals and other affected businesses. The governor told the public, “What’s more important than water? Water’s about life. We know it’s difficult. We know it’s frustrating.” [1] In a couple of days, the crisis abated.

“What’s more important than water? Water’s about life.” In biblical times water was crucial to physical existence. Rainfall and access to water determined the pattern of life, where settlements could be established and what sort of plant cultivation and animal husbandry could be done. At a more profound level, water is crucial to key teachings of the Gospel and spiritual life itself.

      1. Water shows: What is God like?
      2. Water shows: Who is Jesus Christ?
      3. Water shows: What must I do now?
      4. Water shows: How should I live my life?

Today we explore the first of these essentials.

• Water reveals the true God (Luke 3:21-22).

The waters of the Jordan River in Roman Palestine may seem to be an unlikely candidate to reveal anything momentous, magnificent, and profound. In the north, four tributaries form the river, which flows into Lake Huleh (7 feet above sea level) and then it descends into the Sea of Galilee and from there descends further still into the Dead Sea (1,292 below sea level). Between the Sea of Galilee and the Dead Sea it has 27 rapids (making river traffic prohibitive), swampy conditions at various points, terrific heat and (in biblical times) the presence of wild animals. [2]

But, as Luke chapter 3 tells us, it was here that – in mundane conditions, along the banks of the insignificant Jordan River – a lowly, rustic town-crier-like man, John the Baptizer, came as the “voice” spoken of in the prophet Isaiah chapter 40. John “went into all the region around the Jordan, proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins” (Luke 3:3). And the words of Isaiah (quoted in Luke 3:4-6) explain the mission of this voice:

The voice of one crying in the wilderness:
“Prepare the way of the Lord,
make his paths straight.
Every valley shall be filled,
and every mountain and hill shall be made low,
and the crooked shall become straight,
and the rough places shall become level ways,
and all flesh shall see the salvation of God.”

This “town crier” was insistent: turn away from your sins to a new lifestyle, be baptized in water, and get ready for the Lord to come and to bring God’s salvation. It is critical to note that, in this quotation, Isaiah uses two words for God: “Lord” (YHWH in the Hebrew, “Lord” in the Greek translation of the Hebrew Scriptures then in use in the Roman world) and God (Elohim in the Hebrew and “God” in that Greek translation, the Septuagint).

Luke tells it like it is. Now we must work backward in the Gospel According to Luke and fill in six parts of back story. Otherwise, we will miss the utterly profound moment that the waters of the Jordan will bring us. There are times when Holy Scripture admonishes us the readers, “Roll up your sleeves and put your mind in gear” (1 Pet 1:13 MSG). This is one of those times.

(1) Luke uses God and Lord (YHWH) in tandem:

      (Zacharias and his wife Elizabeth) were both righteous before God,
      walking blamelessly in all the commandments and statutes of the Lord (1:6)
     
      (Zacharias) was serving as priest before God . . .
      he was chosen by lot to enter the temple of the Lord (1:8)

(2) Luke adds a third element to the proper understanding of God. An angel tells Zacharias:
     
      your wife will bear you a son, . . .
      he will be great before the Lord . . .
      he will be filled with the Holy Spirit . . .
      he will turn many of the children of Israel to the Lord their God . . .
      to make ready for the Lord a people prepared. (1:13-18)
     
Integral to the working of God in the world is the Holy Spirit.

(3) And yet here in chapter one, Luke affirms one God: “turn many . . . to the Lord their God.”

(4) The distinctions continue in Luke chapter 1. An angel, Gabriel, is sent with a message to Mary (the cousin of Elizabeth): “you will conceive in your womb and bear a son” – thus, her son will be human. And yet because of the action of the Holy Spirit, this human son will also be called “the Son of the Most High,” “the Son of God” (1:31-32, 35). Mary, pregnant with this son, went to visit Elizabeth. And Luke says:

And Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit, and she exclaimed with a loud cry, . . . . “And why is this granted to me that the mother of my Lord should come to me? . . . . And blessed is she who believed that there would be a fulfillment of what was spoken to her from the Lord.” (1:41-45)

The Lord fulfilled his promise to Mary. This son in Mary’s womb is Elizabeth’s Lord, according to Elizabeth. Elizabeth says this while she is filled with the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is able to do what a person can do: convey ideas to the human mind. Furthermore, the son in Mary’s womb is not simply human and the Son of God, he is “my Lord.” If we know who this divine-human son really is, we will want a relationship with him. We will claim him as my Lord.

(5) The angel Gabriel stands in the presence of God and then is sent to Mary (1:26-27). This angel describes the action that will take place in Mary’s womb as follows, “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; therefore the child to be born will be called holy—the Son of God” (1:35). Of John the Baptizer, it is said that “the hand of the Lord was with him” (1:66). But Mary’s son is different than John. Mary’s son is the Holy One. He is the Son of God. Thus, in the Godhead there is the invisible God before whom angels minister. Next there is Holy One, the Son of God, who is visible to all because he has taken on human flesh. And then there is the personal power and hand of God at work in the world: the Holy Spirit, the one who comes not only with illocutionary force (personally conveying ideas to the human mind) but perlocutionary force (personally creating things and causing events).

(6) This human son – who is also the Son of God – was born. As we listen to Luke 2:8-11 telling the news, we need to remember that the personal name of God in the Hebrew, YHWH, is translated “Lord” in the Greek translation of the scriptures that is used throughout the Mediterranean. The evangelist Luke is writing in Greek:

And in the same region there were shepherds out in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night. And an angel of the Lord (YHWH) appeared to them, and the glory of the Lord (YHWH) shone around them, and they were filled with great fear. And the angel said to them, “Fear not, for behold, I bring you good news of great joy that will be for all the people. For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord (YHWH).

Luke very naturally refers to the Savior who has come into the world not only as Christ (Messiah, “Anointed One,” chosen human being) but also as the Lord (YHWH).

Come to the waters and see. It is now time for us to go to the waters of the Jordan River. John the Baptizer is there. Large crowds are there getting baptized. Next “Jesus then appeared, arriving at the Jordan River from Galilee. He wanted John to baptize him. John objected, ‘I’m the one who needs to be baptized, not you!’ But Jesus insisted. ‘Do it. God’s work, putting things right all these centuries, is coming together right now in this baptism.’ So John did it.” (Matt 3:14-15 MSG)

And then the most amazing thing happened. “When Jesus also had been baptized and was praying, the heavens were opened, and the Holy Spirit descended on him in bodily form, like a dove; and a voice came from heaven, ‘You are my beloved Son; with you I am well pleased.’ ” (Luke 3:21-22 ESV). Yes, there is one God. But in the fullness of God, the waters of the Jordan have revealed three persons: the one who has a Son (the Father), the beloved Son, and the Holy Spirit. Water, my friends, has revealed the true God before our very eyes.

A professor of English at Kentucky Christian University has illustrated this profound truth in a simple yet memorable way:

“One God, one God, three persons in one.” These words were chanted by my young brother, Jared. Every time he begins the last line of this lilt he holds his fingers in the air to signify the number three. As the incantation comes to a close, Jared brings his three fingers together to communicate to his listeners and onlookers the connection and unity of the Godhead. The three fingers are made into one before all who watch as a reminder that the One God is comprised of three personalities. At the tender age of three, I doubt Jared has ever uttered words such as doctrine, Godhead, or Trinity. However, in this simple child’s mind, the doctrine of the Trinity is understood perfectly. To him, and all his peers, the illustration of three fingers placed together as one describe the idea in its entirety. [3]

The waters of the Jordan tell us much more about God. First, within the community of three persons, there is relationship: from heaven the Holy Spirit comes upon the Son and remains; from heaven the Father calls the Son “my Son.” Instead of an impersonal, far-off mechanical being, there is a relational bond of persons who are both distant and near, transcendent and immanent. Second, within the community of three persons there is love, delight, appreciation, enjoyment, and fellowship: “You are my beloved Son; with you I am well pleased,” says the Father. Instead of unitary aloneness, there is self-giving, joyful communion. Third, within the community of three persons, there is communication: the Spirit comes, the Father speaks, and the Son hears. Instead of static aloofness, there is dynamic interpersonal interaction.

This unity of community is here with a mission. Jesus the Son, full of the Holy Spirit, goes to the synagogue in his home town, Nazareth, on the Sabbath Day. The Beloved Son is given the scroll of Isaiah, unrolls it and reads a portion. The Scripture he reads is from Isaiah chapter 61 and it says Luke 4:16-19):

      “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,
      because he has anointed me
      to proclaim good news to the poor.
      He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives
      and recovering of sight to the blind,
      to set at liberty those who are oppressed,
      to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.”

He gave the scroll back to the attendant. Everyone present at that gathering fixed their eyes on Jesus and he began by saying, “Today this Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.”

Have we thought about the message of Isaiah? Have we considered our spiritual poverty, our spiritual bondage, our spiritual blindness? Have we accepted the Son of God’s proclamation of good news, liberty, and recovery of sight? Have we received God’s gracious favor, kindness, and salvation – salvation from the one God in three persons: God the Father, Jesus the Lord (YHWH), and the personal, all-powerful Spirit of God?


[1] John Seewer, “Don’t drink the water, says 4th-largest Ohio city,” Associated Press, August 2, 2014. http://bigstory.ap.org/article/ohio-city-issues-water-warning-over-algae-toxin

[2] “Jordan River,” J.D. Douglas & Merrill C. Tenney (eds), revised by Moises Silva, Zondervan Illustrated Bible Dictionary, Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2011.