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August 31, 2021

8/31/2021

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New Meaning for an Old Symbol
 
        Now as they were eating, Jesus took bread, and blessed, and broke it, and gave it to the disciples and said, "Take, eat; this is my body."  And he took a cup, and when he had given thanks he gave it to them, saying, "Drink if it, all of you; for this is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins.  I tell you I shall not drink again of this fruit of the vine until that day when I drink it new with you in my Father's kingdom."  Matt. 26:26-29, RSV.
 
    Here we find Jesus supplying a new meaning for an old symbol.  The old significance of the Passover meal centered on God's deliverance of His people from Egyptian bondage (Ex. 12:1-30).  The new one has to do with their deliverance from sin through the sacrifice of Christ on the cross.  Thus the new meal symbolizes an even greater rescue than the old.
 
    As Jesus breaks the bread and passes it to His disciples, He says, "Take, eat; this is my body."  He could have added "Which will be broken for you" without doing violence to His intent.  He next picks up the cup, indicating that it is His "blood of the covenant" that will be poured out for the forgiveness of our sins.  Just as blood ratified the Old Testament covenant between God and His people, so will it now the new covenant prophesied in Jeremiah 31:31-34.
 
    Jesus tells His disciples in words that they could hardly fail to understand that He would die in our place, as our substitute.  Here is the foundation of the gospel.  He bore the condemnation that was ours so that those who accept Him can participate in the life eternal that is His.  He will die in our place.  His blood will be poured out for the "forgiveness of [our] sins."  For that we can praise God.  From that substitutionary sacrifice all other blessings flow.
 
    But there is something else of importance about Jesus' words on the Lord's Supper.  Once again He demonstrates, even though He is facing death, that He is in control of events.  He knows that He will rise to victory and that in the future He will celebrate with His followers when they drink of the fruit of the vine together in His eternal kingdom.
 
    Christians of all persuasions, although differing in the exact symbolic meaning of the elements of the Last Supper, have made it a major event in their worship experience.  Paul best captured the meaning of the service when he penned, "Whenever you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord's death until he comes" (1 Cor. 11:26, NIV).
 
    The new symbolism points in two directions.  Backward to Christ's saving death and forward to His coming again to establish the fullness of His kingdom.
 
    As we celebrate that Supper let us meditate on both the frightful reality that it symbolizes and the great promise it holds out to us.
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August 30, 2021

8/30/2021

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The Essence of Christianity According to Jesus
 
        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.
 
    It is one of those sermons that I will never forget.  I had been preaching on one of my favorite topics and concluded with one of my favorite verses: "By this shall all men know you are My disciples, because you keep the Sabbath.  By this shall all men know that you are My disciples, because you pay tithe.  By this shall all men know that you are My disciples, because you eat the right things."
 
    After the closing song a new convert ran up to me and excitedly wanted to know where that passage was.  He apparently wanted the perfect Adventist proof text so that he could run home and use it on his parents and friends.
 
    I noted to my somewhat disappointed friend that he hadn't listened to me very carefully.  Whereas some people would love to find my enthusiastic paraphrase of Jesus' words in the Bible, what He actually said is "By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another" (John 13:35, RSV).
 
    With those words Jesus has provided us with His personal definition of the essence of what it means to be a Christian.  The tragedy is that countless church members miss that text.  They are zealous about the doctrine of the Sabbath or the state of the dead, the true nature of Christ in His humanity, and the fine points of diet, but they fail in the one essential thing.
 
    Please note that I labeled such people "church members" rather than "Christians."  The frightful thing is that we can be members of the church without being Christians.  We can have all the right doctrines and be "faultless" in our health reform and other practices and still be lost.  In fact, some of those who are most excited about doctrine and lifestyle issues are "meaner than the devil" in their relationship to other people.
 
    Christianity is not exchanging a false set of beliefs for true ones.  Nor is it substituting abusive practices for healthier ones, even if the rationale for such changes is found in the Bible.
 
    The proof of Christianity is a personal love and care for others.  Christian doctrine and lifestyle issues find meaning within the context of that love.  But outside of it even those with the best doctrine and most faultless lifestyle do not fit within Jesus' definition of what it means to be a Christian.
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August 29, 2021

8/29/2021

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The Beginning of the "Farewell Discourses"
 
        When he [Judas] had gone out, Jesus said, "Now is the Son of man glorified, and in him God is glorified; if God is glorified in him, God will also glorify him in himself, and glorify him at once.  Little children, yet a little while I am with you.  You will seek me; and as I said to the Jews so now I say to you, "Where I am going you cannot come.' "  John 13:31-33, RSV.
 
    The departure of Judas tells Jesus that His end rapidly approaches, that the tsunami of events will soon overtake Him.  With the betrayer gone we find a turning point in the gospel story.  Jesus is now free to say things that He hadn't been able to when Judas was there.  He could not only teach more freely, but He must do so.  He had been with His disciples for nearly three years, and they hadn't learned enough.  They were not prepared for His departure.  And Jesus has just a couple short hours left to teach them.
 
    Here is where the "farewell discourses" begin.  From John 13:31 through the end of chapter 16 Jesus explains to them the fact that He is going away but that they can't follow Him yet.  In those chapters He provides what He believed was the most precious and important instruction that He could leave with His followers as He was facing death.  These men, though not ready, would soon be forced into assuming the leadership role that He Himself had provided up to then.  The great prayer of John 17 follows the farewell discourses.  All of this material appears only in the fourth Gospel.  How thankful we should be that God saw fit to inspire John's Gospel as the last of the four to be added to the New Testament's presentation of the life and teachings of Jesus the Christ.
 
    One thing to note about the instruction in the farewell discourses is that Jesus begins to talk about Himself in new ways.  An example of that phenomenon is His statement in John 13:31 that He will soon be glorified.  Previously His focus had been on the glory of God.  But with Judas on the fast track to betrayal and with Jesus' death, resurrection, and ascension to heaven to sit on the right hand of the Father now looming, the time to openly speak of His own glorification has arrived.  Verses 31 and 32 use the word "glory" five times as Jesus frankly tells His disciples that His hour has come in which He must leave them.
 
    His final words, recorded in John 13:31 through the end of chapter 17, must have provided food for thought as the bereft disciples pondered their new mission without an earthly Jesus to lead them.  With that reality we are in the same place as them.  So listen carefully as Jesus provides essential material for each of us followers.
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August 28, 2021

8/28/2021

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Tension Turns to Shock
 
    When it was evening, he reclined with the twelve.  And as they were eating, he said, "Truly, I say to you, one of you will betray me."  And they were very sorrowful and began to say to him one after another, "Is it I, Lord?"  He answered, "He who has dipped his hand in the dish with me will betray me."...Judas, who would betray him, answered, "Is it I, Rabbi?"  He said to him, "You have said so."  Matt. 26:20-25, ESV.
 
    If Jesus had startled His followers by taking the towel and washing their feet, His announcement that one of them would betray Him was shock on steroids.
 
    Prior to that Thursday evening He had indicated that He would die.  But never has He tied one of the disciples to that event.  For the first time He now states that a member of His own inner circle will play the part of betrayer.  The effect on the twelve is traumatic.  Matthew 26:22 tells us that they were "exceeding sorrowful" (KJV), "in great distress" (NEB), or "deeply grieved" (NASB).  No matter how one translates the Greek, it reflects violent emotion and shock.
 
    The revelation shakes up the disciples even to the point of self-doubt.  Each in turn inquires, "Is it I, Lord?"  And each expects a negative reply, as indicated by the New International Version's rendering: "Surely you don't mean me, Lord?" (verse 22).
 
    It is of interest to note that Judas must have covered his tracks quite carefully.  After all, no one asks, "Is it Judas?"  Yet Judas knows.  Caught off guard, he does not immediately join with the other disciples in inquiring if it is him.  But he soon comes to his senses, realizing that if he fails to participate in the query it will identify him as the culprit.  Thus he also says, "Is it I, Rabbi?"  Note that Judas does not refer to Jesus as "Lord," as do the other disciples, but rather as "Rabbi"--a term of address appropriate for any Jewish teacher and one not used at all by the other disciples in the first Gospel.
 
    Jesus does not respond to the question of the other disciples, but He indicates to Judas His awareness that He will indeed be the betrayer.  At that point Judas realizes that he has been found out.  He also knows that he will have to act quickly if he is to successfully carry out his plan.  It is about this time, John tells us, that "Satan entered into" Judas.  Jesus told him that what he had to do should be done "quickly," and Judas "went immediately out" to put his plan into action (John 13:27-30).
 
    We find a lesson even in this sad story.  The church has never been pure.  It has never existed with all of its members born-again Christians.  We need to keep courage when even leaders fall by the way or turn against the faith.
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August 27, 2021

8/27/2021

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A Neglected Blessing
 
        So after he had washed their feet, and had taken his garments, and was set down again, he said unto them, Know ye what I have done to you?  Ye call me Master and Lord: and ye say well; for so I am.  If I then, your Lord and Master, have washed your feet; ye also ought to wash one another's feet.  For I have given you an example, that you should do as I have done to you.  Verily, verily, I say unto you, The servant is not greater than his lord; neither he that is sent greater than he that sent him.  If ye know these things, happy are ye if ye do them.  John 13:12-17.
 
    One of the more curious aspects of the history of the church is that most religious bodies and Christians have placed a huge emphasis on that aspect of the Last Supper that deals with the bread and the wine but have almost totally neglected foot washing.  Yet Christ commands both.
 
    There are probably good reasons for that.  After all, the death of Christ and His shed blood are central to what Christianity is all about.  As a result, the broken bread representing Christ's body and the wine symbolizing His shed blood deserve an important place in Christianity.
 
    But there is something else of importance in Jesus' teaching and example.  That is the need for His followers to be spiritually ready to partake of the Communion symbols.  Just as Jesus' first disciples needed to humble up and examine their hearts before eating the Communion meal, so likewise modern disciples must prepare their hearts and minds for the experience.
 
    However, most of us moderns don’t like the idea of washing someone else's feet any more than Peter did.  I still remember the first time I attended a church that practiced foot washing.  My whole mind and being rebelled against it.  Yet I have discovered it to be a real blessing.  I have found it to be not only an occasion of service to another person, but also an opportunity to confess my wrongs and shortcomings to both God and other people.
 
    We all as humans have pride and we all have offended others in our families and in the church.  The foot-washing experience is a time to humble up and to follow the example of our Lord.  It is a time of spiritual renewal, a time to find others whom we have wronged, a time to make peace with them and our Lord.  In short, it is a season of spiritual renewal, symbolized by a mini-baptism.  Most important, it prepares us to sit at the Lord's table both in heart and mind as a healed community of sinners who have messed up our feet in the journey of life.
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August 26, 2021

8/26/2021

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Peter Gets a Lesson
 
        He came to Simon Peter.  He said to Him, "Lord, do You wash me feet?"  Jesus answered and said to him, "What I do you do not realize now, but you will understand hereafter."  Peter said to Him, "Never shall You wash my feet!"  Jesus answered him, "If I do not wash you, you have no part with Me."  Simon Peter said to Him, "Lord, then wash not only my feet, but also my hands and my head."  Jesus said to him, "He who has bathed needs only to wash his feet, but is completely clean; and you are clean, but not all of you."  John 13:6-10, NASB.
 
    Peter was uncomfortable enough having been shut out of the two most prestigious table positions.  And now he watched in horror as the foot-washing Jesus served one disciple after another.  But the crisis hit Peter as Jesus approached his own feet.  Flustered and not knowing what to say or do, he blurted out that he would never allow Jesus to wash his feet.  But, to put it mildly, Jesus asserted that what He was doing was essential, that if Peter would not allow Him to serve him, then he could have no place as His follower.  At that point the ever-verbal disciple, not knowing what else to say, declared that Jesus should wash not only his feet but all of him.
 
    Jesus responded that Peter didn't need a complete bath, but only a cleansing of his dirty feet.  Here Christ probably alluded to the custom of bathing before attending a feast.  When guests arrived they needed only their feet cleansed.
 
    We fail to see the importance and full significance of Christ's words if we view them only in terms of physical bathing.  They also contain a level of spiritual meaning.  Verse 10 reflects, by analogy, two kinds of spiritual cleansing.  The first is represented by baptism at the beginning of a Christian's life.  At that point a convert is forgiven of all sin and justified in the eyes of God.  Having been submerged in the watery grave of baptism, the new Christian is clean all over.
 
    But as new believers move through life in their daily business, they make sinful contact with the world and its contaminants.  Worse yet, they make mistakes and commit sin.  Such individuals have not apostatized or left Christ.  Thus they have no need of another full baptism.  However, so to speak, they have messed up their spiritual feet in their journey and need a partial cleansing from time to time.
 
    We should regard the foot-washing service in part as a mini-baptism.  It is a time in which individuals are cleansed and rededicate their lives to Jesus as the Lord of their lives.  They renew their vows of servanthood to the world around them and to fellow church members.
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August 25, 2021

8/25/2021

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Tension in the Room
 
        Jesus, knowing that the Father had given all things into His hands, and that He had come forth from God and was going back to God, got up from supper, and laid aside His garments; and taking a towel, He girded Himself.  Then He poured water into the basin and began to wash the disciples' feet and to wipe them with the towel with which He was girded.  John 13:3-5, NASB.
 
    Tension filled the room.
 
    The disciples, Luke tells us, had been arguing about which of them was the greatest as they journeyed toward their Passover meal (Luke 22:24).  Thus by the time they entered the room they were already agitated.  More than a bit of pushing and jostling occurred as they seated themselves.  Judas and John managed to score a victory over the equally aggressive Peter, with Judas gaining the place to Jesus' left and John to His right.  They all wanted the most important positions.
 
    The tension didn't dissipate after they took their seats.  After all, there was something missing.  It wasn't the water pitcher or the basin. They were in place.  But there was no servant to wash their feet.  On the dirt paths and roads of the day, a traveler's feet would be dusty upon arrival in the dry season and muddy during the wet.  Animal waste fouled every street and path.  As a result, on festal occasions a servant washed the participants' feet.
 
    But there was no servant.  As the  disciples looked around the table, each determined that he would not assume that humiliating role.  You could feel tension in the air as they made no move to serve one another.  Jesus, well aware of the dynamics, merely waited and watched to see what they would do.
 
    In that explosive context He finally arose, girded on the towel, poured the water into the basin, and began to wash each disciple's feet.
 
    What a demonstration!  Here He was, "knowing that the Father had given all things into His hands" and that He would soon be sitting at His right hand in heaven, yet playing the part of the servant.
 
    Jesus, sorrowful at the attitude of His followers, demonstrates the lesson that they need most.  His whole life had been one of unselfish service.  And now He had one last opportunity to demonstrate that principle in a way they would never forget.
 
    Lord, there is tension in my heart also.  I struggle between the principles of Jesus and those of the disciples.  Help me.
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August 24, 2021

8/24/2021

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The Final Passover
 
        On the first day of Unleavened Bread the disciples came to Jesus, saying, "Where will you have us prepare for you to eat the passover?"  He said, "Go into the city to a certain one, and say to him, "The Teacher says, My time is at hand; I will keep the passover at your house with my disciples.' "  And the disciples did as Jesus had directed them, and they prepared the passover.  Matt. 26:17-19, RSV.
 
    Jesus has been moving toward the cross ever since He first told His disciples about His coming death.  Events since His triumphal entry into Jerusalem have begun to accelerate.  The Jewish leaders have decided that the time has come to put Him to death.  And Judas has volunteered his services to aid them in their designs.
 
    The Passover is at hand.  But Jesus and His disciples will eat it on Thursday, the evening before the regular Passover meal.  In Jesus' case this is a necessity because He knows that He will be dead by Friday evening.  The Passover lambs will be slain in the Temple on Friday afternoon, the very time that He will also die.  That timing is significant, since, as Paul puts it, Jesus is "a Passover lamb sacrificed for us" (1 Cor. 5:7, Phillips).
 
    The fact that Jesus died at the Passover was no accident.  It was in God's plan from the beginning.  The Passover finds its roots at the time of the Exodus from Egypt.  God instituted it to commemorate the night of the Israelites' escape, when all the firstborn of the Egyptians perished.  Each Jewish family was to slay and sprinkle the blood on the doorpost as a sign that their house should be passed over when sudden death invaded the homes of the Egyptians.  The sprinkled blood would preserve the inhabitants of the house.  And so it was that the blood of the Passover lamb spared God's people (Ex. 12).  The New Testament views the Passover as symbolic of the work of Jesus.
 
    J. C. Ryle notes that "the intentional connection between the time of the Jewish passover and the time of Christ's death" is of great significance.  "We cannot doubt for a moment that it was not by chance, but by God's providential appointment, that our Lord was crucified in the Passover week....It was meant to draw attention of the Jewish nation to Him as the true Lamb of God.  It was meant to bring to their minds the true object and purpose of His death."  And it was meant to be a sign of the "redemption and deliverance from the bondage of sin, which was to be brought in by our Lord Jesus Christ."
 
    That fateful Passover is the pivot point of redemptive history.
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August 23, 2021

8/23/2021

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The Mary Choice
 
        When Jesus was at Bethany in the house of Simon the leper, a woman came up to him with an alabaster flask of very expensive ointment, and she poured it on his head, as he sat at the table.  But when the disciples saw it, they were indignant, saying, "Why this waste?"...But Jesus...said to them, "Why do you trouble the woman?  For she has done a beautiful thing to me....In pouring this ointment on my body she has done it to prepare me for burial."  Matt. 26:6-12, RSV.
 
    This story doesn't belong here in Jesus' very last entrance into Jerusalem.  It is out of place.  Matthew appears to have deliberately placed the account of the anointing between the plots of the Jewish leaders and Judas' offer to betray Jesus, even though he had to take the event out of its chronological setting to do so.  John 12 situates the anointing six days before the Passover and puts the triumphal entry the "next day."
 
    Yet Matthew does not include the story in the first Gospel merely to help explain Judas' actions.  To the contrary, Mary's anointing has a message of its own.  It is one of immense devotion that symbolizes her gratitude to Jesus.  In sharp contrast to the Jewish leaders' and Judas' responses to Jesus in the story's immediate context, Mary's demonstrates her love for the One who has done so much for her personally and who has brought her brother Lazarus back to life.
 
    Beyond that, the anointing is rich in symbolism.  After all, the very meaning of Messiah or Christ is the "anointed one."  Just as kings and priests received anointing in the Old Testament, so Mary anointed Jesus.
 
    Perhaps the most surprising part of the anointing story is Jesus' explanation that Mary's deed is to prepare Him for burial.  That statement indicates, once again, that Jesus is in control of the situation.  After all, customarily, bodies did not get anointed for burial until after they were dead.  Anointing was traditionally performed on corpses, not on living people, except in the case of criminals.  Thus Jesus' interpretation of Mary's act seems to assume (correctly) that His death will be that of a criminal whose body will be buried without proper ceremony.
 
    The stories of Judas and Mary bring us face-to-face with a crucial question.  Where do we stand?  Are we with the extravagant Mary, who selflessly gave her all to Jesus, or are we with the selfish Judas, who saw Jesus as a tool to serve his own needs?  That is not an easy question to answer honestly, because a Judas lurks within the skin of each of us.  Fortunately, a Mary also resides there.  I make the choice as to which personality will dominate my own life.
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August 22, 2021

8/22/2021

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Judas "Helps" Jesus
 
        Then one of the twelve, who was called Judas Iscariot, went to the chief priests and said, "What will you give me if I deliver him to you?"  And they paid him thirty pieces of silver.  And from that moment he sought an opportunity to betray him.  Matt. 26:14-16, RSV.
 
    The Jewish leaders were ready to move against Jesus, but they faced several problems.  First, they dare not risk open action because the masses are favorable to Him (Matt. 26:5).  Yet they are under the pressure of time.  After all, if they delay their move until after the Passover, Jesus will presumably leave the city and thus elude their grasp.
 
    Aid for their cause comes from a most unexpected source--one almost unbelievable: the defection of one of Jesus' 12 disciples.  Judas Iscariot agrees to work as an inside man for 30 pieces of silver, the price of a slave (Zech. 11:12).  He volunteers to arrange an opportune time for the Jewish leaders to arrest Jesus.
 
    The Gospels all report Judas' betrayal, but none of them provides a reason for the action.  In that absence, Bible students have suggested several possible reasons.  One is that Judas became disillusioned with Jesus when he discovered He was a man of peace rather than a military Messiah who could overthrow the Romans.
 
    But the only motive mentioned in the New Testament is money.  It is no accident that Matthew places the story of the woman who anointed Jesus' feet between the story of the frustrated plotting of the Jewish leaders and the story of Judas' volunteering to betray Jesus.
 
    The fourth Gospel helps us here.  It tells us that Judas was especially upset because of the cost of the perfume (almost a year's wages) and that he was stealing from the disciples' communal money bag, which he carried (John 12:4-6).
 
    But selfishness alone does not provide us with a sufficient interpretation for Judas' actions, especially since he still expected an earthly Messianic kingdom in which he would be a prominent leader.  It seems that the best explanation is that through betrayal Judas sought to force the slow-moving Jesus into exerting His power and setting up His kingdom.  Of all the possible constructions behind Judas' betrayal, this one best suits all the facts.  And it also explains why Judas committed suicide when his plans went wrong.
 
    Thought question: Am I ever guilty of pushing things a bit to get God moving in the direction I think He should go?
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