Psalm 63
He is here. God is here. From a dry and thirsty place I long for his soothing, refreshing Spirit to overwhelm me. The Psalmist does too. I sense in this Psalm an intimacy between the writer and God, something I truly long for, have felt I admit at times, but right now, deeply long for with my Creator. I'm getting there I think. Even this Lenten Journey, like David as he wandered in a wilderness, is about seeking and opening and thirsting and longing. And knowing God is there rejoicing....He is here. I just have to be even more open to His Love, His Power, His Glory in my life. I long for that intimacy.
Psalm 98
The phrase "make a joyful noise" always makes me giggle a little, remembering some of the children's choirs I've had the privilege of directing. Noise it is! But God loves it! Singing...Roaring Sea...Clapping Floods...Singing Hills...All the world's inhabitants can't help themselves but to "make a joyful noise" in praise to the LORD who...
has done marvelous things.
has won the victory.
has shown his vindication.
has remembered his steadfast love and faithfulness to His people.
is coming to judge the earth with righteousness and equity.
Praise be to God for His mighty works! I will not let the seas and hills make noise without me! Praise the LORD!
Daniel 9:3-10
Well, at least it's not Ezekiel (see previous entries). But Daniel? These Old Testament Lessons are not for the faint of heart. I always read the Book of Daniel (don't even think about talking or preaching it) with fear and trepidation. It's a complicated book full of foreshadowing and prophecy like none other in the Old Testament. And it's hard for me to speak to a specific passage without feeling a little worry about not digging into the entire context of this book. All of it informs the rest and I don't want to misinterpret.
With that wild disclaimer, what jumps out to me first in the passage is this... confession. Utter humility in confessing on behalf of himself and a nation the "open shame that falls on us". This is raw admission of guilt, folks. This is what we have done God. We have not followed you as you asked. We have disobeyed your commands. You are righteous, God. We are filled with shame. You are a great and awesome God who has kept your part of the covenant. We are a shameful people who have not kept ours. You are merciful and forgiving, God. We are rebels and sinners.
And this passage, where it ends at verse 10, leaves the prayer of confession wide open. There is no God (yet!) saying "I show you mercy. I forgive you. I love you." And therein, is the core of the Lenten Season. We live in these days, the moments of confession, of wondering and waiting for a Savior who can finally forgive us. Am I in the spirit of confession, of admitting my shame, of laying it out there, of acknowledging my failure to God in order to be prepared for His full and final forgiveness of my sin that came when the righteous, great, awesome, merciful and forgiving God was willingly nailed to a cross to bear the burden of my shame and rebellion and sin?
John 12: 44-50
What hits me head on in this teaching of Jesus ... "for I came not to judge the world but to save it" is that it is the response to Daniel's prayer of confession on behalf of his nation that we just saw in the Old Testament lesson. Daniel confesses and I think that he and the nation believed that God's wrath would come down on them, that God, who has every right to, was going to judge and punish them. \
But not so fast. Years ticked by...God was waiting for His Time to be complete, to come near. And Jesus is the Answer to the confession of our hearts. He ~ God ~ does not carry judgement at the core of his being. Yes, he has the right to judge and will/does, BUT... by Jesus's own words, God doesn't ultimately desire judgement, but for all His people to be saved and live eternally with Him.
There's not denying that someone has to take the punishment for what we have done. God cannot let sin be. There must be consequences. But Jesus... our righteous, great, awesome, merciful, forgiving God... spread out His arms wide to take our sins on himself. He came to save.
Showing posts with label Gospel of John. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gospel of John. Show all posts
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Lenten Readings for Morning
Psalm 30
There's alot of people who don't like a structured reading or preaching schedule such as The Book of Common Prayer or the Lectionary (which is what I am using for my reading during this time), mostly because as they claim "it takes the Work of the Spirit" out of the work of the proclaimer. Well. This Psalm selection by those who select such things, aptly titled in my Bible Thanksgiving for Recovery from Grave Illness, could not be anymore from the Spirit as it is for me this morning.
I am home alone, on the couch, while my children and Hubby take a roadtrip to the farm. It's an adventure for sure, but I am certain it is not what my very tired Hubby longed to do on this snowy day. But he is so good to me. He didn't ask me if this was okay. He told me that he felt I needed the weekend to rest and work towards gaining strength. I am recovering from major surgery six weeks ago, a surgery that we hope is the next big step in how God is healing my body and spirit.
I don't know if David the Psalmist ever suffered from grave illness. He suffered from alot of things so I suppose this could be prayed on his own behalf. But that is hardly the point. The point is that this Psalm, one I had forgotten was here long ago, touches me deeply this morning, a word from the Holy Spirit, that indeed He, the Giver of Life who has the Power to Restore Life, is healing me.
I've prayed for healing for years from the pain and sorrow and weariness that comes from chronic illness. I've knelt at altars sobbing, begging. I've been surrounded by pastors as they laid hands on me. I've been anointed with oil. Prayed over by pastors from Africa, who know how to touch heaven even from the depths of hell. I have also watched as people are miraculously, instantly healed from disease and pain. I've walked with friends and parishioners as well, as their healing became full. I have prayed and begged for healing, and promised God that He would get all the glory for healing. I have done it for others and I have done it for myself.
Sometimes God heals as we hope he will. And sometimes He has other plans that we can't see or even begin to understand. This Psalm is a prayer of thanksgiving and so beautiful, and truly a help in a time of healing for me, as I seek God's peace and joyy in the middle of it all.
And verse 5 is the core of this passage to me, speaking of how really short-lived illness is in the whole scheme of things. Illness doesn't mean that God is angry with me but essentially, the need for healing comes out of God's justice for the whole human race. God wouldn't be angry had we not sinned in the first place. And healing would not be needed in this world had we not sinned in the first place. God is angry because of our sin, and one of the consequences of our fallenness is disease. God's healing is a sign of God's favor, undeserved in its full essence. So I can beg for it, and make all sorts of promises, but I really, in the whole of it, deserve nothing but what I get. None of us do. The fact that God shows His Favor at all to this obedient generation shows God's true character.
The Psalmist so beautiful sings:
Sing praises to the LORD, O you his faithful ones.
Give thanks to His Holy Name. (4)
For his anger is but for a moment. His Favor is for a lifetime. (5)
And here's the thankful part, where we shout for joy regardless of our present state:
You have turned my mourning into dancing.
You have taken off my sackcloth and clothed me with joy,
so that my soul may praise you and not be silent.
O LORD, I will give thanks to you forever.
Writers of Scripture since have echoed this sentiment... my circumstances do not define the need to give thanks.
Psalm 32
And just two psalms later there is this... a psalm that expresses the freedome and lightheartedness in the greatest healing of all, that of the clean heart that comes from humble confession and utter forgiveness. I have a hard time reading this Psalm as it was originally presented, by those looking still, longing for the Messiah who would set things right. It was hundreds of years yet until the Jesus we know as the Ultimate Forgiver was born.
But still, this writing expresses the central FACT of forgiveness. When I am silent, bearing the weight of the sins I have committed, my body literally groans and wastes away (4) from the heaviness of it all. It is in the 'acknowledging' of sin (5), in not hiding it anymore, in confessions, that the weight of guilt has the possibility of going away through the forgiveness of God.
Don't be stubborn and hang onto the things that should be confessed to God. It's not good for me or anyone. Confess, and I will "find my hiding place" (7). I will be delivered. (7). I will shout for joy. (11)
Ezekiel 39:21-29
Ezekiel again? What are they trying to do to me? The contrast for Israel between exile and deliverance is fairly constant in their history. And God always come through, keeping his promise to "restore the fortunes of Jacob, and have mercy on the whole house of Israel" (25). God is so faithful. How can anyone not see it? People cry out at what a vengeful God He is, how horrible that someone might actually suffer the consequences of their actions. God is an awful God, isn't he? Who would want to be loyal, to trust a God who gets angry?
Israel certainly suffered and felt that way ...exile, captivity, slavery, wandering, and on and on. And God could have delivered them from it all, but really, would that have helped? Do we need to sometimes go through stuff so we see God's mercy has clearer, truer? Do we need to suffer some so we understand the grace of God? Would we appreciate His restoring power, His deliverance, His Spirit upon us (29) if it weren't for the times of exile?
John 17: 20-26
Jesus continues to pray like the priest/pastor that He is, this time, pouring out His requests to the Father for those who do not yet know the Truth. Through Jesus' life and death, He left behind the potential for us on earth to live as one people, in unity. He prepared the potential believers for glory. He longed in the deepest of His being as expressed in His interceding prayer, that every single person "may be with me where I am" (24). He knew where he was going, what He was walking through, and what the final result would be. And He wanted that result for us, His brothers and sisters, too.
In this prayer, Jesus prayed FOR ME. He prayed for everyone who reads this. He prayed for those who do not yet know who He is, that His Name would be made known to all, so that all could be saved.
He prayed FOR ME.
There's alot of people who don't like a structured reading or preaching schedule such as The Book of Common Prayer or the Lectionary (which is what I am using for my reading during this time), mostly because as they claim "it takes the Work of the Spirit" out of the work of the proclaimer. Well. This Psalm selection by those who select such things, aptly titled in my Bible Thanksgiving for Recovery from Grave Illness, could not be anymore from the Spirit as it is for me this morning.
I am home alone, on the couch, while my children and Hubby take a roadtrip to the farm. It's an adventure for sure, but I am certain it is not what my very tired Hubby longed to do on this snowy day. But he is so good to me. He didn't ask me if this was okay. He told me that he felt I needed the weekend to rest and work towards gaining strength. I am recovering from major surgery six weeks ago, a surgery that we hope is the next big step in how God is healing my body and spirit.
I don't know if David the Psalmist ever suffered from grave illness. He suffered from alot of things so I suppose this could be prayed on his own behalf. But that is hardly the point. The point is that this Psalm, one I had forgotten was here long ago, touches me deeply this morning, a word from the Holy Spirit, that indeed He, the Giver of Life who has the Power to Restore Life, is healing me.
I've prayed for healing for years from the pain and sorrow and weariness that comes from chronic illness. I've knelt at altars sobbing, begging. I've been surrounded by pastors as they laid hands on me. I've been anointed with oil. Prayed over by pastors from Africa, who know how to touch heaven even from the depths of hell. I have also watched as people are miraculously, instantly healed from disease and pain. I've walked with friends and parishioners as well, as their healing became full. I have prayed and begged for healing, and promised God that He would get all the glory for healing. I have done it for others and I have done it for myself.
Sometimes God heals as we hope he will. And sometimes He has other plans that we can't see or even begin to understand. This Psalm is a prayer of thanksgiving and so beautiful, and truly a help in a time of healing for me, as I seek God's peace and joyy in the middle of it all.
And verse 5 is the core of this passage to me, speaking of how really short-lived illness is in the whole scheme of things. Illness doesn't mean that God is angry with me but essentially, the need for healing comes out of God's justice for the whole human race. God wouldn't be angry had we not sinned in the first place. And healing would not be needed in this world had we not sinned in the first place. God is angry because of our sin, and one of the consequences of our fallenness is disease. God's healing is a sign of God's favor, undeserved in its full essence. So I can beg for it, and make all sorts of promises, but I really, in the whole of it, deserve nothing but what I get. None of us do. The fact that God shows His Favor at all to this obedient generation shows God's true character.
The Psalmist so beautiful sings:
Sing praises to the LORD, O you his faithful ones.
Give thanks to His Holy Name. (4)
For his anger is but for a moment. His Favor is for a lifetime. (5)
And here's the thankful part, where we shout for joy regardless of our present state:
You have turned my mourning into dancing.
You have taken off my sackcloth and clothed me with joy,
so that my soul may praise you and not be silent.
O LORD, I will give thanks to you forever.
Writers of Scripture since have echoed this sentiment... my circumstances do not define the need to give thanks.
Psalm 32
And just two psalms later there is this... a psalm that expresses the freedome and lightheartedness in the greatest healing of all, that of the clean heart that comes from humble confession and utter forgiveness. I have a hard time reading this Psalm as it was originally presented, by those looking still, longing for the Messiah who would set things right. It was hundreds of years yet until the Jesus we know as the Ultimate Forgiver was born.
But still, this writing expresses the central FACT of forgiveness. When I am silent, bearing the weight of the sins I have committed, my body literally groans and wastes away (4) from the heaviness of it all. It is in the 'acknowledging' of sin (5), in not hiding it anymore, in confessions, that the weight of guilt has the possibility of going away through the forgiveness of God.
Don't be stubborn and hang onto the things that should be confessed to God. It's not good for me or anyone. Confess, and I will "find my hiding place" (7). I will be delivered. (7). I will shout for joy. (11)
Ezekiel 39:21-29
Ezekiel again? What are they trying to do to me? The contrast for Israel between exile and deliverance is fairly constant in their history. And God always come through, keeping his promise to "restore the fortunes of Jacob, and have mercy on the whole house of Israel" (25). God is so faithful. How can anyone not see it? People cry out at what a vengeful God He is, how horrible that someone might actually suffer the consequences of their actions. God is an awful God, isn't he? Who would want to be loyal, to trust a God who gets angry?
Israel certainly suffered and felt that way ...exile, captivity, slavery, wandering, and on and on. And God could have delivered them from it all, but really, would that have helped? Do we need to sometimes go through stuff so we see God's mercy has clearer, truer? Do we need to suffer some so we understand the grace of God? Would we appreciate His restoring power, His deliverance, His Spirit upon us (29) if it weren't for the times of exile?
John 17: 20-26
Jesus continues to pray like the priest/pastor that He is, this time, pouring out His requests to the Father for those who do not yet know the Truth. Through Jesus' life and death, He left behind the potential for us on earth to live as one people, in unity. He prepared the potential believers for glory. He longed in the deepest of His being as expressed in His interceding prayer, that every single person "may be with me where I am" (24). He knew where he was going, what He was walking through, and what the final result would be. And He wanted that result for us, His brothers and sisters, too.
In this prayer, Jesus prayed FOR ME. He prayed for everyone who reads this. He prayed for those who do not yet know who He is, that His Name would be made known to all, so that all could be saved.
He prayed FOR ME.
Friday, February 19, 2010
Lenten Readings for Morning
Psalm 95
I can just hear the faith community gathered singing these words at the top of their lungs. Oh to be caught up with your church family praising God unabashedly, with power, and meaning it! Do we worship this way anymore? Truly? Would we as people be willing to just shout out these words without regard of what people around us think? And if we did, would we mean the very words we say? Surely, we are not performing for God and others...are we? Are we, without reserve, truly worshipping?
Let us make a joyful NOISE to HIM with songs of praise! (2)
Let us come before Him ~ first ~ with THANKSGIVING on our lips!
Let us worship and bow low, kneel before the One Who Made Us! (6)
Why would we do this?
For the LORD is a GREAT GOD! (3)
For the LORD is a GREAT KING above all others!
He holds the lowest and highest places of the earth in His Hands! (4)
He owns the sea and dry land... after all, He created it! (5)
He is our Creator! He is Our God!
Who are we?
We are His Creation.
We are the sheep of His pasture. (7)
O that today I will listen to His Voice! (7)
Psalm 31
When David wrote and sang this song, he was under alot of stress. He wanted God to listen. He wanted God to rescue him. He wanted God to protect him and save him. He wanted God to show His Grace.
David is sad...exhausted...weak...rejected...broken...paranoid...fearful.
Oh, how I can relate.
But after he pours out his heart and requests to God, he doesn't just lie down and expect God to make everything perfect right then and there. What he does next is remarkable... (v. 14)
Calmly. Powerfully. Wholly.
BUT.
I put my trust in you, O LORD.
I say, "you are my God".
My times are in your hand. (15)
O How ABUNDANT is your goodness.
O What You have accomplished for those who take refuge in you.
You hide us in the shelter of your just being here. You hold us safe. (20)
BLESSED be the LORD, who wondrously shows his everlasting love to me.
Deliver me, God, from the ones who want to hurt me.
Let your face shine on me, your servant.
Save me in your steadfast love.
Don't let me be put to shame, O LORD. (16)
David doesn't just cry out with his fears and frustrations and then gives up. David cries out knowing Who God is to Him... God is Good. God is Safe. God is Grace. God is Love. That is how David lived through the stressful times. I must do that too.
Ezekiel 18: 1-4; 25-32
The Book of Ezekiel does not record the cheeriest of stuff. In fact, it is the only book in the Bible that I haven't made it through (and there are many that have been read dozens of time). It's that icky. And frankly, even in reading this passage, I still don't get it.
What is this meant to say to me in this Season of Lent?
This passage, on the surface (which is how I am reading it for these writings... I am not researching the depths I am sure are contained in all these passages, but rather speaking of what I see in light of my life circumstances and season at this moment) talks about (gasp...sputter)
...the unfairness of life. Or more specifically, is God unfair in the way he treats people? Treading lightly here, the complaint (v. 25-26) is that when the righteous turn away they are punished for their sings, but when the wicked turn turn away, they are saved from their sins.
Seems, yes, on the surface to have an element of unfairness there. But...
is it really that way? Is God an unfair judge? Or is he just saying plainly (v. 31) "Don't sin. Stop committing the wrong things. Get yourself a new heart, a new spirit and wow... gasp...sputter...you won't have anything to worry about."
To know God means that unfairness doesn't exist for Him, in His will. He doesn't like the punishing anymore than He likes having to be the judge. If we could just face the fact that we need a new heart and new spirit to really know the God who wants to embrace us all, then we wouldn't have to worry about God being unfair at all, but rather bask in His love for always.
John 17: 9-19
Jesus continues to pray in this passage, for his closest friends and disciples. He loves them and begs God to protect them in the hard road ahead. Jesus won't be there anymore to watch out for them, speak for them, correct and discipline them. Jesus asks his Father to help them through, because the world doesn't accept their different way any longer. He prays for their sanctification, for them to be set apart in a new way so they can fulfill the calling on their lives.
These words of Jesus touch me to the core of who I am as a person called into ministry. That Jesus in the middle of what he knew were his last days...last words...would cry out on behalf of the Beloved who have given up their lives in the world really makes me realize that Jesus knew...he knows... what we all go through as followers of Christ. He knew it would be hard. He expected nothing less than hardship. But he also expected the walk to be filled with the presence of God at every turn. Thanks be to God for His calling on my life, and for His presence as I try to walk in obedience to this call, and for Jesus' interceding prayers on my behalf.
I can just hear the faith community gathered singing these words at the top of their lungs. Oh to be caught up with your church family praising God unabashedly, with power, and meaning it! Do we worship this way anymore? Truly? Would we as people be willing to just shout out these words without regard of what people around us think? And if we did, would we mean the very words we say? Surely, we are not performing for God and others...are we? Are we, without reserve, truly worshipping?
Let us make a joyful NOISE to HIM with songs of praise! (2)
Let us come before Him ~ first ~ with THANKSGIVING on our lips!
Let us worship and bow low, kneel before the One Who Made Us! (6)
Why would we do this?
For the LORD is a GREAT GOD! (3)
For the LORD is a GREAT KING above all others!
He holds the lowest and highest places of the earth in His Hands! (4)
He owns the sea and dry land... after all, He created it! (5)
He is our Creator! He is Our God!
Who are we?
We are His Creation.
We are the sheep of His pasture. (7)
O that today I will listen to His Voice! (7)
Psalm 31
When David wrote and sang this song, he was under alot of stress. He wanted God to listen. He wanted God to rescue him. He wanted God to protect him and save him. He wanted God to show His Grace.
David is sad...exhausted...weak...rejected...broken...paranoid...fearful.
Oh, how I can relate.
But after he pours out his heart and requests to God, he doesn't just lie down and expect God to make everything perfect right then and there. What he does next is remarkable... (v. 14)
Calmly. Powerfully. Wholly.
BUT.
I put my trust in you, O LORD.
I say, "you are my God".
My times are in your hand. (15)
O How ABUNDANT is your goodness.
O What You have accomplished for those who take refuge in you.
You hide us in the shelter of your just being here. You hold us safe. (20)
BLESSED be the LORD, who wondrously shows his everlasting love to me.
Deliver me, God, from the ones who want to hurt me.
Let your face shine on me, your servant.
Save me in your steadfast love.
Don't let me be put to shame, O LORD. (16)
David doesn't just cry out with his fears and frustrations and then gives up. David cries out knowing Who God is to Him... God is Good. God is Safe. God is Grace. God is Love. That is how David lived through the stressful times. I must do that too.
Ezekiel 18: 1-4; 25-32
The Book of Ezekiel does not record the cheeriest of stuff. In fact, it is the only book in the Bible that I haven't made it through (and there are many that have been read dozens of time). It's that icky. And frankly, even in reading this passage, I still don't get it.
What is this meant to say to me in this Season of Lent?
This passage, on the surface (which is how I am reading it for these writings... I am not researching the depths I am sure are contained in all these passages, but rather speaking of what I see in light of my life circumstances and season at this moment) talks about (gasp...sputter)
...the unfairness of life. Or more specifically, is God unfair in the way he treats people? Treading lightly here, the complaint (v. 25-26) is that when the righteous turn away they are punished for their sings, but when the wicked turn turn away, they are saved from their sins.
Seems, yes, on the surface to have an element of unfairness there. But...
is it really that way? Is God an unfair judge? Or is he just saying plainly (v. 31) "Don't sin. Stop committing the wrong things. Get yourself a new heart, a new spirit and wow... gasp...sputter...you won't have anything to worry about."
To know God means that unfairness doesn't exist for Him, in His will. He doesn't like the punishing anymore than He likes having to be the judge. If we could just face the fact that we need a new heart and new spirit to really know the God who wants to embrace us all, then we wouldn't have to worry about God being unfair at all, but rather bask in His love for always.
John 17: 9-19
Jesus continues to pray in this passage, for his closest friends and disciples. He loves them and begs God to protect them in the hard road ahead. Jesus won't be there anymore to watch out for them, speak for them, correct and discipline them. Jesus asks his Father to help them through, because the world doesn't accept their different way any longer. He prays for their sanctification, for them to be set apart in a new way so they can fulfill the calling on their lives.
These words of Jesus touch me to the core of who I am as a person called into ministry. That Jesus in the middle of what he knew were his last days...last words...would cry out on behalf of the Beloved who have given up their lives in the world really makes me realize that Jesus knew...he knows... what we all go through as followers of Christ. He knew it would be hard. He expected nothing less than hardship. But he also expected the walk to be filled with the presence of God at every turn. Thanks be to God for His calling on my life, and for His presence as I try to walk in obedience to this call, and for Jesus' interceding prayers on my behalf.
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Lent Readings for the morning: Thursday, February 18, 2010
Psalm 37: 1-18
Verses 4-5 of this passage has been a favorite of mine from long ago... trust in the Lord and do good; take delight in the LORD and he will give you the desires of your heart. It was a life-altering thought some nearly 20 years ago when I discovered that this does mean "pray hard and God will give you what you want, but rather, make your desires parallel to what God wants for you and it will all be right".
But even further, this reading forces me to look at my choices, that of the righteous person versus the wicked. I may not see the wicked way in me, but God does and He speaks to that by admonishing me to "trust in Him"..."do not fret"..."be still before the LORD"..."refrain from anger"..."wait upon the LORD"..."be meek"..."be content with little"...
ALL this says is that my focus must not be on making things right by forcing those who might not have my best interests at heart (or maybe have evil intentions) ~ justice for the sake of my own redemption ~ but on trusting that the LORD will "uphold the righteous"..."cause wrongdoers to wither like the grass"..."make vindication shine like a light"..."cut off the wicked".
See, the LORD makes my job easy. He makes trusting Him easy compared to His job of justice and vindication for what is evil and wrong with the world.
Am I truly delighting myself in the LORD?
Habakkuk 3:1-18
This is one of the most marked up chapters in my Bible. The Prophet Habakkuk prays earnestly to God, declaring His glory and power, honoring God's desire for discipline among His people, and the need of God to display His anger when He sees people doing what they do and not following Him. His anger comes NOT because he's plain mad, but because He's sad that we do these things to ourselves. His anger is what saves us. And even further, the words of verse 17 and following, words of trust in the middle of trouble, words of joy in the middle of poverty:
Though the fig tree does not blossom, and not fruit is on the vines;
though the produce of the olive tree fails and the fields yield no food;
though the flock is cut off from the fold and there is no herd in the stalls,
YET I will REJOICE in the LORD!!!!
I will exult in the God of my salvation.
God the LORD is my strength;
he makes my feet like the feet of a deer, and makes me tread upon the heights.
To the God who is able to bring rejoicing in loss goes glory!
John 17:1-8
Much of the chapters preceding this prayer are Jesus' words about Himself, teaching those who will listen ~ let him that have ears, hear! ~ who He is. And at this point "he turns to heaven" and talks directly to His Father. And amazingly enough to me anyway, God prays to God for Himself. He knows the time has come for their plan to come to a climax, and I wonder, in His humanness, if He wonders if He could do it, all the while as God, knowing He could do nothing less than save His people. So He prays, for no other reason, to show us how to pray, how to ask God for God to be glorified in the very act of living out our purposes on earth.
Jesus also prays for the ones who follow Him, whom He has chosen and I suppose, who have limited capacity to understand what is about to happen. He honors His followers as "gifts from God". He acknowledges that they believe. And he prays this in front of them in what seems like affirmation of their calling as His Disciples.
Verses 4-5 of this passage has been a favorite of mine from long ago... trust in the Lord and do good; take delight in the LORD and he will give you the desires of your heart. It was a life-altering thought some nearly 20 years ago when I discovered that this does mean "pray hard and God will give you what you want, but rather, make your desires parallel to what God wants for you and it will all be right".
But even further, this reading forces me to look at my choices, that of the righteous person versus the wicked. I may not see the wicked way in me, but God does and He speaks to that by admonishing me to "trust in Him"..."do not fret"..."be still before the LORD"..."refrain from anger"..."wait upon the LORD"..."be meek"..."be content with little"...
ALL this says is that my focus must not be on making things right by forcing those who might not have my best interests at heart (or maybe have evil intentions) ~ justice for the sake of my own redemption ~ but on trusting that the LORD will "uphold the righteous"..."cause wrongdoers to wither like the grass"..."make vindication shine like a light"..."cut off the wicked".
See, the LORD makes my job easy. He makes trusting Him easy compared to His job of justice and vindication for what is evil and wrong with the world.
Am I truly delighting myself in the LORD?
Habakkuk 3:1-18
This is one of the most marked up chapters in my Bible. The Prophet Habakkuk prays earnestly to God, declaring His glory and power, honoring God's desire for discipline among His people, and the need of God to display His anger when He sees people doing what they do and not following Him. His anger comes NOT because he's plain mad, but because He's sad that we do these things to ourselves. His anger is what saves us. And even further, the words of verse 17 and following, words of trust in the middle of trouble, words of joy in the middle of poverty:
Though the fig tree does not blossom, and not fruit is on the vines;
though the produce of the olive tree fails and the fields yield no food;
though the flock is cut off from the fold and there is no herd in the stalls,
YET I will REJOICE in the LORD!!!!
I will exult in the God of my salvation.
God the LORD is my strength;
he makes my feet like the feet of a deer, and makes me tread upon the heights.
To the God who is able to bring rejoicing in loss goes glory!
John 17:1-8
Much of the chapters preceding this prayer are Jesus' words about Himself, teaching those who will listen ~ let him that have ears, hear! ~ who He is. And at this point "he turns to heaven" and talks directly to His Father. And amazingly enough to me anyway, God prays to God for Himself. He knows the time has come for their plan to come to a climax, and I wonder, in His humanness, if He wonders if He could do it, all the while as God, knowing He could do nothing less than save His people. So He prays, for no other reason, to show us how to pray, how to ask God for God to be glorified in the very act of living out our purposes on earth.
Jesus also prays for the ones who follow Him, whom He has chosen and I suppose, who have limited capacity to understand what is about to happen. He honors His followers as "gifts from God". He acknowledges that they believe. And he prays this in front of them in what seems like affirmation of their calling as His Disciples.
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