Thursday, June 13, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Always Pray and Do Not Lose Heart - 5

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
Greetings and peace to you all in the name of the Almighty name of Jesus Christ. In the last session, Part 4 we learned HOW to pray. We learned that we should pray with Faith and that we should not pray for the praise of others. Now let us concentrate on FOR WHOM are we to pray exactly? And WHAT should we pray?

FOR WHOM?
For whom does Jesus demand that we are pray? Of course it is for ourselves, is it because we are deserving? Prayer has nothing to do with deserving, it's all about mercy. We pray for ourselves because we are weak. We are so prone to sin and utterly dependent on preserving grace to sustain our flawed obedience. "Pray then like this," Jesus said, "lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil" (Matt. 6:9,13). That is a prayer for ourselves first, since we know our own frailty and vulnerability better than anyone. Then it is a prayer for the other followers of Jesus and the world.
Praying for self does not allow us to exclude others from our prayers. When Jesus tells us to pray, "Hallowed be Your Name" (Matt. 6:9), He means that we should pray this for anyone who does not yet hallow God's name. And if our selfish hearts should think of some adversary that we do not like, Jesus is unsparing - these too must be blessed in our prayers. "Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you" (Matt. 5:44); "bless those who curse you, pray for those who abuse you" (Luke 6:28). None must be excluded from our love, and none may be excluded from our prayers.

WHAT?
Finally, what does Jesus demand that we pray? What are we to ask the Father to do? Jesus' summary answer is called the Lord's Prayer (Matt. 6:9-13).

Our Father in Heaven,
  1. hallowed be Your Name.
  2. Your kingdom come ,
  3. Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.
  4. Give us this day our daily bread,
  5. and forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors.
  6. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.
We pray for ourselves and for other followers of Jesus and for the world (1) that we should reverence and cherish the name of God above things. This is the first function of prayer - to pray that people would pursue the glory of God.

(2) We pray that God's saving, purifying, Jesus-exalting rule would hold sway in our lives and would finally come in universal manifestation and extent.
(3) We pray that we would do the will of God the way the angels do it n heaven - namely, without hesitation and full of zeal and thoroughness.
(4) We pray for the practical provisions of body and mind that make an earthly life of obedience possible.
(5) We pray for forgiveness for our daily failures to honor God as we ought. That is, we ask God to apply to us each day the perfect redemption that Jesus obtained once for all when He died on the cross.
(6) We pray that God would protect us from the evil one and from the temptations that would bring us to ruin and weaken our witness for Him.

The Lord's Prayer shows us the astonishing nature of prayer. It puts in the position of greatest importance the prayer for God's Name to be glorified, God's kingdom to advance and triumph, and God's will to be accomplished on the earth the way it's happening in heaven. This means that God intends to use human prayers to accomplish His most ultimate and universal purposes. For example, Jesus tells us to pray for workers that will be required to spread the gospel to all the nations. "Pray earnestly to the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest" (Matt. 9:38). Yet nothing is more certain than that the kingdom of God will triumph. Jesus said, "I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it... this gospel of the kingdom will be proclaimed throughout the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end will come" (Matt. 16:18; 24:14). There is no uncertainty about the triumph of God. Nevertheless, in God's providence it depends on human prayer.

This implies that prayer is not only a duty of man but a gift of God. Jesus will awaken in His people the spirit of prayer that asks for everything it will take to accomplish God's purposes in the world. The prayers of Jesus' followers and the purposes of God will not fail.

Source: What Jesus Demands from the World - John Piper

Your Brother in Christ Jesus
Jobin 

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Always Pray and Do Not Lose Heart - 4

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
In the previous session, we were learning on "HOW" we should pray. If we look back to Part 3, we learned on how to pray with Simplicity, Perseverance and to pray through Jesus' death and in His Name. Today, let us understand on How we should pray with Faith.

HOW? With FAITH

"Whatever you ask in prayer, you will receive, if you have faith" (Matt. 21:22; Mark 11:24) we can say that Jesus wants us to pray with faith. Some have taken verses and like this and turned them into the power of positive thinking. They believe that if we can be confident that something will happen, it will indeed happen. But that would be faith in our faith. When Jesus teaches us how to "move mountains" by faith, He says explicitly, "Have faith in God" (Mark 11:22). There  seem to be times when God makes clear to us that His will is to do a particular thing. In that case we may be perfectly confident that very thing will be done. In that sense Jesus says to us, "Whatever you ask in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours" (Mark 11:24). It is God who does it, and our belief rests on Him and His revealed will. Otherwise, we would be God, and He would run the universe according to our will, not His.
Jesus makes it clear that there is a kind of filter that our prayers must pass through in order to be sure that they are according to God's will. "If you abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you" (John 15:7). Here Jesus' promise is more clearly qualified than in Mark 11:24. Are we trusting in Him as our all-supplying vine? And are His words shaping our minds and hearts so that we discern how to pray according to His wisdom?
Praying in faith does not always mean being sure that the very thing we ask will happen. But it does always mean that because of Jesus we trust God to hear us and help us in the way that seems best to Him. It may mean that He gives us just what we ask, or that He gives us something better. Will a father give a son a stone if he asks for bread? No. But neither will he give him bread if it is moldy. He may give him cake. Sometimes God's answers will overwhelm us with their excess. Other times they taste more like medicine than food and will test our faith that this medicine is really what we need.

HOW? Not for the Praise of Others
In view all that we learnt, it should be clear that the reward of prayer comes from God, not man. But Jesus shows us that the human heart is capable of turning the most beautifully Godward act in a manward direction and ruining it. He warns us:
When you pray, you must not be like the hypocrites. For they love to stand and pray in synagogues and at the street corners, that they may be seen by others. Truly, I say you, they have received their reward. But when you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will reward you. (Mark 6:5-6)
Jesus hates hypocrisy - like appearing to love God when what you really love is the praise of man. His most disparaging language was reserved for "hypocrites". He called them children of hell, "blind guides", "full of greed and self-indulgence", "whitewashed tombs" (Matt.23:15, 24, 25, 27). The demand is unmistakable: "Beware of the leaven of the Pharisees, which is hypocrisy" (Luke 12:1). The implication for prayer (ad fasting and alms-giving, Matt. 6:1-4, 16-18) is: Treasure God, and all that He will be for you, in prayer; but do not treasure the praise of man. And most of all do not turn a God-treasuring act of prayer into a man-treasuring act of hypocrisy.

Dear Brothers and Sisters, we have now completed on the how we are to pray. Hope you all enjoyed reading and understanding Jesus' words on how to pray. In the next session, I would take up for whom to pray. May the Lord Almighty bless you and keep you in all your ways. 

Your Brother in Christ Jesus
Jobin

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Always Pray and Do Not Lose Heart - 3

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
We have been learning about the demand of Jesus to pray. In the previous session, Part 1 & Part 2, we received an answer to our why we should pray, Jesus says: because God is very much inclined to hear and answer our prayers - which is not surprising, since prayer is designed to magnify God's glory while sustaining our joy in Him. Now let us understand on How we are to pray...

HOW? Simplicity
The readiness of God to answer and His perfect knowledge of what we need before we ask means that we should be simple in our wording and reject anything like a repetitive mantra that would imply God is aroused by our monotonous incantations. "When you pray, do not heap up empty phrases as the Gentiles do, for they think that they will be heard for their many words. Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask Him" (Matt.6:7-8).


HOW? With Perseverance
This does not mean that there is no room for perseverance in prayer. In fact, Jesus is explicit in telling us to be persistent in prayer over a long period of time, if necessary, as we seek some crucial breakthrough in the cause of righteousness for His glory (Luke 11:5-8; 18:1-8). The point is not to finally break God's resistance but to discover, by patient prayer, God's wisdom as to the way and time the prayer should be answered. He is not disinclined to help His children and glorify His name. He simply knows better than we do when and how the answer should come. Therefore, our persistence in prayer shows both our confidence that God is our only hope and that He will act in the best way and the best time in response to our persistent pleas.

HOW? Through His Death and In His Name
The confidence that we have in prayer is owing to Jesus. He did not just teach us to pray - He died for us and rose again to remove insuperable obstacles to prayer. Without the death of Jesus, our sins would not be forgiven (Matt. 26:28) and the wrath of God would still be against us (John 3:36). In that condition we could expect no answers to prayer from God. Therefore, Jesus is the ground of all our prayers. This is why He taught us to pray in His Name. "Whatever you ask in my name, this I will do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son" (John 14:13; 16:23-24). Ending our prayers "in Jesus' name, Amen' is not a mere tradition; it is an affirmation of faith in Jesus as the only hope of access to God.

Dear Brothers and Sisters, I know stop here. We have understood 3 aspects on How we are to pray to our Father in Heaven. May the grace of our Father, the love of our Savior Jesus, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be a guidance unto us to keep on praying on our knees and in our hearts. Please do keep our spiritual fathers, especially our father, H. G. Zachariah Mar Theophilus, who is undergoing treatment for cancer in US  and please do keep me a sinful servant in your prayers.

Your Brother in Christ Jesus
Jobin

Source: What Jesus Demands from the World - John Piper

Friday, May 17, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Always Pray and Do Not Lose Heart - 2

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus

It has been a month since I last posted on the series on "Demands of Jesus". I had been busy with some personal matters and was also in the transfer process from Cochin to Pune in India on work related matters. We have been learning about the Demands made by Jesus of His followers for the past few months. In the previous session, we started to learn about Jesus' demand to keep on praying and we were learning on WHY should we pray. We learnt one of the reasons being that prayer glorifies our God - Prayer is designed by God to display His fullness and our need. Prayer glorifies God because it puts usin the position of the thirsty and God in the position of the all-supplying fountain.
Now let us look into the second reason why Jesus asked us to pray

WHY? For our Joy
The other purpose Jesus came to accomplish was our joy. Everything He taught was aimed to free us from eternal-joy-killers and fill us with the only joy that lasts - joy in God. "These things I speak in the world, that they may have my joy fulfilled in themselves" (John 17:13). One of His most pervasive teachings for our joy was the teaching on prayer, and He made His motive explicit: Our joy. "Ask, and you will receive, that your joy may be full" (John 16:24). The most wonderful thing about prayer, as Jesus demands it, is that it is perfectly suited to secure God's glory and our joy.


These are great incentives for us to obey Jesus' demand that we "always... pray and not lose heart" (Luke 18:1). To these He adds other incentives, because He is so eager for us to feel hopeful in our praying. He says, for example, "Your Father knows what you need before you ask Him" (Matt. 6:8). The point is that we don't need to multiply pious phrases in prayer hoping that we might awaken God's attention or inclination. He is our caring Father, and He is all-knowing. He will answer. Then Jesus underlines God's readiness to answer by comparing Him to a human father, but pointing out that God is far more eager to answer than human fathers:
Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you... which one of you, if his son asks him for bread, will give him a stone? Or if he asks for a fish, will give him a serpent? If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father who is in Heaven give good things to those who ask Him! (Matt. 7:7-11)
So in answer to the question why we should pray, Jesus says: because God is inclined to hear and answer our prayers - which is not surprising, since prayer is designed to magnify God's glory while sustaining our joy in Him.

Dear brothers and sisters in Christ Jesus, we have now understood on 'WHY' Jesus asks us to pray without losing heart. In the following series, we will understand on How are we to pray and What are we to pray and For Whom are we to pray. 

May the love of our Heavenly Father, grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the Fellowship of the Holy Spirit guide us all to pray unceasingly to our Father. Please do keep this sinful servant in your prayers.

Your Brother in Christ Jesus
Jobin

Source: What Jesus Demands from the World - John Piper

Monday, April 22, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Always Pray and Do Not Lose Heart - 1

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
We have been learning steadily about the demands that Jesus makes of His followers. In this session let us now concentrate why Jesus asks us to pray. 
And He told them a parable to the effect that they ought always to pray and not lose heart. - Luke 18:1
But when you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret. - Matt. 6:6

Jesus intends to create a praying people. His demand is clear, and the issue is so important that He tells us why, how, for whom, and what we are to pray. And though we might think that the Son of God would be above the need to pray, He sets the example for us, as a perfect human being, by rising early in the morning to pray (Mark 1:35) and seeking times alone to pray (Matt. 14:23) and sometimes spending the whole night in prayer (Luke 6:12) and, in the end, preparing for His suffering by prayer (Luke 22:41-42).

WHY? FOR THE GLORY OF GOD
Why did Jesus think prayer was so important for His followers? The reason is that prayer corresponds with two great purposes of God that Jesus came to accomplish: God's glory and our joy. Jesus said: "Whatever you ask in my name, this I will do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son" (John 14:13). Prayer is designed by God to display His fullness and our need. Prayer glorifies God because it puts usin the position of the thirsty and God in the position of the all-supplying fountain.
Jesus knew the Psalms and read Psalm 50:15 where God, like Jesus, demands that we pray for help and shows that this gives glory to God: "Call upon me in the day of trouble; I will deliver you, and you shall glorify me." Prayer is designed as a way of relating to God, so that it is clear we get the help and He gets the glory. Jesus said that He had come to glorify His Father. "I glorified you on earth, having accomplished the work that you gave me to do" (John 17:4). Part of what God had given Him to do was to teach His disciples to pray, because when we pray in Jesus' name, "the Father (is) glorified in thee Son" (John 14:13).

Dear brothers and sisters in Christ Jesus
This is just the beginning of the next session of why we are meant to be a praying people to the Lord. In the next session we will see why prayer is for our joy. Let the mercy of the Father, the love of Jesus and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with us all.
Please do keep me in your prayers
Your brother in Christ Jesus


Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Do Not Be Anxious About the Threats of Man - 3

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
In the last session, we were learning about some of the reasons why Jesus said not to be anxious about the threats of man, to not to be afraid to speak clearly and openly what Jesus taught us - even if it costs us our lives in the end. Let us look into some more reasons why Jesus says so...

EVEN THE HAIRS OF YOUR HEAD ARE ALL NUMBERED
Fourth reason Jesus says to not fear to speak the truth, but to be courageous and speak clearly and openly is because God is always giving close and intimate attention to all you do. Jesus says, "Even the hairs of your head are all numbered" (Matt. 10:30). In other words, the suffering you may undergo in speaking the truth is not because God is disinterested in you or unfamiliar with your plight. He is close enough to separate one hair from another and give each one a number. Fear not; He is close. He is interested; He cares. Be of good courage, and speak the truth whatever the cost.

NOT ONE OF THEM WILL FALL TO THE GROUND WITHOUT YOUR FATHER'S WILL
Finally, fear not because God will not let anything happen to you apart from His gracious will. "You are of more value than many sparrows." "Not one of them will fall to the ground without your Father's will" (Matt. 10.29, 31). Jesus' point is: God governs the world right down to the smallest events like birds falling to the ground. Therefore, no harm can befall you but what God wills. This confidence has given great courage to the followers of Jesus for centuries. Many have spoken in the words of missionary Henry Martyn, "If God has work for me to do, I cannot die." We are immortal until the work God has for us is done.

SO DO NOT FEAR THE FACE OF ANY MANY
Therefore, the demand of Jesus stands, and there is sufficient reason to obey it with joy and courage. Don't be anxious about the ordinary needs of life, and don't fear the threats of man. Don't yield to the spirit of age that woos us into peaceful silence when the truth is being trampled. "Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth," Jesus said. "I have not come to bring peace, but a sword" (Matt. 10:34). Not the sword of steel, but the sword of truth that gives life to all who believe. Love the truth, therefore, and what you learn from Jesus in the solitude speak from the housetop. And do not fear the face of any man.

Dear brothers and sisters, I have now completed the Demand of Jesus to not to be anxious about the threats of man. Hope that you all enjoyed and learnt from these series. Will come soon with more of Jesus Demands. Stay tuned. Meanwhile do uphold me in your prayers.

Your brother in Christ Jesus
Jobin George

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Do Not Be Anxious About the Threats of Man - 2

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
In the last session, we learnt that we should be courageous to talk about Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior. We should  be courageous to stand for Jesus in the dark and unsavory world, in which we are now living. Now let us look at some of the reasons why we should have courage to be standing for Christ, even if it means death of our life and everything we might hold dear in our life.

THEY WILL MALIGN YOU LIKE THEY DID JESUS
When we consider Matthew 10:26, Jesus says, "SO [therefore] have no fear of them." In other words, fearlessness should flow from what Jesus just said - "If they have called the master of the house Beelzebul, how much more will they malign those of His household."
Jesus reasons such: "Your mistreatment for speaking the truth is not some unexpected, random, meaningless experience; instead it's the same way they treated me, and so it's a sign that you belong to me. So don't be afraid of the names they call you when you speak out plainly. Those very names bind you and me together."

NOTHING IS COVERED THAT WILL NOT BE REVEALED
Secondly, in the middle of the same verse 26 - "So have no fear of them; FOR nothing is covered that will not be revealed, or hidden that  will not be known." How are we to be made courageous here?
It gives us assurance that the truth we are speaking will triumph. It will be vindicated in the end. People may reject it ow. They may call it demonic. They may cast it out. They may try to bury it and hide it from the world ad pretend that it does not exist. But Jesus says, "Take heart in the cause of truth, because in the end all truth will be revealed. All reality will be uncovered. Ad those who spoke it with clarity and openness will be vindicated.'

FEAR NOT, YOU CAN ONLY BE KILLED!
Thirdly, Jesus says, fear not, you can only be killed! "And do not fear those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul" (Matt. 10:28). In other words, the worst thing your opponents can do to you when you speak the truth is kill your body. And that leaves the soul untouched and happy in God forever. But if you keep silent, if you forsake the path of truth and fall in love with the praise of men, you could lose your very soul. If you want to fear something, fear that! But don't fear what man can do to you. All he can do is dispatch your soul to paradise. Fear not.

Your Brother in Christ Jesus
Jobin George

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Do Not Be Anxious About the Threats of Man - 1

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
In the last session, we completed why Jesus demands us not to be anxious about our daily necessities, but even is we gain a measure of victory over the fear that all our needs will not be met, there remains another gut-wrenching fear that we all face. The fear of speaking the truth when it might cost us our lives. Jesus deals with this fear in Matthew 10:24-31. It is especially relevant in our day as the likelihood increases that tolerance will hold sway for everyone, except the person who claims that everyone must give absolute allegiance to Jesus.
The aim of Jesus in Matthew 10:24-31 is to give us the courage to speak His truth with clarity and openness no matter what the cost. Throughout the command, Jesus makes three repetitions of the command do not fear.
Verse 26: "So have no fear of them."
Verse 28: "Do not fear those who kill the body."
Verse 31: "Fear not therefore; you are of much more value than many sparrows." 
Jesus' aim is clear: Be fearlessly courageous. But courageous to do what? Let's concentrate on what Jesus demands us to courageously do.

WHAT YOU HEAR WHISPERED, PROCLAIM UPON HOUSETOPS
Jesus has something very specific in mind that is threatened by fear and advanced by courage. he says in Matthew 10:27-28, "What I tell you in the dark, speak in the light; and what you hear whispered, proclaim upon housetops. And do not fear..." We all can relate to this fear. We face it constantly in our daily lives. We are afraid to speak about Jesus to this world, fearing what others will think about us. We fear we might lose our comfortable positions in this world when we proclaim the Word of God. This is the fear that Jesus focuses in this passage: the fear of speaking clearly (in the light) and openly (on the housetops) when that speaking might get you into trouble.
So here's the demand: "Don't be afraid to speak clearly and openly what I have taught you, even if it costs you your life.

Rest of Jesus' words are motivation - five reasons why we should have courage in the cause of truth, which I would be glad to share with you in the upcoming days. May the grace of God, The Father, the love of Jesus Christ, His Son and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.
Please do uphold this sinful brother in your prayers.

Jobin George
The above extract has been take from the book "What does Jesus demand from the world" by John Piper.

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Do Not be Anxious About the Necessities of Daily Life - 5

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
Christ is Risen! Indeed, He is Risen! Wishing you all a very Happy Easter. Before the Great Lent we were learning about some of the demands of Jesus and in particular His demand to not be anxious about our daily lives. In Part 4, we were learning about the reasons why Jesus said such a demand. We learned that by being anxious we do not add anything to our lives and also that our Father in Heaven loves us so  much that He would take care of our needs. Now moving forward, lets see some more reasons why Jesus says not to be anxious about our daily necessities...
YOUR HEAVENLY FATHER KNOWS THAT YOU NEED THEM ALL
The fifth and sixth reasons why a follower of Jesus shouldn't be anxious are given in Matthew 6:32. We shouldn't be anxious about what we eat or drink or wear because "[fifth reason] the Gentiles seek after all these things; and [sixth reason] your Heavenly Father knows that you need them all." Anxiety about the things of this world puts us on the same level with the world of unbelievers. It shows that we are really very much like the world in what makes us happy. And Jesus assumes that we will not want to be like that. It also shows that we don't think our Father in Heaven knows our needs. Or perhaps we don't think He has the heart of a loving Father. Anxiety shows that we are too close to the world and too far from God. So don't be anxious-the world has nothing eternal to offer, and your loving heavenly Father knows your needs now and forever.

ALL THESE THINGS WILL BE ADDED TO YOU
The seventh reason not to be anxious is that when you seek the kingdom of God first, He works for you and provides all your needs. "Seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness and all these things will be added unto you" (Matt. 6:33). "All these things" does not mean everything we think we need, but everything we really need. And real needs are determined by what God calls us to do, not what we feel like doing. God will give us "all these things" that we need to fulfill His calling on our lives.

TOMORROW WILL BE ANXIOUS FOR ITSELF
The last argument is, "Do not be anxious about tomorrow, for tomorrow will be anxious for itself. Let the day's own trouble be sufficient for the day" (Matt. 6:34). In other words, God has appointed to each day its portion of pleasure and pain, as the old Swedish hymn says, especially the last  two lines of this verse:
Day by day, and with each passing moment,
Strength  find, to meet my trial here;
Trusting in my Father's wise bestowment,
I've no cause for worry or for fear.
He Whose heart is kind beyond all measure
Gives unto each day what He deems best-
Lovingly, its part pain and pleasure,
Mingling toil with peace and rest.
So don't misappropriate God's allotted troubles for tomorrow. That is, don't bring them forward into today in the form of anxiety. Believe that God will be God tomorrow. Tomorrow there will be grace for tomorrow's troubles. That grace is not given today.
The main point of all this is clear and unmistakable: Jesus does not want His followers to be anxious. He does not secure His kingdom by keeping His subjects in a state of worry. On the contrary, according to Matthew 6:33, the more primary and central His kingship becomes in our lives, the less anxiety we will have.

Source: What does Jesus Demand from the World - John Piper
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus, with this I now finish Jesus' demand for not to be anxious about our daily necessities. Let us all be more trusting in His abundant grace to carry us through our daily troubles.

Please do keep this sinful brother in your prayers.
Jobin George

"The Lord bless you and keep you; 
The Lord make His face shine upon you, And be gracious to you; 
The Lord lift His countenance upon you, And give you peace." - Numbers 6:24-26

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Tuesday before Palm Sunday – Commentary on Gospel Reading


St. Luke 9:18-27 and St. Mark 10:32-45

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus

We are now just 5 days away from when we will be celebrating and remembering our Lord’s triumphant entry into Jerusalem Temple. Our church has prescribed the following reading - Gospel according to St. Luke 9:18-27 and St. Mark 10:32-45 for the Tuesday before Hosanna / Palm Sunday. Dear friends, since the first part of both the readings is common and the message same, I would take them both together, but the second part I will be concentrating on the reading from the Gospel of St. Mark.

In the Gospel according to St. Luke 9:18-20, Jesus asks His disciples to say who He is to them. Just as He asked His disciples about who He is to them, He is also constantly asking who He is for us. The Christian faith is not just limited to say that we are followers of Christ, but Jesus requires you to take a stand on our beliefs for ourselves. It is not what others believe, but in whom you believe in. Who do you say Jesus is?

In both the Gospels, St. Luke 9:21-22 and St. Mark 10:32-34 Jesus tells His disciples about His death by the hands of elders and priests and teachers of religious law. But the disciples would seldom understand what Jesus meant by all this, since they all still expected the Messiah to come as a conquering king. He spoke to them the words about resurrection, but they heard only His words about death. Jesus often spoke in parables, therefore the disciples must have thought that His words on death and resurrection were another parable they weren't astute enough to understand. How many of us think on the same lines. We read our Lord’s words in the Bible and still we do not understand Him. We still go far from Him.

In the Gospel of St. Mark, we are said that two of Jesus’ disciples went to Jesus with a request of being seated at the places of honor beside His glorious throne. As stated before, the disciples were still assuming that the Lord would be a conquering King and when His throne is established they wanted to have seats of honor. We too think along the same lines. How many of us would love to have glorious life here on earth? We think that accepting and following Christ would give us monetary stability, long and peaceful life here on earth. But Jesus’ Kingdom is not of this world, it is not centered in palaces and thrones but in the hearts and lives of His followers.

How many of us are willing to suffer for Jesus? James and John said they were willing to suffer, and yes they suffered indeed. James died as a martyr (Acts 12:2), and John was forced to live in exile (Revelation 1:9). It is easy for us to say that we would endure anything for Christ, and yet many of us complain about the most minor problems. We may say that we are willing to suffer for Christ, but are we willing to suffer the minor irritations that sometimes come with serving others?

James and John wanted the highest positions in Jesus’ Kingdom. But Jesus told them that true greatness comes in serving others. In today’s age, greatness is measured by personal achievement. In Christ’s Kingdom however it is service which will make one great. Rather than seeking to have your needs met, look for ways that you can minister to the needs of others.

“For even the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve others and to give His life as a ransom for many.” – St. Mark 10:45

This verse not only reveals the motive for Jesus’ ministry but also the basis for our salvation. A ransom was the price paid to release a slave. Jesus paid a ransom for us because we could not pay it ourselves. His death released all of us from our slavery to sin. The disciples thought Jesus’ life and power would save them from Rome; Jesus said his death would save them from sin, and even greater slavery than Rome’s.

Hope you have blessed Lenten season
May the Lord Almighty bless you and keep you in all your ways.
Your Brother in Christ Jesus
Jobin George