Friday, December 23, 2011

What is God Trying to Teach Me Anyhow??


Do you ever wonder why there seems to be an ever-increasing level of stress and pressure in your life?  I do.  In fact I’ve coined a new term for this condition – I call it “stressure.”  I don’t always know what causes it, and I don’t always know where to find relief from it.  But I do know God allows it in my life, and therefore, there must be a reason and a purpose for it. 

In my opinion, one of the most amazing passages in the scriptures is Hebrew 5:5-8.  When we study and appreciate these verses, they will generate a deep sense of awe and reverence for the Lord Jesus Christ, and it will help us better understand the will of God in this stressure we’re experiencing.   It says:
 “So also Christ did not glorify Himself to become High Priest…Who, in the days of His flesh, when He had offered up prayers and supplications, with vehement cries and tears to Him who was able to save Him from death, and was heard because of His godly fear, though He was a Son, yet He learned obedience by the things which He suffered.”  

Jesus humbled Himself that He might become our High Priest. He glorified God by receiving His sufferings willingly and submitting His will to His Father.  What a remarkable relationship they shared - so much so that the death of the Son brought glory and praise to the Father.  Could the Lord be calling us to die to ourselves as Jesus did?  Perhaps the Lord allows just enough stressure in our lives to drive us to our knees with tears and cries of brokenness and submission.  It may feel like defeat, but the child of God prays to our Father who is able to save us from death and bring joy for every tear we shed.  And truly, the Lord is glorified by the wonderful service you render to Him and the saints in spite your sufferings!

Another astonishing phrase in this passage is:
“…though He was a Son, yet He learned obedience by the things He suffered.”

It never dawned on me that Jesus had things to learn.  I always assumed because He was God in flesh, He knew everything.  Yet the scriptures teach He emptied Himself of the privileges of His deity, and became like us in every way, yet without sin (Philippians 2:5-11). Jesus humbled Himself to the lowly status of a child, student, and servant – and the method the Father used to train and mature Him was suffering.  Only then was He able to receive the mantle of High Priest, which was the Father’s purpose for Him.

I point these things out that we might realize the marvelous hand of God in our lives even in things that hurt and things we don’t like or understand.  When we begin to view our sufferings in light the eternal weight of glory God has for us, we are able to endure them with a joy that confounds the world around us. Most importantly, we give pleasure and glory to God when we trust Him with our lives through every season and circumstance.  So smile – the more stressure the more proud the Father is when we humble ourselves, and the more it makes us like Jesus!

Love and blessings,
Pastor Eric

2 comments:

  1. Yes this is a very interesting passage. Good Job :) I love controversial passages like these. You are right about Jesus. He had to dim down His deity in order to save of based off His own law. Though Jesus is God and did know everything, He had to lead by example and become fully human but at the same time fully God. Almost as confusing as Jesus praying to the Father and asking Him if there was another way to save mankind besides dying. Of course He knew there was no other way and when He prayed to the Father He prayed to Himself but He allowed Himself to feel fear because He had to be human. The wages of sin are spiritual death (an unknown pain and death caused by God destroying your spirit). The only way to save a sinful mankind was if a "Man" who committed no sin experienced physical and spiritual death in our place. According to the bible even angels can fall victim to temptation but not God. Even though Jesus was tempted (as needed) He never fell for it and never would making Him the perfect sacrifice to satisfy the wrath of God.

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  2. I love your comment. It's good that we all spend more and more time contemplating the great agony and tragedy of the Cross. Only in Christ can life and joy come from death and shame. To God be the glory!

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