The Weight of the World

“And he said, ‘Abba, Father, all things are possible for you. Remove this cup from me. Yet not what I will, but what you will.’” – Mark 14:36

This week celebrates the week that changed the world! At the beginning of the week, Jesus rode into Jerusalem in triumph, hailed as the new king of Israel. By the end of the week, Jesus would be crucified, dead, and buried. Then came that glorious Sunday morning when the resurrected Jesus left the grave behind, victorious over sin and death!

Thursday was a solemn night of fellowship, teaching, prayer, and betrayal. After the Passover meal, Jesus led His disciples out to the olive trees of Gethsemane. There He spent hours in agonized prayer. His soul was in deep turmoil that night. Not only would He soon be betrayed by a close friend and follower…. Not only would He be arrested, humiliated, tortured, and unjustly condemned to a brutally painful death…. Jesus was about to carry the weight of all your sins and those of the rest of the world.

Jesus had never sinned in His entire life, but He was about to carry the weight of all the world’s sins, past, present, and future. As fully a man, He would suffer in agony as our representative. He would experience what we should experience for our sins. As fully God, He would suffer the horror of becoming the embodiment of all that is rebellious and hateful toward His beloved Father. More than that, He was about to experience all of God’s holy, righteous, justified wrath for our sins. The eternal Son of God who’d never experienced anything other than God’s love since before time began was about to drink everything that was in God’s foaming cup of wrath for sin. This is the cup Jesus prayed would pass from Him.

Nonetheless, Jesus was faithful! He submitted to God’s eternal and good plan of salvation. He went forward from Gethsemane to the cross. He drank the cup. For you. For the world. He did this so that everyone who trusts in Him as Lord and Savior will be forgiven their sins and receive eternal life. Will you #FollowJesus?

The Path You Walk

“It was now two days before the Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread. And the chief priests and the scribes were seeking how to arrest him by stealth and kill him” – Mark 14:1

This week celebrates the week that changed the world! At the beginning of the week, Jesus rode into Jerusalem in triumph, hailed as the new king of Israel. By the end of the week, Jesus would be crucified, dead, and buried. Then came that glorious Sunday morning when the resurrected Jesus left the grave behind, victorious over sin and death!

By the middle of the week, the plot to kill Jesus was underway. His clear claim to be Messiah, His brilliant answers to every challenge, and His direct condemnation of the religious status quo in Jerusalem was simply too much to bear! Those in power needed Jesus dead before the people turned on them or the Romans crushed the city’s messianic fervor. Rather than embrace the possibility that Jesus really was who He said He was, the leadership just wanted Him dead.

Jesus was, and remains, a threat to entrenched structures of religious power. Jesus was, and remains, a threat to those accumulating riches in the name of God. Jesus was, and remains, a threat to those who talk about holiness but don’t live it themselves. Jesus was, and remains, a threat to anyone who claims to be a leader but won’t lead in a godly manner. People will always oppose those walking in the way of Jesus.

Ultimately, however, we must remember that the death of Jesus was the eternal will of God. This is why Jesus came to earth – to die on the cross. And so, God used the wickedness, pettiness, greed, and jealousy of these false teachers and priests to send His Son to the cross to pay the penalty for our sins. This is the path Jesus had been walking for a long time, the one leading to the cross. This is also the path He invites each of His followers to walk.

Jesus is inviting you to walk the path of authentic faith and obedience to Him. He’s inviting you to walk the path of personal holiness, vulnerability, and humility. He’s inviting you to walk the path that leads to your own cross each day. Will you #FollowJesus?

That Cursed Fig Tree

“As they passed by in the morning, they saw the fig tree withered away to its roots. And Peter remembered and said to him, ‘Rabbi, look! The fig tree that you cursed has withered.’” – Mark 11:20-21

This week celebrates the week that changed the world! At the beginning of the week, Jesus rode into Jerusalem in triumph, hailed as the new king of Israel. By the end of the week, Jesus would be crucified, dead, and buried. Then came that glorious Sunday morning when the resurrected Jesus left the grave behind, victorious over sin and death!

On Tuesday morning, the disciples marveled at the fig tree Jesus had cursed the day before. In one short day, it had withered to its roots. Many today wonder why Jesus did this. They ask what had that poor fig tree done? The answer is that it had the misfortune of representing all that was wrong with the religious leadership of Israel!

The fig tree itself was a symbol of Israel. This particular fig tree had been leafy and green, looking great from a distance. Up close, though, it wasn’t fruitful. This is how the religious leadership was at that time. They looked GREAT from a distance. Very holy, very righteous, very faithful. They had rules upon rules upon rules for being holy on the outside. Inside they were rotten. Spiritually dead. Full of hypocrisy, pride, greed, and condemnation toward others. They were making everyone in their care farther from God rather than closer. All leaf, no fruit. Like the fig tree.

What Jesus did to the fig tree represents what God was doing to the religious leaders of the day. Rejecting their appearance of holy fruitfulness and condemning their continued lack of actual fruitfulness. The cursing of the fig tree was a symbol of the condemnation of the religious leadership. What happened to that tree was what was happening in the temple as Jesus debated and condemned the leaders throughout that week.

As we consider the fig tree today, we should honestly reflect on ourselves. In what aspects of our lives do we look leafy and fruitful on the outside while falling short of Jesus’ commands and expectations inside? How are we like those Pharisees Christ condemned when He cursed that fig tree? #FollowJesus

The Week That Changed the World

“And they came to Jerusalem. And he entered the temple and began to drive out those who sold and those who bought in the temple, and he overturned the tables of the money-changers and the seats of those who sold pigeons.” – Mark 11:15

This week celebrates the week that changed the world! At the beginning of the week, Jesus rode into Jerusalem in triumph, hailed as the new king of Israel. By the end of the week, Jesus would be crucified, dead, and buried. Then came that glorious Sunday morning when the resurrected Jesus left the grave behind, victorious over sin and death!

Throughout the week, there was tremendous conflict and profound teaching. On Monday, Jesus entered the city and began cleaning the filth that infected God’s Temple. The Temple was built to a holy place of worship, a beacon drawing people from all over the world to meet, pray, and worship God. Sadly, it had become a bazaar, a marketplace, a vast money-making operation built to overcharge and exploit travelers. Rather than set up business outside the grounds of the Temple, dishonest business was being done on God’s property.

No doubt, many celebrated the convenience of being able to take care of business on their way in and out. But the worship of God isn’t supposed to be about what’s convenient. It’s supposed to be pure, holy, and devoted. It should take some effort. It’s must be about wholehearted devotion to God in heaven. All the buying, selling, and negotiating cheapened and darkened all that. God’s house of prayer had truly become a den of thieves!

Jesus turned it all over! Grab ahold of the zeal of Jesus in that moment. Let His zeal become a powerful desire in yourself to worship and pray without distraction. Pray often and worship often, disciplining yourself do it without the thoughts and distractions of business and finances in your mind. As a Christian, your body is now God’s Temple – live with a zeal for holy devotion to God in worship and prayer.

#FollowJesus

The Testimony of a Demon

“And immediately there was in their synagogue a man with an unclean spirit. And he cried out, ‘What have you to do with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us? I know who you are—the Holy One of God.’” – Mark 1:23-24

Demons always know who Jesus is! They don’t debate whether He was simply a good teacher, a moral example, a mere prophet, or a revolutionary. They know, with 100% certainty, that Jesus is the Christ, the Messiah, the Anointed Son of God. They know He has absolute power over them and they’re terrified of Him! They even know that one day He will utterly defeat and destroy them, casting them into the eternal lake of fire. This is why they only ask questions about timing and His intentions toward them in that moment. They don’t doubt Who Jesus is, what He can do, and what He will do.

Do you have that same confidence in Jesus? If not, consider this testimony from a demon and let it grow your faith! Consider the awesome power of Jesus to cast demons out of sufferers with just a word. Consider His absolute authority over all things supernatural and let that build your confidence in Jesus. This is who He is – the Holy One of God. Messiah. Christ. King. Son of God. God come in the flesh.

We’re blessed to live after the cross. At the cross, Jesus utterly defeated sin, death, and Satan through His own sacrificial death and resurrection. Because of His work on the cross, we know Jesus has been given all “All authority in heaven and on earth.” Praise Jesus as King of the Universe! Worship Jesus as the all-powerful Lord that He is. Make Him your Lord and #FollowJesus