Sunday, March 15, 2026

Anticipating Easter - Timothy Keller - The Real Rest



The word Sabbath means a deep rest, a deep peace.

It's a near synonym for shalom -- a state of wholeness and flourishing in every dimension of life

When Jesus says, "I am the Lord of the Sabbath," He means that He is the Sabbath.

He is the Source of the deep rest we need.

He has come to completely change the way we rest. The one-day-a-week we take is just a taste of the deep divine rest we need, and Jesus is its Source.

When Jesus says, in effect, "As the Lord of the Sabbath, I can give you rest," what does that mean?

When Jesus calls you to rest, He is calling you to take time off -- physical and mental time off from work on a regular basis.

But there's another level of rest, a deeper level.

At the end of Genesis chapter 1, the account of God's creation of the world, God is said to have rested from his work.

What does that mean? Does God get tired? No, God
doesn't get tired. So how could He rest?

A different reason to rest is to be so satisfied with your work, so utterly satisfied, that you can leave it alone.

Only when you can say about your work, "I'm so happy with it, so satisfied -- it is finished!" can you walk away. When God finished creating the world, He said, "It is good." He rested.

The movie Chariots of Fire was based on the true story of two Olympians in the Paris competition of 1924.

One of them, Eric Liddell, was a Christian, and he refused to run on the Sabbath. As a result he lost the chance for a gold medal in a race he was favored to win.

At one level, taking a day off for rest is what the movie is about.


But the movie added another level and contrasted Harold Abrahams with Liddell.

Abrahams and Liddell were both trying very hard to win gold medals.

But Abrahams was doing it out of a need to prove himself. At one point, speaking of the sprint event in which he was competing, he said, "I've got ten seconds to justify my existence."


Liddell, on the other hand, simply wanted to please God who had already accepted him.

That's why he told his sister, "God made me fast, and when I run I feel His pleasure."


Harold Abrahams was weary even when he rested, and Eric Liddell was rested even when he as exerting himself.

Why? Because there's a work underneath our work that we really need rest from. It's the work of self-justification.

Most of us work and work trying to prove ourselves, to convince God, others and ourselves that we are good people.

That work is never over unless we rest in the Gospel.


At the end of His great act of creation, the Lord said, "It is finished," and He could rest.

On the cross at the end of His great act of redemption, Jesus said, "It is finished!"

And now we can rest.

On the cross Jesus was saying of the work underneath your work -- the thing that makes you truly weary, this need to prove yourself because who you are and what you do are never good enough -- that it is finished!

He has lived the life you should have lived; He has died the death you should have died.

If you rely on Jesus' finished work, you know that God is satisfied with you.

You can be satisfied with life.

You can take all the vacations in the world, but if you don't have deep rest of the soul, resting in what Jesus did on the cross, you will not truly rest.

On the cross Jesus experienced the restlessness of separation from God so that we can have the deep rest of knowing that He loves us and our sins have been forgiven.

    -- From King's Cross, Chapter 4, by Timothy Keller



~~~~~

Come to me, all you who are weary
and burdened, and I will give you rest.
Matthew 11:28

When the kindness and love of God our Savior appeared, 
He saved us, not because of the righteous things we had done,
 but because of His mercy.
He saved us through the washing of the rebirth
and renewal by the Holy Spirit,
 whom He poured out on us generously
through Jesus Christ our Savior.
Titus 3:5-6




Saturday, March 14, 2026

A Call to Worship from the World Around Us

A Special Treat for Today

Read Psalm 104. Focus on verse 24: "How many are your works, LORD! In wisdom you made them all; the earth is full of your creatures."

Sounds like a call to worship! There are 5,000 known species of sponges on the ocean floor and over 300,000 species of beetles living among us; thousands of different flowers, trees, birds and animals. 

Some are breathtakingly beautiful and some are enchantingly odd.

Why? They reveal the wealth of God's creativity, His  love of beauty, and often His sense of humor! All designed by His divine wisdom.

This verse invites us to marvel at it all and also to study and explore His miracles.  We view them as artists and also as scientists.

Stop and gaze at the world around you today. Be awed in 'wonder, love and praise'! And listen carefully and you might hear their joyful song:

"In reason's ear they all rejoice,

And utter forth a glorious voice!

Forever singing as they shine,

'The Hand that made us in divine!'"

--Joseph Addison


Open our ears and eyes, Lord!



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Friday, March 13, 2026

Pilate and Joseph of Arimathea


"As evening approached, there came  rich man from Arimathea, named Joseph, who had himself become a disciple of Jesus. Going to Pilate, he asked for Jesus' body, and Pilate ordered that it be given to him. Joseph took the body, wrapped it in a clean, linen cloth, and placed it in his own new tomb that he had cut out of the rock. He rolled a big stone in front of the entrance to the tomb and went away. Mary Magdalene and the other Mary were sitting opposite the tomb." (Mathew 27:57-61).

Jesus was born in a borrowed manger ... now buried in a borrowed tomb..

A few years later the Christians at Philippi had a creed they chanted together (and probably sang) that included these words:

   "Who, being in nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be used for His own advantage; rather, He made Himself nothing by taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness, and be found in appearance as a man, He humbled Himself by becoming obedient to death -- even death on a cross..."   That's our Savior! (Read the whole creed/hymn in Philippians 2) 













Thursday, March 12, 2026

It's All About Easter - Yancey/M Scott Peck


Over time, it was the cross on the hill that changed the moral landscape of the world.

M. Scott Peck writes:

"I cannot be any more specific about the methodology of love than to quote these words of an old priest: "There are dozens of ways to deal with evil and several ways to conquer it. All of them are facets of the truth that the only ultimate way to conquer evil is to let it be smothered in a willing, living human being. When it is absorbed there like blood in a sponge or a spear into one's heart, it loses its power and goes no further.

The healing of evil -- scientifically or otherwise -- can be accomplished only by the love of individuals. A willing sacrifice is required...I do not know how this occurs. But I know that it does...Whenever this happens there is a slight shift in the balance of power in the world."



The balance of power shifted more than slightly that day at Calvary because of who it was that absorbed the evil.

"If Jesus of Nazareth had been one more innocent victim, like King, Mandela, Havel, and Solzhenitsyn, he would have made his mark in history and faded from the scene.

No religion would have sprung up around him.

What changed history was the disciples' dawning awareness (it took the Resurrection to convince them) that God Himself had chosen the way of weakness. The cross redefined God as One who was willing to relinquish power for the sake of love.

Power, no matter how well-intentioned, tends to cause suffering. Love, being vulnerable, absorbs it.

In a point of convergence on a hill called Calvary, God renounced one for the sake of the other."

--From The Jesus I Never Knew, by Philip Yancey


Wednesday, March 11, 2026

As long as we are not alone.....


Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death... you are with me. (Psalm 23)

Remembering the horrifying pictures of 9/11.

Hundreds, trapped high above ground, as the heat grew more intense, felt they had no choice but to jump to their deaths.

Remember those pictures? Many were holding hands.
Most cases, with complete strangers.

Why? Jumping to their deaths, they chose to attach themselves to another human being.

We are made for community. We were not meant to live this life alone.

In that sense we imitate the Holy Trinity. The Holy Community.

In Mark 3:13-14 we read:

     Jesus went up on a mountainside and called to
     him those he wanted, and they came to him.

     He appointed twelve--designating them apostles--
     that they might be with him....


He called those he wanted....that they might be with him.

Jesus at Gethsemane, just before his arrest, to his disciples: My soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death. Stay here and keep watch with me. (Matthew 26:38)

Jesus, the God-man.

Fully divine  -  Fully human.

He did not want to be alone.

"And surely I am with you always" (Matthew 28:20)

                 ....and so we are never alone!