Tag: serial

  • Fully Trained – 6

    Fully Trained – 6

    And he lifted up his eyes on his disciples, and said:

    “Blessed are you who are poor, for yours is the kingdom of God.

     “Blessed are you who are hungry now, for you shall be satisfied.

    This is what Jesus had told all of us back then on the hillside that day, other times in other places… back before we were truly trained as our Lord’s disciples.

    The gospel of Luke carefully records truth from eyewitness accounts of numerous historical citizens of the first century.

    The following is a fictional representation continued from our previous episodes of eyewitness by one of Jesus’ first disciples.

    Now that we have become fully trained just as Jesus had mentioned in those early days I wanted to share some of our Lord’s teaching with you; not as we heard it then as uncertain believers, but as we now consider how our Lord’s teaching has changed us over time – now, years later and after Jesus’ resurrection, many appearances and glorious ascension into heaven.

    “Blessed are you who weep now, for you shall laugh.

    starving child of warSure, we were hungry many times. In later months we were rejected by our towns and villages, just as Jesus had been nearly thrown off a cliff in Nazareth. We were banished into the mountains or driven out toward unfriendly sea shores to fend for ourselves. Work was all but impossible to find. Food became scarce.

    We wept. Our children wept for no food many hungry evenings until our sorrows and weakness swept us into sleep.

    Yet the Messiah Jesus had promised that though we were now hungry, we will be satisfied.

    WSomali-refugeehat did He mean?

    We witnessed many of our beloved friends and hundreds of those we did not know go through terrible suffering while the rich of the world looked on taking little notice.

    We were refugees of the world just trying to survive in these difficult times ruled by the powerful and rich men from other places and desperate men fleeing to places where they might stand up against Rome and make a name for themselves as they controlled what little food we had hope for.

    We wept, rather than living with laughter as even in our dreams we can no longer do. What did Jesus mean when He taught: You shall laugh. You will be satisfied… What was Jesus our Lord telling us? What was He preaching to the people without hope?

    Our Lord truly looked into the faces of the suffering. We were not just disciples hoping for a Messiah, although we had desperately hoped for a redeemer from our present circumstances.

    You are blessed now, our Lord would tell us. For your reward is great.

    And now that Christ is risen and has risen to the clouds in the flesh, we know that not only is our Redeemer great, our great hope is eternal and everlasting!

    Our spiritual poverty before we lived in Christ lacked the basic sustenance of hope. Though our flesh ached from lack of food, though our soul mourned for the loss of life of our own children of hopelessness; we despaired most from our lostness from any joy and glory of God. We were lost and starving in every way… that is, until our Lord looked down on his disciples like me and my family, smiled with the deepest compassion and taught:

    • Blessed are you who are poor…
    • Blessed are you who are hungry…
    • Blessed are you who weep.

    After all these months of following Jesus I look back and know now how poor I once was in spirit. I was hungry more for the Lord even than to fill my emptiness for lack of food.

    We no longer weep day after day and night after night. Even in our present suffering we have certainty in Christ, who was crucified for our sins and rose from death – we witnessed it! – even in our troubles today, we are filled with Jesus who lives in us. We are rich in His glory fed to us in scripture. We rejoice in His love and await the day where there will be no more weeping… no more crying… no more sin and no more death.

    We look back on our early days of listening to Jesus and rejoice that the Lord has blessed us.

    To be continued…

     

  • Fully Trained – 5

    Fully Trained – 5

    [ctt title=”“A disciple is not above his teacher, but everyone when he is fully trained will be like his teacher.” tweet=”“A disciple is not above his teacher, but everyone when he is fully trained will be like his teacher. – Luke 6:40 from ‘Fully Trained’ serial http://ctt.ec/86L38+” coverup=”86L38″]

    The gospel of Luke carefully records truth from eyewitness accounts of numerous historical citizens of the first century.

    The following is a fictional representation continued from our previous episodes of eyewitness by one of Jesus’ first disciples.

    I have told you of how I became an early disciple of the Messiah Jesus and followed our Lord in the early days. It has been many years ago now; before the good news of our Lord’s crucifixion by the Jews and resurrection and appearance to many witnesses, including me and my family.

    We continued in the Way. We worshiped our risen Lord with the Apostles and many others. John Mark, who had been with Saul, and Luke the doctor have shared the increase in the good news with us. In fact, Mark has just returned to us from a time he has spent with Paul, who we knew as Saul.

    Acts 13: 13 Now Paul and his companions set sail from Paphos and came to Perga in Pamphylia. And John left them and returned to Jerusalem

    John Mark brings us good news that the Roman proconsul of Cypress has witnesses the power of Christ in Paul and has come to believe in the Way.

    Now that we have become fully trained just as Jesus had mentioned in those early days I wanted to share some of our Lord’s teaching with you; not as we heard it then as uncertain believers, but as we now consider how our Lord’s teaching has changed us over time – now, years later and after Jesus’ resurrection, many appearances and glorious ascension into heaven.

    Horns of HattinThinking back to our Lord’s teaching to the crowds, which we heard consistently many times in those early days… He was teaching on a mountainside one day, as Jesus often did. Jesus would stand with His back toward the highest hillside above the gentle slopes populated with disciples from every locale. Jesus could look around into their faces and most of us could see His probing gentle eyes.

    Luke 6:

    20 And he lifted up his eyes on his disciples, and said:

    “Blessed are you who are poor, for yours is the kingdom of God.

    We didn’t understand this then; for we were all poor and all the kingdoms of Judah, Samaria, Rome and all the others were powered by the rich – those who could buy influence or high office, whether Herod or Octavian or other rich men and women who bought their way into leadership.

    Other times Jesus had said:

    “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. – Matthew 5:7

    It is this poorness of spirit we now understand – a poorness desired we had never sought, before our Lord and Master had lived out its meaning before our very eyes.

    Jesus had never had anything by which men might consider him anything but poor. In Nazareth he made a more meager living as a sort of handyman carpenter than most of us town’s people. He never wore fancy clothes. His well-worn shoes were just like mine.

    Jesus’ humility showed more than just his lowly station in life, his beleaguered place in our small community isolated from the seats of power. He was in every way as the scriptures say, a bruised reed”  himself. His gentle sincere smile always encouraged us. His happiness from deep within overflowed into the depths of our own souls. After a time I too sought to show others this same poorness of my spirit, that they might see the richness of the blessings of the Lord.

    Yes, during all of the years of Jesus’ teachings and the many years since His resurrection we were poor. We were all poor. We were oppressed by Rome. We were miserable and afflicted by our own rulers in our day to day lives and often our insignificant deaths. Followers of the Way were soon and often persecuted. We suffered financially and physically.

    We were poor. Yet in our Messiah Jesus we have inherited the Kingdom of Heaven.

    Psalm 40:

    I waited patiently for the Lord;
    he inclined to me and heard my cry…

    3 He put a new song in my mouth,
    a song of praise to our God.
    Many will see and fear,
    and put their trust in the Lord…

    ..my iniquities have overtaken me,
    and I cannot see;
    they are more than the hairs of my head;
    my heart fails me.
    13 Be pleased, O Lord, to deliver me!
    O Lord, make haste to help me!

    17 As for me, I am poor and needy,
    but the Lord takes thought for me.
    You are my help and my deliverer;
    do not delay, O my God!

    To be continued…

  • Fully Trained – 4

    Fully Trained – 4

    The gospel of Luke carefully records truth from eyewitness accounts of numerous historical citizens of the first century.

    The following is a fictional representation continued from our previous episodes of eyewitness by one of Jesus’ first disciples.

    More and more of us became convinced as we journeyed with Jesus that He IS the Christ, the Messiah Savior of Almighty God. His power to heal was overwhelming, convincing beyond a doubt.

    Luke 6:

    17 And he came down with them and stood on a level place, with a great crowd of his disciples and a great multitude of people from all Judea and Jerusalem and the seacoast of Tyre and Sidon, 18 who came to hear him and to be healed of their diseases. And those who were troubled with unclean spirits were cured. 19 And all the crowd sought to touch him, for power came out from him and healed them all.

    +

    From among those of us who followed Him, Jesus had appointed twelve Apostles, an inner circle to help our Lord and Teacher to manage the crowds, by now hundreds of followers. Nothing like this had ever happened in Israel. No Prophet or Teacher like Jesus had ever appeared in Judea, not even John (who many thought preached as a Prophet). But it was much more than His miracles. It is Jesus himself who captivated our hearts and won back our souls to God.

    Jesus taught like no other teacher, like no other Rabbi of Israel.

    He taught many things which we saw our Master live. Though Jesus was humble as a servant, He was as perfect in authentic love for each of us as any man I have ever met. He was more than just a teacher, Jesus was our dear friend, one who cared for us in every way.

    That is why after our Lord taught us about His teaching, we knew we had to change our lives to live like Him.

    40 A disciple is not above his teacher, but everyone when he is fully trained will be like his teacher.

    Imagine – me like Jesus! Fully trained in what our Lord taught. Fully trained in how our Lord lived each precious day. Me – living like God on earth… a seemingly impossible task. Yet our Lord called on us to do it.

    We began to think about really trying to live like we saw Jesus living every day. We listened thoughtfully to what our Lord taught. We considered His words. We even finally prayed about how to do just with Jesus had told us.

    Our Lord encouraged us when we did well.

    43 “For no good tree bears bad fruit, nor again does a bad tree bear good fruit, 44 for each tree is known by its own fruit.

    He let us know when our love showed the good fruit of His love. He also let us know when we strayed away from His challenging commands, His difficult teachings. He rightfully rebuked our ill-conceived actions.

    46 “Why do you call me ‘Lord, Lord,’ and not do what I tell you?

    As I listened to Jesus’ parables I imagined where I fit into his less personal illustration of the kind of things we all do and so often get it wrong. We get it wrong every day. Sin. Uncoverable sin. And He made it so obvious in His most-loving way.

    How could I ever become fully-trained to be like Jesus?

    I thought and prayed about that increasingly in time alone, baring my own soul before God.

    To be continued…