Tuesday, July 27, 2021

Celebration in Christ


Matthew 9:14-17

   In this passage, Jesus gives a unique metaphorical teaching to illustrate He is offering something new which involves celebration, since where there is a groom, there is a wedding, and where there is a wedding, there is celebration.

   Interpreting this passage in the context of other Scriptures helps me to know the fact that the celebration came at a cost of the ultimate suffering.  There is a need to remember Christ’s sacrifice.  Second, we can celebrate our eternal life in Christ.

   Notice the suggestion of both realities when Jesus performed the first miracle revealed in Scripture.  In turning water into wine at the wedding at Cana, Jesus instructed the workers to use containers which were normally used for “ceremonial washing,” as stated in John 2:6.  I think Jesus did that on purpose to gently foreshadow the cleansing which would be available by His blood shed on the cross.  And even though the party looked like it was going to come to a halt, the miraculous wine opened the door for a new celebration, another gentle foreshadowing.

   Jesus would later directly assign wine as a symbol of His blood.  During the supper the night before He was crucified, Jesus used the familiar objects of bread and wine to symbolize His body and blood shortly before He was sacrificed.  Jesus specifically said His blood was poured out for the forgiveness of sins, and He said His blood was of the New Covenant (see Matthew 26:28).

   Regarding the forgiveness of sins, 1 Peter 1:18-19 states redemption was made possible by “the precious blood of Christ, a lamb without blemish or defect.”  Jesus was the Lamb of God who shed His blood as the atonement for the sins of people.  Cleansing comes from the death of Jesus, the One who died in our place, taking the punishment we deserved.

   Regarding the New Covenant, the shed blood as the sacrificial atonement also was used by Jesus to establish the New Covenant, since the shedding of blood was a necessary action in the Ancient Near East for sealing a covenant.  Jewish people were under the Mosaic Covenant, as they had been for over 1400 years.  The Messiah rocked the Israelite world, and the rest of the world, by establishing a New Covenant which was available to anyone, and which results in an eternal celebration for anyone who believes in Jesus as his or her Savior and Lord.  Such a believer can experience the ultimate celebration in his or her heart, as he or she has been saved from spiritual death forever.

   Thus when Jesus speaks of new wine, I think He is speaking of the blood He shed on the cross.  And when He speaks of new wineskins, I think He is speaking of the New Covenant.  Both involved suffering.  Both brought about a possibility for an eternal celebration.

   Considering this passage is often avoided in sermons, I address one issue which I think presents a challenge: the passage involves alcohol.  Personally, I do not drink alcohol, and I do not advocate drinking alcohol in the least.  What I learned in Biology class in college about alcohol is just a starting point of the negative points I could go on and on about.  Yet what does the Bible say?  The Bible does not prohibit alcohol, however, New Testament Scripture does prohibit getting drunk (see Ephesians 5:18).  And New Testament Scripture does set strict standards regarding alcohol consumption for Christian leaders (see I Timothy 3:8).

   Wine was a staple in the Middle East in ancient times due to the fact people in ancient times did not have refrigeration there in a region where temperatures are scorching hot.  Thus wine was a common beverage, which I read in a Bible encyclopedia in 2015.

   Yet I do not think Jesus was promoting alcohol here.  Jesus further upgraded wine as a drink to be used for remembering His death on the cross.  I also noticed when pondering this passage throughout the week that when Jesus was establishing the Lord’s Supper, He referred to the drink as “the cup.”  For example: “Then [Jesus] took the cup, gave thanks and offered it to them, saying, “Drink from it, all of you.  This is my blood of the new covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins” (Matthew 26:27-28).  He never said wine.  Considering this fact and considering the context of wine being used frequently in that culture, I advocate grape juice can be used for the Lord’s Supper.  There are various convictions on this subject.

   Yet what we should be focused on when partaking of the Lord’s Supper brings us back to the lesson of this passage.  When partaking of Communion, we need to remember the sacrifice Christ made, and we are blessed beyond description to celebrate the forgiveness of our sins and celebrate our new life within the New Covenant.

   The suffering of Jesus is finished, as Jesus proclaimed on the cross as recorded in John 19:30.  Then in due time afterwards, Jesus ascended into heaven.  Though Jesus remains in the heart of a believer by the Holy Spirit, He is not with us in full, and we followers of Jesus suffer in this fallen and hurtful world in manners we would not if we were not Christians.  Thus there are times when even a follower of Jesus is going to feel lonely, or frustrated, or hurt, or rejected, or abandoned.  We Christians sometimes still sin, and we Christians are surrounded by people who sometimes sin and hurt us.  Sometimes giving up something I do regularly helps me focus on God.  There will likely be occasions when a Christian feels compelled to fast, if not from food then from something else.  However such fasting should always be done as a personal choice.

   And in spite of the continued challenges for Christians in this world, we followers of Jesus can still celebrate in our hearts, and hopefully in other ways, our new life in Christ.  The Holy Spirit is with us now, and one day we will be with God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit in full for all eternity.  Indeed all genuine believers in Jesus will never suffer again as we feast at the wedding supper of the Lamb, as was foretold in Revelation 19:7-9!
Hunter Irvine

Sunday, July 18, 2021

We all need Jesus


Matthew 9:9-13

   Jesus said, “For I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners.”  Before I gave my heart to Jesus in 1990, I was a sinner, yet Jesus kept reaching out to me.  Now in the 6th grade, I was Captain of the safety patrols at my school, and at the end of the year I was recognized as the number two safety patrol in my county.  In junior high school and in high school, when we would do yearbook signings near the end of the year, a vast majority of women would write I was a “nice guy.”  My primary activity in my youth was Scouting, and I earned the rank of Eagle!  At Virginia Tech, I was a dedicated student and a successful Resident Advisor.
   But I was a sinner not doing God’s will.  I did not have true love in my heart, and I was spiritually dying.  I needed the forgiveness of my sins.  Jesus died on a cross for the forgiveness of sins of anyone since He loves us.  Jesus was the substitutional atonement.  I gave my heart to Jesus in 1990, receiving His offer of forgiveness.  I am ever thankful He forgave me.
   And I live daily with His true love.  Jesus remains with me through the Holy Spirit, still working even 31 years later, to keep healing me and to keep making me a better person.  I am such a different person than I was 31 years ago in my heart.  In the midst of the countless challenges in my life, it is a blessing to remember that this Jesus lover, student of the Bible, ancient virgin, and passionate witness, was a sinner saved from spiritual death thanks to the mercy and grace of Jesus Christ.  And even though after all this time this Jesus lover, student of the Bible, ancient virgin, and passionate witness sometimes really messes up, I am able to keep relying on God for mercy and for help to be a better man.
   Please know today that Jesus loves you!
Hunter

Sunday, July 11, 2021

Forgiven


Matthew 9:1-8

   For Matthew 9:1-8, which records an event also witnessed in Luke 5:17-26, I dive right into the main message.  The message: Jesus forgave the sins of the man.  The personal message: Jesus offers the forgiveness of sins to anyone.

   Though not a comfortable topic, the issue of sin is central to both the need of people and the mission of Jesus, because sin is what caused the separation of people from God, and the atoning sacrifice of Jesus is what will bring the redemption of a person so that he or she can be forgiven and united with God.

   I do add that Jesus forgave this man of his sins prior to when He died as the atonement for sins on the cross.  Whether it was simply temporary forgiveness, or eternal forgiveness by the atonement on the cross in advance, I do not know.  Yet Jesus had authority to forgive sins, just as He said.  The bottom line is Scripture reveals the atonement made by Jesus on the cross is permanent for any person who receives Christ.  The atonement made by Jesus on the cross was not confined by time or space.  All people before the time of Christ could be saved (see 1 Peter 3:18-20).  All people at that moment could be saved.  And all people until judgment day have an opportunity to be saved (see Acts 16:31).  To be saved, a person must believe in Jesus.
Hunter

   Please join me in considering one sin you have done recently.  After thinking of one, you can ask God for forgiveness for that wrong doing.

   And if you would like, close this time by saying the Lord’s Prayer:

Our Father
who art in heaven
hallowed be thy name

Thy kingdom come
thy will be done
on earth as it is in heaven.

Give us this day our daily bread
and forgive us our sins
as we forgive those who sin against us.

And lead us not into temptation
but deliver us from evil

For thine is the kingdom
and the power
and the glory
forever and ever.
Amen.

Monday, July 5, 2021

Humbly ask for help


Matthew 8:23-27   Then he got into the boat and his disciples followed him.  Without warning, a furious storm came up on the lake, so that the waves swept over the boat.  But Jesus was sleeping.  The disciples went and woke him, saying, “Lord, save us! We’re going to drown!”
He replied, “You of little faith, why are you so afraid?”
Then he got up and rebuked the winds and the waves, and it was completely calm.  The men were amazed and asked, “What kind of man is this?  Even the winds and the waves obey him!” (NIV)

Why would Jesus lecture His disciples who were pleading for help?
I think what they were doing was smart.
   The problem was not the fact they were asking for help, though granted they seemed to be demanding help.  But such emotions are natural when there is a crisis.  The problem Jesus identified was their mode of fear and despair.  Reacting to desperate circumstances in a mode of despair only makes things worse.  But if things look hopeless, fear and despair are natural.  Why not fear?  Because God is willing to help.
   Honestly, for years the response of Jesus seemed to me to be a bit harsh.  I did not understand why He was being so critical of His disciples in such a life or death situation.  Yet I think Jesus wanted them to be certain, and for us to be certain, of a critical fact: He is God.  He was sleeping in the boat, being fully human.  Yet Jesus stopped the wind and the waves, the One who is fully God, One with the Father and the Holy Spirit.
   The disciples asked the right question: “What kind of man is this?”  The answer is He was Immanuel, which means God with us (see Matthew 1:23).  And we can turn to Him.  When desperate, if we humbly come to Jesus and ask for help, there can be goodness, even if it is nothing more than His peace.  Why can we rely on Jesus?  Because He is the One who has overcome the world (see John 16:33).
   All encounter trouble in this world, and desperate circumstances sometime happen.  They have for me.  For some crises, you need to act quickly.  For other crises, ones which are a swelling crisis with potential for terrible long term consequences, you need to invest time pondering the situation in order to make a careful decision.  A person with a heart humbled by God will be able to make a wiser decision.  I will speak for myself and say I sometimes still make mistakes when the pressure is on.  Yet rather than getting upset with Jesus, goodness results when we ask Him for help.
   You will be more prepared for future crises, which often come when we least expect them, if you keep soaking in two truths of Jesus.  First, if you believe in Jesus as your Savior and Lord, your soul has been saved from spiritual death, and you have eternal life.  Jesus is God the Son, and Jesus saves.  Second, if you believe in Jesus as your Savior and Lord, Jesus is spiritually with you!  Jesus wants to guide and encourage you daily, and Jesus is available to help you!  We can humbly, and even quickly, ask God for help.
   To celebrate my vaccination I went to a great water park in the Denver metro area.  Though unemployed, and though all by myself, I made it happen.  After a year of social distancing, there I was with numerous unmasked people outside at a neat place on a sunny Colorado day ready to have fun.
   Being excited, I waded into the giant wave pool.  When the wave machine was turned off, which they do every so many minutes to give people a rest, I went out to the deep end, where few people were, to swim around and tread water.  To give an example of my swimming history, during a period of my life in the past decade, I swam strong for about one mile every week at a recreation center.  Yet being older now, I do not have the stamina I had even a few years ago.  And I had not been to a pool since the pandemic was declared.  Treading water there in the calm wave pool, I could tell my stamina was lower.
   Then the buzzer sounded and the wave maker was turned back on.  Tired after treading water, all of the sudden I was dealing with waves which were too much for me to handle.  I had not even considered the waves would be so much more challenging in the deep end.  I had even thought they would be easier to deal with compared to back where they “broke,” as was the case at the beach I went to in my childhood.  Yet a wave pool is different.  Those powerful swelling waves required intense treading, and much stamina, which I did not have.
   Suddenly I realized I was not going to be able to handle those waves much longer.  It was a moment of realistic panic.  Fortunately, in that moment of crisis I made a humble decision: Head to the emergency steps, those steps at the side of the pool there in the deep end.  I had never seen anyone use those steps the time I was at that water park years before.  Yet I realized I needed help, and those steps were help.  In retrospect I praise God, because thanks to the vast work He has done in my heart over many years, I am someone who is incredibly more humble than I was years ago.
   Slowly swimming towards the steps while working to rise over the waves, I got one gulp of water from a wave I did not completely clear.  Fortunately I drank the water rather than inhaling.  It was scary, because I was weak enough where I could have gone under had I inhaled water.  They have top-notch lifeguards, but I would not have even been capable of yelling up the large wall to her while coughing and weak.  Yet I was soon at the steps, safe.  I made a terrible mistake, yet a humble response resulted in a happy ending.
   Sometimes even Christians make mistakes where there is no safe way out and which lead to tragic consequences.  However, for those who believe in Jesus, He has promised He will be with us always (see Matthew 28:20).
Hunter Irvine

The song “Be Still My Soul” is a grand illustration of this passage.  Over six years ago I added a link to this live version by Selah, and I do so again.  It is a classic.