Jesus, Lord of the Sabbath.
Description
Jesus declares himself Lord of the Sabbath. This is less about him arguing
over Sabbath law, and more about him establishing his Lordship over
everything, including that which we most hold dear.
This is confrontational and necessarily requires his hearers, as well as
us, to consider where our hearts have wandered to other gods. When we’re
confronted like this we have a choice: we can react defensively, with
avoidance, or rejection. Or we can choose to humble ourselves and receive
his Lordship over our lives - to do so is to experience not enslavement but
freedom, life not death. His offer is of Sabbath rest for all of us -
reconnection to God, and life as it was alway intended.
By Ed Flint
Who is leading you?
Jesus sees the crowd in Galilee as sheep without a shepherd. But rather
than be the revolutionary zealot leader the people want him to be, he
reveals a different kind of leadership. He is the servant God who gives his
life up for the sake of others. And in word and deed,...
Published 11/25/24
In a rare moment when Jesus does not appear in the gospel, Mark tells the
story of Herod’s beheading of John the Baptist.
Herod’s story is a cautionary one about the misery that comes when someone
devotes their life to the pursuit of earthly power. Where Herod’s power
destroys, Jesus’ power,...
Published 11/18/24