Thursday, April 8, 2021

When He had received the drink, Jesus said, “It is finished.” With that, He bowed His head and gave up His spirit. John 19:30

A statement of triumph! The long reign of sin and threat of death has ended. It is over and there is a victor.  

There are three verbs in this verse.  Jesus said, “It is finished.” The ending came because He allowed it. He bowed His head in one last act of acceptance, submission and worship and then He GAVE up His spirit, His life!  All acts of Jesus’ own will. Jesus alone fought this battle and won!

The crucifixion is horrendous from our perspective, but from the cross there was a vista with all eternity in view. The only way for man to have the hope and joy of what Jesus saw and knew to be fact, was through the cross. It was love’s gift!

Love!

Gretchen

Wednesday, April 7, 2021

The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. I Corinthians 15:56-57

Shortly after the birth of the church, Pentecost, there were those who replaced faith and the purity of a Risen Savior with a blend of Christianity and pagan traditions and thoughts. Paul wrote to the church of Corinth, a city of cultural and geographical crossroads, to leave a blueprint of the true Nature of the Gospel of Christ.  

Part of logical thinking is that somehow, someway, man can create a lawful, utopian world, cloistered and controlled so closely that temptation never becomes an issue and even if it did, the environment would be so perfect, man could not possibly sin or do wrong toward their neighbor or God. If man is able to do this, then there is no need for a resurrected savior who gave us mercy and grace. The Resurrection gives life true meaning and hope for the lost and broken. 

Jesus defied the laws of the grave, death and separation from God/life. He overcame, He lives forever. Because of this fact, we too can have an existence that will never end.

Have a Wonderful Wednesday,

Gretchen

Tuesday, April 6, 2021

Being confident of this, that He who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus. Philippians 1:6

The Philippian Church was known as one of the purest churches of the New Testament.  Luke was its pastor for six years and Paul accepted financial support from them during his vast missionary journeys, something he rarely allowed. (He supported himself as a tent maker so he could stand above reproach.)

Imprisoned in Rome but still evangelizing people in Nero’s court while captive, (how convenient) Paul had his moments of loneliness and felt his isolation profoundly. A messenger from this church brought good news and comfort, a balm to Paul’s soul.  God was doing great things. This congregation is rooted in correct theology and missional at heart. The Body of Christ is alive and well. Paul responds with the beautiful prayer and letter we read as Philippians.

The spiritual needs of Christians, old or new, pastors or lay persons, do not change through time or geography. Paul is relentless in his passion to keep the church pointed to the Throne of God while living in a world that has become a foreign land. Our strongest connection to them is that we too are living as immigrants in a world that is not our home. Our confidence in what God is doing in our lives and those around us, until His Day, is an important act of worship. Find someone that made a difference in your life and let them know. They need to hear and you need to remember. 

Love,

Gretchen

Monday, April 5, 2021

This is the bread that came down from Heaven. Your ancestors ate manna and died, but whoever feeds on this bread will live forever. John 6:58

The miracle of feeding 5,000 people with five small barley loaves and two fish, is the only miracle told in all four Gospels. Multitudes were traveling toward Jerusalem, Passover bound. This crowd of Jews understood the story of manna from Heaven. After the Exodus of Hebrew slaves out of Egypt, they feared they would starve in the desert. God fed the young nation with manna from Heaven. 

Jesus, the Man of Miracles, that ministered to the physical needs of so many, begins His final year on earth. Yes, He healed and fed bodies many times, but He came to heal souls and rescue lives from the bondage of sin and shame. Jesus came to feed our hearts, not just our stomachs.  

Some of those who heard Jesus’ words lost interest when they realized He wasn’t going to set up an eternal food program on earth. They wanted an earthly king that gave them a quality of life based on their familial connection to Abraham. They were entitled and offended when Jesus didn’t come through with their expectations. 

Man cannot live without bread. He also cannot not ‘Live’ without Jesus, The Bread of Life.

Love,

Gretchen

Saturday, April 3, 2021

When the perishable has been clothed with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality, then the saying that is written will come true: “Death has been swallowed up in victory.” I Corinthians 15:54

Paul, the author of this letter, was a Jewish scholar. a Pharisee, obsessed with interpreting and obeying the laws of Moses to the extreme. He joined those who hated and crucified Jesus and promptly began persecuting Christians. That is, until he had an up close and personal encounter with Jesus, The Risen Savior. (Acts 22:7-10)

Part of Paul’s education and practice would have been debate and reason. In this passage Paul speaks like a litigator. ‘If you believe this, then you must also believe this.’ This is not a bad pastoral strategy, as he was addressing problems with false teaching.

The Resurrection of Jesus is the single most important event in history. If you do not believe this one fact, then everything else is in vain, futile, hopeless. BUT!!!! If you believe nothing else but this, THEN everything changes and life is transformed into eternal living hope.

Death is no threat to those who will not die. We win, the end!

Life is Beautiful,

Gretchen

Friday, April 2, 2021

Christ redeemed us from the use of the law by becoming a curse for us, for it is written: “Cursed is everyone who is hung on a pole.” He redeemed us in order that the blessing of Abraham might come to the Gentiles through Christ Jesus, so that by faith we might receive the promise of the Spirit. Galatians 3:13-14

The early Judaic Christians wanted to make the gentile believers heirs of Abraham by following Mosaic Law, strict adherence to a kosher diet, celebration of festivals and circumcision.  The problem with this connection to Abraham and Moses is that they were generations apart. God entered into a covenant with Abraham so that all nations (men) will be blessed. Moses delivered the descendants of Abraham out of slavery. In freedom they became the Jewish nation with laws to set them apart and guide them. Throughout all this time, God still planned for a Savior, from the nation, to come and rescue all men from the finality of death and separation from God. 

Laws are a tricky thing. We understand them to be defined boundaries designed to keep us safe and working together for the greater good. However, in the hands of men, laws become something entirely different. Laws evolved into restrictions that totally suffocated the freedoms they were intended to protect. Paul is wading through this quagmire of traditional legalism and leading the way to complete and total freedom in salvation. 

Christ took on our sin, the curse that doomed us all to eternal death. By dying and living once again, He paid the price so that Abraham’s blessing is available to each of us. The blessing? We are family and we get everything the Father has to give, specifically, complete freedom from sin, sorrow and death.

Love,

Gretchen

Thursday, April 1, 2021

They stripped Him and put a scarlet robe on Him, and then twisted together a crown of thorns and set it on His head. They put a staff in His right hand. Then they knelt in front of Him and mocked Him. “Hail, king of the Jews!” they said. Matthew 27:28-29

Jesus called Himself The Son of God. This declaration by someone other than The One True God is considered blasphemy, a crime punishable by death. Fair enough, but there was plenty of evidence to the Truth. However, justice and facts weren’t the issue, the extreme evil in the heart of man was. Jews, Herod and his soldiers, Pilate and his soldiers, priests, elders and scribes took part in the sport of humiliate (they stripped Him naked) and torture (thorns were crammed into his scalp and face). They thought they were bringing Jesus down from His high horse………He was patiently waiting for love to have its final word. 

I’ve always wondered if those people went home that night proud of themselves. Did they feel all big inside, being part of a riot that ended in someone’s death? How did their children, sitting across the room, look at them. Did they fear the adults so free and loose with their fists and spit, or did they hail them as heroes? Did any of them want to rewind time and have a do over of that day? Was there any life changing regret? Thoughts on these answers matter to us today because they define character and the motivation of our own actions toward one another. It’s easy to pick out the wrong doers at the crucifixion, but if we withhold love’s chance and opportunity, we stand in the shadow of the cross, not the Light!

For these vicious hate filled men, and women, Grace was never out of reach until their final breath was drawn. In fact, when Jesus drew His final breath, a soldier that had played a part in the day’s events, came to believe. RIGHT THERE IN LIVING COLOR, AT THE FOOT OF THE CROSS a murderer was humbled, confessed and found eternal life.

I am so relieved that God is Good, He is Love. We must cautiously, with determination, guard our hearts against all things but love and goodness.

Happy April!

Gretchen