20-8 Finding Meaning In Everyday Experience
In Jn. 10:36 there's a brief and rare window into how the Lord
perceived His life before age 30. There Jesus says that He was "consecrated"
[as a priest or High Priest], and then sent into the world, at age
30. That's how He looked back and understood those 30 years of mundane
village life- a process of consecration, of purifying, of preparation.
He saw that none of the multitude of daily frustrations was without
purpose- it was all part of His preparation. And perhaps we'll look
back on these brief years of our humanity in the same way. But the
point in our context in these studies is that the Lord's mundane
life before 30 was actually an active preparation of Him for service.
Like most Jews, He would have prayed the shema ("
The Lord our God is one" ) upon rising and going to bed- just
as He had a garment like that of the Pharisees, with the traditional
tassles hanging from its edge (Mt. 9:20; 23:5). Yet He thought about
what He prayed. When asked which was the greatest of the commandments,
He replied that it was the fact that God is one. He saw the unity
of God as a commandment that elicited action; and He says [note
His grammar] that this plus the command to love our neighbour is
the [singular] great commandment (Mk. 12:31). And He again combines
these two commandments in Lk. 10:27,37, saying that to love God
with all our heart is parallel with loving our neighbour and showing
mercy to him. He quoted two commandments as one, so deeply had He
perceived that we can't claim to love God without loving our brother.
How had He worked that out? Perhaps by daily reflecting upon what
to many was merely a ritual saying of words. And we too read and
have pass our lips, ideas which can work radical transformation
in us if only we will put meaning into the words and reflect
upon them. He speaks of giving His shalom [peace] to us,
not as the [Jewish] world gives it; each time He called out shalom
across the street or to the guys at work each morning,
He meant it. And He perceived that it would take His death on the
cross to really achieve what He was giving to them in His words.
This way He had of finding meaning in everyday experience is reflected
in His parables, most of which have an element of unreality in them. By
doing this, Jesus was telling stories which had the hearers feeling comfortable,
because they were set in such well known homely contexts, but then He
shows how in the midst of ordinary life, there is something arrestingly
different.
No shepherd really leaves 99 sheep and
goes off looking for one |
But this is the extent of the searching,
saving love of Christ |
A mustard seed doesn't really grow into
such a huge tree where birds nest. They only grow a metre or so
high. |
But this is the power of preaching; small
beginnings have disproportionate results. A leaflet left on a
bus brings a human being to eternal life... |
No sower really throws out seed literally
everywhere. |
But this is the enthusiasm we should
have to spread the message absolutely everywhere |
No employer really pays the guy who worked
one hour what he paid the one who worked all day |
But works are so totally irrelevant to
the pure grace of salvation, the penny given to all. |
Nobody with a plank in front of them
seeks to reach behind it to take a splinter out of another's eye |
But this is how stupid we are in seeking
to criticize others. |
No smart trader literally sells all he
has and buys a pearl, just to sit and look at it in his new poverty.
He can't eat it, benefit from it materially...just have it. |
So possessing relationship with the Father
and the hope of salvation is something which gives no material
increment; it's the joy of having it which is so wondrous, and
leads us to act out of character with human wisdom, as the once
wealthy trader did. |
It surely wouldn't be that when the King
has a marriage supper for his son, nobody wants to come |
But this really is how hurtful, rude
and inexplicable is humanity's rejection of the Gospel's invitation. |
No father waits up all day looking for
any sign of his wayward son; no woman goes so crazy and gets so
extravagant when she finds a lost dowry coin |
But this is the Father's searching love
and eager desire for our return; and Heaven's joy at a repentance
is way out of proportion with who we are. That an attitude of
mind within human brain cells can result in the whole of Heaven
electric with joy... |
All this reflects how although the Lord was supremely 'separate' in the
ways that true holiness require, yet He perceived spiritual prompts in
the ordinary things of every day life. Recall how the disciples rebuked
those who wanted to bring children to Jesus (Lk. 18:17). Yet He saw in
them the qualities of those who would be in His Kingdom. Those kids weren't
'spiritual' in themselves. They were just Palestinian kids with well meaning
mums. Yet, the Lord explained, that was no reason to disregard them. They
should be seen as reminders of spiritual qualities which should be in
us all. And this was how He perceived everything in His daily round of
life. He raised everything to an altogether higher level. It was, for
example, customary for Semitic peoples to greet each other [as it is today]
with the words 'shalom!' or 'salaam!' ['peace']. But there was little
real meaning in those words. The Lord said that His peace, His 'shalom',
He gives to us, not as the [Jewish] world gave it. Likewise He told His
disciples to say " Peace be to this house" (Lk. 10:5) when they
entered a home. Yet this was the standard greeting. What He surely meant
was that they were to say it with meaning.
Jesus focused on the essential whilst still being human enough to be
involved in the irrelevancies which cloud the lives of all other men.
Just glancing through a few random chapters from the Gospels reveals this
tremendous sense of focus which He had, and His refusal to be distracted
by self-justification. In all of the following examples I suspect we would
have become caught up with justifying ourselves and answering the distractions
to the point that our initial aim was paralyzed.
Focus |
Distraction |
Resumed Focus |
The sick woman touches His clothes,
and He turns around to see her. He wants to talk to her. |
The disciples tell Him that this
is unreasonable, as a huge crowd is pressing on to Him |
" He looked round about [again]
to see her that had done this thing" (Mk. 5:30-32).
He talks to her. |
He says that the dead girl is only
sleeping; for He wants to raise her. |
" They laughed Him to scorn"
|
" But..." He put them
all out of the house and raised her (Mk. 5:40,41). |
He was moved with compassion for
the crowds, and wants to feed them and teach them more. |
The disciples tell Him to send
the people away as it was getting late |
He tells the disciples to feed
them so that they can stay and hear more (Mk. 6:35-37) |
Again He has compassion on
the hunger of the crowd |
The disciples mock His plan to
feed them |
He feeds them (Mk. 8:3-6) |
He explains how He must die |
Peter rebukes Him |
He repeats His message, telling
them that they too must follow the way of the cross (Mk.
8:31-34) |
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