Devotional Thought for the Day
Mark 3:31-35
And his mother and his brothers came, and standing outside they sent to him and called him. 32 And a crowd was sitting around him, and they said to him, “Your mother and your brothers[c] are outside, seeking you.” 33 And he answered them, “Who are my mother and my brothers?” 34 And looking about at those who sat around him, he said, “Here are my mother and my brothers! 35 For whoever does the will of God, he is my brother and sister and mother.
If I came to you and claimed I can throw a baseball over 150 mph, you might say, “Nice try, but that’s not funny.” If I can back to you the next day and made the same claim, you might think, there is something seriously wrong with me. If I followed up next day with the same statement without a hint of humor, you will have to conclude I am flat out lying, or there is something mentally wrong with me, or quite unlikely, I might be the god of baseball.
This is right where the Jesus’ family is finding themselves. They hear the way he teaches, and they are beyond disbelief. Why does Jesus constantly make such outrageous claims, like, “I’ve always existed, I created the world. I’m the ultimate reality. I’ll return at the end of time and your eternal destiny will depend on your relationship to me.” You have to assume he was lying or he is insane or maybe telling the truth.
This was CS Lewis’ famous “trilemma” argument. Lewis says, “the one thing you can’t say about Jesus was that he was a good man, a moral man or a trustworthy leader, because as soon as he claimed to be God, He eliminated Himself from that category, because good people, wise, sensible people don’t go around saying, they are God.” He’s right. Jesus is either God to be worshipped or he’s a mad man, or a con man. We can’t reduce him to a harmless teacher who goes around saying nice things about loving and forgiving each other. Jesus didn’t give us that option.
Let us remember that Jesus isn’t from India, with over two million gods; he’s among Jews, who are fiercely monotheistic, who believed in a God who is infinitely exalted, holy and perfect; so transcendent, they dare not speak and write his name. To believe Jesus is God, this was against every fiber of their being. What was about Jesus that they were convinced? Why wasn’t he reduced to one of the hundreds of lunatics who have come and gone claiming messiahship. What makes him different from someone like Charles Manson, who is clearly proven to be a complete lunatic?
The New Testament is written clearly to make it obvious to any reader that Jesus is not a lunatic or a liar. The mind of Jesus is most pure, perfect, with His articulations the most profound. No one ever spoke like He spoke; so pure and sublime. Nor was Jesus a liar. If he was, he would be the greatest liar of all time. I mean how did he do it? Sure, there have been other religious figures who claim to be divine or to be the Messiah, but none of them ever got a religious movement off the ground, let alone sustain it for 2,000 years, without the use of a sword or threat of death.
Lunatics don’t heal sick ppl, raise dead ppl and drive out demons. Liars don’t speak the way Jesus spoke, with such wisdom for life. Lunatics don’t attract women and children, nor are liars marked by kindness, mercy and compassion the way Jesus was. You’re left with one option. He is who He claimed to be, that He is God. The evidence is in, virgin born, sinless life, power over the physical world, power over the spiritual world, power over creation, power over life and death. Clearly Jesus is Lord. His family, who knew him best, would ultimately see this truth. Mary remained faithful to the end and tradition tells us James was martyred for his faith in half-brother Jesus.
CS Lewis, in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, writes about how Mr. Beaver tells Susan that Aslan (the ruler of Narnia) is a great lion. Susan is surprised, since she assumed Aslan was a man. She then tells Mr. Beaver, “I shall feel rather nervous about meeting a lion.” She asks Mr. Beaver if Aslan is safe, to which Mr. Beaver replies, “Safe? Who said anything about safe? ‘Course he isn’t safe. But he’s good. He’s the King.” If you’ve really met the King, he will ruin you, He will ruin your agenda, but it will be so glorious. He will ruin your career trajectory, your idea of success, your retirement plans, your careful, safe, comfortable life, he’ll ruin it all. But oh how glorious it is!
Prayer: God, teach me to see the mind of Christ. Help me pursue Your knowledge and grow in confidence in the Bible today. Your claims are the most beautiful statements ever to be uttered on this planet. Help me to savor them and grow in them . . . In Jesus’ name, amen.
Bible Reading for Today: Judges 15
Lunch Break Study
Read 1 Corinthians 2:14-16: “The natural person does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned. 15 The spiritual person judges all things, but is himself to be judged by no one. 16 “For who has understood the mind of the Lord so as to instruct him?” But we have the mind of Christ.”
Questions to Consider
- How does the “natural” person understand the things of the Spirit of God?
- How do we understand the mind of the Lord?
- How can you grow today in having the mind of Christ?
Notes
- The natural man cannot understand because they are not able to discern spiritually.
- We do it by having the mind of Christ.
- Personal response
Evening Reflection
Which will you heed?
“The mind that is alive chooses the spiritual rather than the fleshly. For example, take our thought life. The world sends a constant barrage of messages to us—politics, world, business, sex, sports, products, and others. God also is sending us messages, messages about His expressed will in the Bible for us, promptings about words to say or not to say, anger to control, or patience to extend.” – TW Hunt
“My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me” (Jn. 10:27).
Heed the voice of the Lord.
The AMI QT Devotionals from March 20-21 are provided by Pastor Charles Choe of Tapestry Church, Los Angeles. Charles, a graduate of UC Riverside and Fuller Theological Seminary (M.Div.), is married to Grace, and they have three children: Chloe, Noah, and Camden.
In my youth I was totally confused. I was a tall skinny kid, a wanna be athlete, trying so hard to fit in with the cool kids, even going through a phase of wearing Cavarccis to look like MC Hammer for a while, and then finally, feeling somewhat comfortable with the a more preppy look. In other words, I was totally insecure about what others thought of me and without much sense of my place in the world. Then I met Christ, and there is where I found myself. I realized in Him I was first and foremost a child, the beloved son, of the King.
There used to be a TV show on the Discovery Channel called Dirty Jobs. The title gives the basic premise of the show: the host would go around the country and join actual workers for a day, doing their “dirty jobs” that were uncomfortable, hazardous, disgusting and sometimes all of the above. Some of the examples of the dirty jobs that he did were sewer inspector, pig farming, mosquito control officer, and diaper cleaner. None of these jobs are at all appealing, but they are all necessary because someone has to do them.
The senior pastor of a church died and proceeded on to heaven. At the pearly gates, the pastor’s guardian angel met him to escort him to his heavenly abode—otherwise known as a place prepared for us by Christ (Jn. 14:1-3). Along the way, the pastor spotted the church janitor who had died a few months earlier. The pastor marveled at the grandeur of the janitor’s mansion and thought, “Wow, if his heavenly home looks like that, then surely mine must be bigger and more splendid!”
Perseverance in prayer can be wearisome, especially when our prayers seem to be unheard and unanswered. Perhaps you have brought your prayers to the LORD, time and time again, only to hear no answer or to see no changes after. The temptation to stop praying then becomes great, but that is when we need to persevere in prayer. “Ask . . . seek . . . knock . . . and you will find and it will be opened to you” (Matt. 7:7). How often we may have missed an answer to our prayers because we did not persist in our prayers.
This passage often comes to mind when we think of babies. For me, I come back to this passage every time a circumstance has whispered the lie that I was unknown or insignificant. The psalmist’s words remind me of how intimately my Creator knows me and has formed me. Our God is so big and sovereign, yet He knows what each of our days will hold.
The AMI QT Devotionals for March 15-16 are provided by Joanna Tzen. Joanna graduated from U. Penn and currently works in Philadelphia. She married Paul in 2014, and they attend Grace Covenant Church. They are expecting their first child any day now!
Waiting is a part of life, whether it’s as simple as waiting for the bus or waiting for God to move in a particular area of our lives. Simeon was waiting to see the Messiah in his lifetime. This passage tells us he was righteous, devout, and filled with the Holy Spirit. The Spirit moved him to visit the temple courts where he saw Jesus. Verse 29 tells us Simeon was a patient man. He was an old man ready to go home to the Lord was waiting for his time to come. Once he saw Jesus, his purpose was fulfilled.
Twenty-two years ago, when my boyfriend Kirt (now my husband) informed me that he was coming to visit me in Taiwan with the intention of marrying me, my immediate thought was to pray and to call my college professors Dr. Gray and Dr. Charalambakis. They both knew me well through three plus years of college and also got to know Kirt when we began dating. Being the only Christian in my family then, I valued their counsel and blessing above my own mother’s approval and blessing, before I could move forward with the relationship. I didn’t fully trust myself with the decision, and I wanted confirmation on what I was hearing from God. Because of their genuine love for me and their solid witness of having an intimate relationship with Jesus and a Christ centered marriage, I knew I could trust them.
In today’s text, we see that God chose Saul to be the king over Israel. Saul rose to kingship overnight from a nobody to the first king in Israel’s history. The limelight of kingship soon revealed many flaws in his character. Essentially, the core of his character failed under the pressure of leadership. The most important test of Saul’s leadership was his obedience to God’s instructions. In 1 Sam, 13:8-12, when Samuel showed up later than expected, Saul gave in to circumstantial and people pressure and took matters into his own hands to perform a priestly job that was outside of his responsibility as a king. In 1 Sam. 15:17-26, he disobeyed God’s instructions again and attempted to justify his selective obedience to the prophet. Through his examples, we see that partial obedience in God’s eyes equals disobedience. Therefore, God could not trust Saul to carry out His will for the nation of Israel, and God was grieved that He appointed Saul to be King (1 Sam. 15:35).
The AMI QT Devotionals from March 11-13 are provided by Mei Lan Thallman. Mei Lan is originally from Taiwan and a graduate of Asbury College and Asbury Theological Seminary (M.A.) in Kentucky. She is the wife of Pastor Kirt, who serves at Grace Covenant Church (Philadelphia). They have two children, Nate (14) and Naomi (12).
Super Bowl 2018 marked the history of Philadelphia for winning its very first Super Bowl championship. This memorable win had a dramatic story of its own. The Philadelphia Eagles was the underdog team who fought their way up as the season progressed. Two games prior to the NFL championship, their star quarterback, Carson Wentz, tore his ACL and joined mounting casualties of injured key players out of the season. At the Super Bowl, they played against the legendary five-time reigning Super Bowl champions, the New England Patriots and their super undefeated quarterback, Tom Brady. The Eagles’ backup quarterback, Nick Foles, faced the pressure calmly and courageously led the team with undaunted grit toward the epic win of 44 to 33.