A thought by John Ortberg (2012-08-07) from his
book, Who Is This Man?: TheUnpredictable Impact of the Inescapable Jesus (p. 164). Zondervan. Kindle
Edition. (Click on the title to go to Amazon.com to buy the book.)
Now we call this day,
the day that Jesus died on a cross, Good Friday. Satan thought it was a good Friday. He finally had gotten back at God. He hated God and he thought killing His only
Son was a good thing. But if you read
the last book in the Bible you will find that it was not a good thing for
Satan. He hadn’t won.
Now the Jewish
religious leaders thought it was a good Friday.
I mean they finally got rid of a major problem for them. But did they?
If you read the rest of the story you will find that it wasn’t really a
good day for them.
No, it was not a good Friday for them but a Good Friday
for us. As John says, “Out of his
remarkable brilliance, breathtaking courage, and inexplicable love, Jesus sized
up a situation that defeated every human attempt at correction. He identified
exactly what would be needed to bring redemption. It would cost him his life.” And then, “Jesus outlasted, outmaneuvered,
and out-thought every group, every power. But not just that. Mostly he just
out-loved everybody…On Friday, Jesus died for love.”
He loved us, He died because He really, really
loved us. And this is a very, very good
thing for us.
Think of this, John says, “The cross was changed
from the symbol of a human empire’s power into a symbol of the suffering love
of God. It was changed from an expression of
ultimate threat into an expression of ultimate hope. It came, in a sense, to
express the exact opposite of its original purpose — that the power of embraced
sacrifice is greater than the power of coercion. How did this happen? Jesus
chose it. He chose to die on it. After Friday, neither the cross nor the world
could stay the same.”
Yes today is truly Good Friday.
Have you yet accepted what He truly can do for
you?
Comments
Post a Comment