Friday, March 16, 2018

Lenten Walk - Part 22

Friday, March 16, 2018
So then, since we have a great High Priest who has entered heaven, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold firmly to what we believe.  This High Priest of ours understands our weaknesses, for he faced all of the same testings we do, yet he did not sin.  So let us come boldly to the throne of our gracious God.  There we will receive his mercy, and we will find grace to help us when we need it most.  Every high priest is a man chosen to represent other people in their dealings with God.  He presents their gifts to God and offers sacrifices for their sins.  And he is able to deal gently with ignorant and wayward people because he himself is subject to the same weaknesses.  That is why he must offer sacrifices for his own sins as well as theirs.  And no one can become a high priest simply because he wants such an honor.  He must be called by God for this work, just as Aaron was.  
Hebrews 4:14 – 5:4(NLT)
In yesterday’s devotion we considered the importance of confession in our Lenten journey.  Scripture declares over and over that confession is indeed good for the soul.  To ignore that truth and practice is to trample the grace by which we are saved.  Confession should be quick, genuine and without reservation; without confession we cannot begin to have a relationship with God, much less continue.
Today’s passage leads us to the priest who receives our confession…and, for me, the rub of ministry leadership.  Of course Jesus is THE High Priest; no ordinary human can fill this role.  Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross for sin was sufficient; it was one time – for all time and all persons.  We need no other high priest; Christ IS our salvation.  That being noted, we see also that God does call humans to serve in a priestly fashion, leading others in their dealings with God.  And God reserves the selection of these to Himself.
The “rub” – or place where the rubber encounters the road, when it comes to being called as a minister (priest, if you will), is whether it is God doing the calling, or if it is some other voice.  This is the struggle-story I’ve heard countless times.  A person senses a pull towards ministry and then spends, perhaps, years running from it…fearing answering a call that may not have been a call from God at all.  Perhaps it was just a weird stomach cramp after too much pepperoni on the previous night’s pizza.  Or the supposed call was really just a pull towards getting a little needed attention to boost a poor self-esteem level.  (That one is really pathetically-funny actually…because, if God didn’t call you into ministry, you will have nothing to sustain you when the actual day-to-day of ministering to people blows your self-esteem out of the water, and you are left sitting in a corner somewhere staring at your naval.) 
In the end, those who choose ministry as a career, rather than respond to God who does the choosing, will find a hollow emptiness instead of the leading of that still, small voice.  It’s the difference between the called one who empties himself…and is filled by God with His Spirit and the fire to preach the Word…as opposed to the one full of himself, who just enjoys having preeminence in leadership.[2]
That principle is also just as valid in the pew as it is in the pulpit.  If we assume we are Christian by virtue of anything less than God’s grace and call to forgiveness by repenting of our sins, we are as foolish as a child playing with toy soldiers in the backyard thinking he is conducting a war.  The difference is huge, considering one day the child will probably grow up and understand the difference between play war and the obscenity of real war.  Not so in pretending to be a Christian by being good, being obedient, or thinking your way into being better; a pretend Christian just isn’t.
For You Today
1 Hand-PenEmptying before God all of who you really are, trusting in Christ alone, will result in being filled to overflowing with Who He is!  That is a terribly flawed English sentence, but an eternal, life-giving, life-changing truth you cannot live without.
You chew on that as you hit the Rocky Road; have a blessed day.

Go to VIDEO


[1] Title Image:  Courtesy of Pixabay.com
[2] See 3 John – the apostle’s warning against being like Diotrephes.

No comments:

Post a Comment