From our congregational devotions, Devoted.
Monday, March 30
Monday, March 30
Lowell Hennigs
Monday in Holy Week
Read Isaiah 42:1-9
Being God’s Friends
Teresa of Avila (1515-1582) once wrote,
“If this is how God treats his friends, it’s no wonder he has so few of
them!” In the first half of Holy Week,
we can read from the Songs of the Suffering Servant in Isaiah 40-55. The prophet describes one who will save by
suffering, who will win by losing, who will live by dying.
It is not surprising that Jesus takes
these songs to describe his vocation and his destiny. The God whose heart is love, whose nature is
compassion and whose way is peace—that God would come apart at the seams if God
tried to save the world through violence and coercion. So the path of suffering service is the only
way.
This Suffering Servant is the one in whom
God’s soul delights. We can hear echoes
of Jesus’ baptism at this point. “You are my beloved Son,” God says to
Jesus, “in whom I am well-pleased.” Lovely words, but God has a funny way of
showing it. From that moment, Jesus is
pitched into a battle with sin, death and evil.
That battle takes Jesus to a violent death.
If this is how God treats God’s friends…
And yet, this is the nature of love. There can be no other way. As C. S. Lewis reminds us in The Four Loves, to love is to be
vulnerable, to be “wound-able.” To love
is to risk having your heart broken, over and over. And the only way to avoid that risk is to
shut your heart up in a loveless casket.
To live without loving is to be dead
before you know it.
So this is precisely how God must treat
God’s friends. We are partners now in
that task of saving the world through loving self-giving. We dare not do violence in the name of Jesus,
for it we do we contradict our call.
Instead, we suffer the price of loving.
Let’s pray. Thank you, God, for your willingness to
suffer our pain and heal our sin. Use us
to love the world you love. In Jesus’
name. Amen.
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