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preacher31
DON'T CALL ME A SHEEP! - Subscribe
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(Lenten Meditation) Read John 10:11-39. TEXT: (Jesus said) "I am the Good Shepherd. I know My own and My own know Me." ... "and I lay down My life for the sheep" (John 10:14, 15b). In today's reading Jesus identifies Himself as our Good Shepherd. This, of course, means that we are like sheep. That automatically says two things about us: we are helpless creatures, and we have powerful enemies against which we are defenseless. But are the crowds willing to admit this-that they need Jesus to be their shepherd? Jesus tells them He will freely lay down His life to save them from their enemies. He will lay it down on Good Friday when He is nailed to the cross and gives up His life for the sins of the world. But He will take it up again on the third day when He rises in glorious victory. The crowds hear this great news, and find themselves divided yet again! Some say He has a demon, or He is insane. But others, thinking how Jesus healed the man born blind, ask, "Can a demon open the eyes of the blind?" Jesus made some very bold statements about Himself and the work He came to do. Few are as powerful or as comforting as these words. Jesus Christ has been pleased to take us as His very own sheep, and will guard us, protect us, lead us to good pasture, care for us in body and soul and finally lead us through death to life everlasting. Jesus stretches out His hand to you today. If you are His sheep, listen to His voice, He will protect you from all enemies and guide you safely home to paradise. He promises that nothing can snatch you out of His hands. PRAYER: Lord Jesus, thank You for offering to hold me firmly and safely in Your hands. Let me never wander away in unbelief. Amen. Lutheran Hour Ministries |
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preacher31
OUR RESURRECTION AND LIFE 4/04/2011 03:13 - Subscribe
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Scripture: Read John 11:1-44. TEXT: "Jesus said to her, 'I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in Me, though he die, yet shall he live, and everyone who lives and believes in Me shall never die. Do you believe this?'"(John 11:25-26). Lenten Meditation: Jesus is about to do one of His greatest miraculous signs. He receives a frantic message to come to Lazarus who is gravely ill. But Jesus remains where He is. His disciples think Jesus is avoiding Jerusalem where the crowds had tried to stone Him a short time ago. But Jesus waits two days before finally heading out for Bethany, a small village near Jerusalem. Thomas tells his fellow disciples, "Let us also go, that we may die with Him." Jesus finally arrives after Lazarus has been dead four days. Martha says, "Lord, if You had been here, my brother would not have died. " But Jesus had a reason for His delay. Jewish rabbis believed a person's soul hovered over the body for three days, and then finally departed when decomposition set in. By waiting for the fourth day, Jesus would be performing a miracle none of the Jewish leaders could deny. Sometimes we get confused by the struggles in our life. Like Martha we plead with the Lord to help, but when we need Him most He seems to delay, or not to hear. But Jesus has a purpose and a plan for everything He does for us. Jesus told Martha "I am the resurrection and the life." Jesus proved that by raising Lazarus from the dead-and by His own resurrection on the third day. When we are discouraged, beaten down and depressed, we can look to Jesus and know our future is secure. PRAYER: Lord, give me confidence in Your victory during the dark days when I need You the most. Amen. Lutheran Hour Ministries |
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preacher31
ANOINTED FOR BURIAL 4/05/2011 07:12 - Subscribe
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Lenten Meditation: Scripture Read John 12:1-8. TEXT: "Jesus said, 'Leave her alone, so that she may keep it for the day of My burial. For the poor you always have with you, but you do not always have Me'" (John 12:7- .Mary is very grateful to Jesus. She has heard His wonderful words and received her brother Lazarus back from death. As her family gathers around the table with Jesus and His disciples for dinner, she pours an expensive ointment over Jesus' feet and wipes it with her hair. Her generosity should be an inspiration for Jesus' disciples. But it only stirs the darkness in Judas. He complains how the ointment was worth nearly a year's wages and that the money should have gone to the poor instead. But Jesus stands up in her defense. He boldly commands Judas to leave her alone. She has done this to honor Him, and the scent of that perfume will linger on His body throughout His trials, crucifixion and burial in the coming days. Do we have Mary's tremendous sense of gratitude and love for our Lord? Do we really appreciate what He has done for us, what He has given to us, and the promise of a glorious future because of Him? How striking to compare Mary's devotion with that of Judas-who has replaced his devotion to Jesus with a love for money. For, as John tells us, Judas had no intention of helping the poor with that money. He only wanted to get his hands on it-as he had stolen money from the disciples' moneybag many times before. Sadly, in the next few days he will do far worse for a much smaller amount of money. PRAYER: Holy Spirit, stir up in my heart true love, gratitude and appreciation for all Jesus has done for me. I pray in Jesus' Name. Amen. Lutheran Hour Ministries |
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preacher31
OUT OF CONTROL 4/06/2011 04:11 - Subscribe
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Lenten meditation Read John 12:12-19. TEXT: "So the Pharisees said to one another, 'You see that you are gaining nothing. Look, the whole world has gone after Him'" (John 12:19). The great Festival of Passover is near. Huge crowds make their way across the countryside toward Jerusalem, and our Lord Jesus enters Jerusalem in triumph, riding on a donkey. The Pharisees throw up their hands in fear and frustration. They say to each other "You see that you are gaining nothing." The situation is totally out of control. But again they will not stop to consider Jesus' claims. They only react in frustration and fear of what Jesus might do with the huge Passover crowds gathering around Him in Jerusalem. It is fascinating to compare their reaction to that of the crowds. The crowds cry out to Jesus, "Hosanna," which means "help" or "save." And they are right. The Lord Jesus is the mighty Son of God, who has come to battle Satan, sin, death and hell. He alone can save us from our bitter enemies. As we begin this week of Jesus' suffering and death for our sins, we notice He is completely in control. We will notice He is in control through this entire week-clear up to and including His arrest, trials and crucifixion. That's important to remember when we look at our own lives. Often we are as fearful and frustrated as the Pharisees, realizing situations in our lives are totally out of control. We can throw up our hands like the Pharisees, or call upon Jesus as the crowds do, remembering that Jesus is still in control, sitting at the right hand of the Father and guiding all things for our good. PRAYER: Lord, please help and save us, especially when circumstances are at their worst and totally out of our control. Remind us that they are never beyond Your control. Amen. Lutheran Hour Ministries |
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MY SOUL IS TROUBLED 4/09/2011 11:37 - Subscribe
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Lenten Meditation Read John 12:27-33. TEXT: (Jesus said) "'Now is My soul troubled. And what shall I say? 'Father, save Me from this hour'? But for this purpose I have come to this hour'" (John 12:27). Jesus has just told His disciples why He has come to Jerusalem: He is to suffer and die for the world. But the thought is not easy for Jesus to face. He says, "Now is My soul troubled." We see that turmoil again when He falls on His face in agony in the Garden of Gethsemane (see Luke 22). Here He prays, "Father, glorify Your Name." He doesn't ask the Father to save Him from the cross but to use His suffering and death on the cross to glorify His Name. He wants people to look at the cross and believe that "God so loved the world that He gave His only-begotten Son." In Gethsemane God will send an angel to strengthen His Son, but here He speaks to Jesus. "I have glorified it, and I will glorify it again." We all come face to face with overwhelming situations and struggles in life-heartbreak and loss, grief beyond telling, the shadow of death-whether our own or that of a loved one. Jesus has come to this hour in His life to be the answer to the overwhelming situations in each of our lives. He will be raised up to draw all men to Himself. This was done so that in Jesus Christ each of us might find the answer to our problems, the courage for the trials we face and the victory over Satan who brought all these situations upon us through his temptation. PRAYER: Heavenly Father, You glorified Your Name in the sufferings of Your beloved Son Jesus Christ. Glorify Your Name through me as You give me strength and courage to face the difficult times in my life. I pray in Jesus' Name. Amen. Lutheran Hour Ministries |