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Friday, March 7, 2014

Brown's Daily Word 3-7-14

     Praise the Lord for this Friday.  Sunday is coming.  We all will get to gather in the House of the Lord with His people to worship and celebrate.  We will get to join the church of Jesus Christ our Lord around the corner and around the globe declaring that Jesus Reigns.  Last Wednesday in our Bible study we were sharing about  how our Lord is in the business of healing.  Luke chapter 13 contains one of many such healing story.  We have  read and heard these stories of Jesus healing people many times.  In some ways, they're all alike — a person with a physical or mental or spiritual defect comes to Jesus, and Jesus heals the person.  There was blind, man, whom Jesus gave back his sight.  In Luke 13 there was a little boy who had a terrible fever; his father thought he was going to die, but Jesus healed him.  There was also the man whose mind was so darkened that he used to run around unclothed, cutting himself with stones. Look at how Jesus cured him,   made him whole, and gave him back his life.  Our Lord is amazing and wonderful.
    Stories of Jesus healing people are wonderful stories, each one so similar, and yet each one also unique, one of a kind.  Luke 13 records the story of Jesus healing a woman who was bent over, for instance.  While Jesus was teaching He noticed a woman, bent over.  We are told that she had been suffering from this infirmity for eighteen years and that an "evil spirit" was responsible.  Jesus saw the woman, but then did something most of us would not do.  He focused his attention on her.  It is quite the opposite for most of us.  If we see somebody who is obviously handicapped, we look away because we don't want to be impolite and stare since it is rude to keep staring at somebody who looks different.  Right in the middle of his teaching, when he saw the bent-over woman, he interrupted his lesson and called her over to him.  He not only saw her, but focused his attention on her, right there in front of everyone.  He called her to him, and said to her, "Woman, you are set free from your ailment."  He placed his hands on her, and she stood up straight and began praising God.
    The leaders of the synagogue were clearly unhappy about the incident, about how inappropriate it is that this healing should take place on the Sabbath.  Our  Lord, however, had no patience with those who are more concerned about legal niceties than they are about relieving human suffering.  "You hypocrites!" he said. "You give water to your work animals on the Sabbath.  Ought not this woman, a daughter of Abraham whom Satan bound for eighteen long years, be set free from this bondage on the Sabbath day?"
    Jesus called her "a daughter of Abraham."  She is the only person in the whole Bible to be called by that name.  Abraham, of course, was the great father of faith. He was the one who, many years before, received God's promise that a great nation would be created out of his descendants, a people through whom all the nations of the earth would be blessed.  This woman, according to Jesus, was a daughter of Abraham, and nothing less.  He did not see her as the crippled woman, a nobody.  As a beloved child of Abraham, she was not to be shoved aside, given a label to keep her in her place.  No, she was a beloved child of Abraham, part of God's great plan of salvation and blessing for the whole world.
    Love just poured out of Jesus, and He reached out to heal here without even being asked.  He saw her, seeing not just the obvious thing, that she could not stand up straight.  He saw whatever spirit has been keeping her life bent.  He saw the totality of her suffering: the humiliation of her ailment, the way it has set her apart into a prison of loneliness.  He saw how other people looked away when she came into their line of vision.  He saw the emotional as well as the physical pain she suffered.  He saw the whole picture, including the fact that she was too timid or too afraid or too hopeless to ask for healing.
    Just as He saw straight to the heart and mind of the woman, He sees the same things about each of us.  He sees our deepest need, which we at times cannot even see ourselves.  He sees and knows that our anger at other people is so often really anger at ourselves, and that we're often afraid to look inside ourselves because we know there's a lot of garbage there that we'd rather not deal with.  He sees that the good front we sometimes put on when we're out in public is often a cover-up for the hurts we have suffered over the years — the rejections, the disappointments, the betrayals, the failures, the losses, the fears.  He sees the ugliness inside us — things others have done to us, that we have done to ourselves, that we have done to others, and that were nobody's fault, but just happened.
    He sees it all and, just as He did to the bent-over woman, He calls us over to Himself, and says to us, "Come here to me.  Let me put my hands on you and heal you.  Let me take all that is bent and crooked in your life and make it straight and strong.  Let me wipe away all the ugliness inside you."  We are sons and daughters of Abraham, through Jesus our Lord.  We are loved without limit, without reservation, and without condition.

  In His grace and love,

  Brown

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