Oh no. He's there again. Right
outside the department store door, between me and my grocery bags filled with the
food I’ve just purchased for Easter and the street where I'll catch a jeepney
for home. He's standing as usual. Dirty tatters cover his legs,
spread wide for balance, and his arms reach high in supplication as he mutters
his plea for alms. He won't see me avert my eyes and look away. I
look anywhere but at his disfigured face and blind eyes. He won't see
me. And I don't want to look at his suffering, or to get anywhere near
it.
Could this somehow be a failure on the part of
God, that this man should know such shame and misery? Is God in reality not powerful enough to
eradicate his suffering...and for that matter, the suffering in my
life, and in yours, and in the lives of those we love?
Or is all this
suffering somehow mysteriously linked to that hill in Israel where Almighty God
carried out the final horrible details of an earth-shaking, history-making plan
masterminded even before He spoke this earth into existence?
Because He planned it just as it happened.
And all that dwell upon the earth shall
worship Him, whose names are not written in the book of life
of
the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world.
Revelation 13:8
The cross wasn't some cosmic disaster, nor a gentle gesture of sentimental goodwill somehow
spun tragically out of control.
Those one-inch thorns driven deep into Jesus'
head,
the lacerated back laced with ribbons of bleeding
flesh required to shoulder a 75 pound cross-beam,
tapered, square-shafted five-inch iron spikes
pierced into the median nerve of the wrist, inflicting severe, excruciating
pain,
His every breath an agony of effort,
and the darkness,
the worst of
all.
The darkness of God's
wrath, as He turned His back.
Every single detail was planned from before
time. God planned this suffering?
"Sometimes God allows what He hates to accomplish what He
loves." - Joni Eareckson Tada
Is it possible that our suffering may be exactly what God has planned to accomplish something
far more valuable than
comfort and happiness in our lives?
As I look at Christ’s outstretched arms, into His
face distorted with agony, into this suffering, is this not why I
celebrate Easter? Is this, after all, the real food of Easter? Without His sacrifice I'm utterly helpless. All my righteousness is like
filthy rags, my eyes are blind to the gospel, and my life distorted by sin. Could it be that I look to God exactly like this beggar man in front of me?
But because of His suffering I am brought back to God (1 Peter 3:18) I am healed. (Is. 53:5) I am forgiven. (1 Peter 2:24)
Only by the suffering
of Christ is my greatest suffering, my
agonizing need for Him, finally filled.
Right here is the true food of Easter.
*edited from the archives
5 comments:
"Sometimes God allows what He hates to accomplish what He loves." - Joni Eareckson Tada
I found my answer in Psalm 139:12, "even the darkness in not dark to you; for the night is bright as the day, for darkness is as light with you." All of my dark times have been light to Him as He can see exactly what those times were accomplishing in the depth of my soul. And all that He does is good.
Thanks for sharing with us. :)
Beautiful. Thanks for sharing!
amen, Carmen. all He does is good.
A beautiful Easter post . . . so many points so poignantly stated. Happy Easter and Resurrection Day to you and yours.
Happy Easter to you, too, Sherrey!
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