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03/13/2013

JESUS HAS A QUESTION OF HIS OWN

Scripture:

Read Luke 20:41-44.
TEXT: "David calls Him Lord, so how is He
his Son?" (Luke 20:44).

Jesus has completely silenced His enemies,
easily evading their traps. Now it's His turn to
ask the questions and show the priests and
scribes-those who are considered experts in
the Old Testament-how little they truly
understand of God's Word.

The scribes readily accept that the Messiah
is David's Son, a human. For them the hard
leap is the transition from thinking of the
Messiah as a mere man to believing He is
God's Son. But Jesus starts on the other
side. First establishing from Psalm 110:1
that the Christ is David's Lord, Jesus asks
how God's almighty Son can possibly be
human?

Jesus is revealing the very heart of the Old
Testament, which the scribes had missed
despite all their careful study. The promised
Savior is the Son of God, begotten of His
Heavenly Father from eternity, before all
creation. But here in time God's Son
became human by the miraculous power of
the Holy Spirit, when He was conceived of
the Virgin Mary. This should sound familiar.
Jesus is talking about the mystery of
Christmas!

But that Baby lying in the manger was not
just Mary's human child; He was God's own
eternal Son, who had become human. That
is the reason the angels proclaimed His birth,
and the reason the wise men bowed down to
worship Him. Being human He could submit
Himself to God's Law and earn our home in
heaven by His perfect obedience. And since
He is human He could take our sins upon
Himself and suffer and die. Since the Christ
is also God's Son, His suffering and death
will suffice for all humans of all time.

THE PRAYER:

Lord Jesus, we thank You for humbling
Yourself to leave Your glorious throne, for
becoming human, and for saving us from
our sins. Amen.

(Lutheran Hour Ministries(

13:53 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)

03/12/2013

DOUBTS ABOUT THE RESURRECTION

Scripture:

Read Luke 20:27-40.
TEXT: There came to Him some Sadducees, those
who deny that there is a
resurrection (Luke 20:27).

The scribes and Pharisees make up part of the Jewish
high court; another group is the priests who are
Sadducees. They only accept Moses' writings from the
Old Testament and reject the resurrection, angels and
heaven. But that won't stop them from posing a
resurrection riddle to make Jesus look foolish.

They refer to a Mosaic law that preserved the line of an
Israelite man who died childless. If the man's brother
married the widow, the first son born could be
considered the dead man's son. In their riddle a man
died childless, each of his six brothers married the
widow in turn, but each died childless. So whose wife
will she be in the resurrection?

It seems a no-win question for Jesus. She couldn't be
the wife of all seven. But if God chooses one of the
brothers to be her husband He would be wronging the
others. Jesus easily smashes their house of cards.
God's gift of marriage holds only for this earthly period
of time-not at the resurrection.

Now Jesus turns to their rejection of the resurrection.
He even refers to Moses, the only authority they will
accept from the Old Testament. When speaking to
Moses out of the burning bush, God said, "I am the
God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob" (see Exodus 3:6).
If there was no life after death God would have had to
say "I was their God," not "I am their God." God's
"I AM" proves the human soul survives physical death
and implies the resurrection when Christ returns.

Jesus has corrected the Sadducees so well even the
hostile scribes commend Him.

THE PRAYER:
Lord Jesus, we are often so slow to believe things we
cannot see. Remove my doubts and unbelief and give
me firm confidence in the resurrection and eternal life
You have promised to all believers. I pray in Jesus'
Name. Amen.

(Lutheran Hour Ministries)

15:36 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)

03/11/2013

ANOTHER TRAP

Scripture:

Read Luke 20:20-26.
TEXT: The scribes and the chief priests ... sent
spies, who pretended to be sincere, that they
might catch Him in something He said, so as to
deliver Him up to the authority and jurisdiction of
the governor (see Luke 20:19-20).

The leaders of the Jewish high court are furious
at Jesus, especially for the parable He just spoke
against them. But since the crowds are hanging
on Jesus' every word, the leaders cannot directly
attack Him. They know they will only be able to
destroy Him if they can turn the people against
Him.

They decide to attack Him indirectly. So they
send spies posing as genuine believers to trick
Jesus into saying something that will get Him
into trouble with the Roman governor. First, they
flatter Jesus to try to throw Him off; then they
slyly ask, "Is it lawful for us to give tribute to
Caesar or not?"

It's a devilishly brilliant trap. If Jesus answers,
"Yes, you should pay taxes," He'll risk losing
His popularity with the pilgrim crowds. But if He
says, "No," Pilate will be forced to move in and
quickly silence this troublemaker, especially
with the dangerous crowds gathered for the
Passover Feast.

But Jesus perceives their craftiness and
recognizes their trap. So He asks them to show
Him the coin used to pay the tax. When they
produce the denarius He asks whose image
and inscription it bears. They answer, "Caesar's.
" Jesus then answers, "Then render to Caesar
the things that are Caesar's and to God the
things that are God's."

Unable to catch Jesus in His words before the
multitudes, they marvel and grow silent.

THE PRAYER:

Lord Jesus, Satan sent so many enemies to
lay traps for You, yet none were able to trip
You up. Forgive my pride and failings and guide
my steps that I may honor You in my words
and actions. Amen.

(Lutheran Hour Ministries)

14:29 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)