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03/04/2016

LAST MINUTE ENCOURAGEMENT


By Rev. Wayne Palmer

Lenten Devotion

And when He (Jesus) rose from prayer, He came to the
disciples and found them sleeping for sorrow, and He
said to them, "Why are you sleeping? Rise and pray that
you may not enter into temptation" (Luke 22:45-46).

Read Luke 22:45-46.

Matthew and Mark's Gospels tell us Jesus' prayer lasted
about an hour-and He repeated it two more times. And
each time He went to check on His disciples. He longed
for their prayers, their presence, their support. How
disheartening is must have been to find them asleep.
Instead of rising up in prayer to meet the sorrow that
weighed heavy on their spirits, they sunk beneath it in
defeated sleep.

Jesus' exhausting struggle in prayer had prepared Him
for the grueling trial to come. Yet in their sleep His
disciples left themselves unprepared and vulnerable. He
awakens them, urging them to pray so they can
overcome the temptation to doubt and fall away from faith
when they see Him condemned and executed. They will
need to continue to pray in the hours and days to come
until they see Jesus' standing alive before them on
Sunday. Though they had failed to be there for Jesus, He
is there for them.

When we face difficult trials in life-especially trials of
faith-it is easy to grow weary and fatigued. Like the angel
He sent to Jesus, God strengthens us through His Word
and His gifts of Baptism and Holy Communion. We are
empowered to bear up under those burdens, and wrestle
our fears, struggles and heartaches. Through prayer God
prepares our hearts to embrace His perfect, fatherly will,
and to accomplish the amazing things He has planned for
our lives here on earth.

THE PRAYER:

Lord Jesus, strengthen my faith through the trials I face,
and teach me to persistently pray as You did. Then by Your
mighty power, glorify Your Name through all I do and say.
Amen.

(Lutheran Hour Ministries)

02:34 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)

03/03/2016

POURED OUT IN PRAYER

By Rev. Wayne Palmer

Lenten Devotion

And there appeared to Him (Jesus) an angel from heaven,
strengthening Him. And being in an agony He prayed more
earnestly; and His sweat became like great drops of blood
falling down to the ground (Luke 22:43-44).

Read Luke 22:43-44.

At some point in our lives, many of us will face a moment
when the doctor says, "There's nothing more I can do." You
get word that a loved one has died unexpectedly. As the
realization sinks in so does hopelessness, shock, and the
unrelenting pain of reality. Like Jesus, all we can do is
come to our Father on our knees, and pour out our hearts.

The Father has laid a burden on His Son that no human
can bear, and even Jesus' perfect human nature becomes
faint under the burden. In tender love and compassion the
Father sends an angel from heaven to His dear Son.
Through that angel He provides the strength Jesus' body
requires to fulfill its part in accomplishing God's gracious
plan of salvation. Later we will see Jesus' physical strength
give out again as He attempts to carry the cross and
collapses under its weight. But for now, strengthened by
the angel, Jesus can fully face the dread welling up inside
Him.

In agony, He prays even more earnestly, deeply,
emotionally than before, and the inner turmoil in His soul
pours itself out through His body. Doctors tell us severe
mental stress can cause small blood vessels in the skin
to burst, mingling blood into the sweat. The physician Luke
tells us, "His sweat became like great drops of blood falling
down to the ground." This was the intense struggle our Savior
wrestled through, working to accept as His own His Father's
will to suffer and die for our salvation.

THE PRAYER:

Lord Jesus, help me never to shrink back from life's troubles,
but to always bring them to You in prayer; as You brought
Your needs to Your Father in heaven. Amen.

(Lutheran Hour Ministries)

01:26 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)

03/02/2016

CRYING OUT

By Rev. Wayne Palmer

Lenten Devotion

And He (Jesus) withdrew from them about a stone's throw,
and knelt down and prayed, saying, "Father, if You are
willing, remove this cup from Me. Nevertheless, not My will,
but Yours, be done" (Luke 22:41-42).

Read Luke 22:41-42.

Jesus doesn't go far from His disciples, about as far as one
can throw a stone. Matthew and Mark tell us He brings along
three disciples: Peter, James, and John. After strongly
encouraging them to keep watch with Him and pray, He
withdraws a few paces. This is a burden they cannot share.
He has to face it alone with His Father, but still it comforts
Him to know they are listening and praying for Him.

Jews normally stood in prayer, but Jesus kneels down,
showing tremendous humility, coupled with the weight of the
grief bearing down on Him. Immediately, He cries out in pain
and distress. Surely, His three closest disciples hear and join
in fervent prayer. He pleads with His Father to remove the
cup-the physical suffering, the abuse, the pain-but more than
anything, the prospect of coming under the wrath of God for
the sins of the world. Yet He immediately surrenders His will
to His Father, "Nevertheless, not My will, but Yours, be done."

He isn't afraid of death-but dreads the thought of being cut
off, forsaken by His Father, and suffering the terrible wrath of
God. Yet He casts aside His own desire, His own will, and in
genuine love for His Father, accepts God's perfect plan as His
own.

In our hours of greatest need our prayers often focus on
ourselves-but notice how Jesus focuses instead on His Father
and what He wants. Again, Jesus casts His own needs and
interests aside, embracing His Father's will-and our desperate
need.

THE PRAYER:

Lord Jesus, in awe and holy fear we listen as You lay Your heart
bare before Your Father. Teach us so to pray. Amen.

(Lutheran Hour Ministries)

13:21 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)