Journeying to Easter - Part 3නියැදිය

Journeying to Easter - Part 3

12 න් 6 වන දිනය

Jesus arrested

These four verses indicate the speed at which events happened in the final days of Jesus’ earthly life and ministry. This Jesus, the Son of God come in the flesh, has been called ‘the Lamb who was slain from the creation of the world’ (Revelation 13:8b). So He knows His fate and, knowing that the end is near, He meets with the disciples in the upper room for the Last Supper, then alone in the Garden of Gethsemane in prayer with His heavenly Father. He predicts His demise, but how will it end? Unusually or predictably, it ends with a kiss. Judas, a so-called loyal and trusted disciple of Jesus and the ‘treasurer’ of the group, leads armed and violent people to take Jesus by force and to hand Him over to the ‘authorities’ so that they can get rid of Him. He kisses Jesus with the greeting of a friend as the sign that this is who to arrest, and the mob pounces.

In our communion services we often quote: ‘The Lord Jesus, on the night he was betrayed, took bread, and when he had given thanks, he broke it and said, “This is my body, which is for you’’ (1 Corinthians 11:23b–24a). I often think, ‘What did I do on the night that I was betrayed?’ Unlike Jesus, I certainly was not thinking about how to bless others. But Jesus is so unlike any of us. He was and is human enough to engage with His team and to feel their betrayal but focused enough to love and honour God to the end.

Written by JOHN SCOTT

ලියවිල්ල

දවස 5දවස 7

මෙම සැලැස්ම පිළිබඳ තොරතුරු

Journeying to Easter - Part 3

“In these next days and weeks leading up to Easter we’ll explore different scriptures. Each verse a thread in the tapestry of God’s great big redemption story – all culminating in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. In this Easter season, let’s slow down and create a regular rhythm of remembrance together.” (Lent – Lucy Weil)

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