Deuteronomy 10 –Moses recounts how
God told him to bring two new stone tablets and an ark of wood to place them
in. Aaron dies in Moserah and his
son Eleazar succeeds him. The tribe
of Levi is set aside to carry the ark, to stand in God’s presence and serve him. They give up their share of the
inheritance of land (10:12-13). Moses passed forty days on the mountain doing
all this, convincing the Lord not to destroy them.
So
now, what does the Lord ask of His people in return for all He has done? Only
this: to fear Him, to follow all His ways “exactly,” to love Him, to serve Him
with all their hearts and souls, to keep the commandments and laws He has given
them. Moses encourages his people
to circumcise their hearts [the Schocken
editors say this reads “foreskin of your hearts” —the thick part of your
hearts]. We need to circumcise the parts of us least amenable to obedience. And
then Moses speaks of the character of this God: “He “has no favorites, accepts no bribes; [He] executes justice for the
orphan and the widow, and befriends the alien, feeding and clothing him. So you too must. . .” (10:18-19). The great love and reverence Moses has
for God comes through in all his words.
He calls us to be just and
merciful in response to the love and mercy shown to us by God.
Matthew
26:26-46 - The last supper (26:26-46) is thought to
have been held on a Thursday. Seders were held on Friday evening, but Jesus perhaps knew
he would be taken on Friday.
Essenes followed a solar calendar and always celebrated Passover on a
Tuesday night. “From now on. . .I shall not drink wine until the day I drink the new
wine with you in the Kingdom of my Father” (26:29).
Then they go to the Mount of Olives where
Jesus predicts they will all “run away and leave me” (26:31). Peter assures
Jesus “I will never leave you, even
though all the rest do!” (26:33)
Oh, Peter, you are so like me – so sure of yourself, so wanting to be
the one loyal one, the one dependable one – but you (and I) are so like the
rest – so unpredictable. Jesus goes off to pray and be alone with God. “Grief and anguish came over him, and he
said to them, ‘The sorrow in my heart is so great that it almost crushes me.
Stay here and keep watch with me.’” (26:37-38). I think we can all of us
relate to this moment. We have all been “crushed” with sorrow in our lives. How
comforting it is to know that the great God I love KNOWS my experience. Jesus asks his friends to “keep watch”
with him, but of course, for all their proclamations of love and loyalty, they go
off and go to sleep while he is in the deepest pit of misery. This is his agony
in the garden. He prays three
times while his disciples—Peter, James and John—sleep.
Lord, that you should sorrow on my account is
painful to me even now. Forgive me
for all the times I have denied you or slept when your Spirit called to me and
I was asleep.
No comments:
Post a Comment