MAKING
IT PERSONAL!
Gen
22:6
6
And Abraham took the wood of the burnt offering, and laid it upon Isaac his
son; and he took the fire in his hand, and a knife; and they went both of them
together.
Matt
27:32
32
And as they came out, they found a man of Cyrene, Simon by name: him they compelled
to bear his cross.
Mark
15:21
21
And they compel one Simon a Cyrenian, who passed by, coming out of the country,
the father of Alexander and Rufus, to bear his cross.
Isaac was a type of Christ; he carried the
wood on which he was to be sacrificed. This type was fulfilled when our Lord
was led forth carrying His cross.
Cyrene was a city of Libya, in Africa,
lying west of Egypt. There were many Jews there, and they were in the habit,
like others, of going frequently to Jerusalem. We might gather that Simon could
have been a black man and that speaks to the issue of race. Little else is
known about him, except that he had two sons named Alexander and Rufus, and we
might even conclude that he was a pagan and not a Jew. If he was a pagan then
that speaks to the issue of world-wide missions, the thought that the cross
would one day be laid on the backs of the nations. But his name was
Simon and that makes carrying the cross very personal.
We are forever inviting people to make
Jesus their “personal” savior and yet the word “personal” is found
nowhere in the Bible. The concept is certainly present, however. If I say that
“God so loved the world” as we see in John 3:16 then I can easily discount the
personal nature of it. But if, with the Apostle Paul, I say that “Jesus died to
save sinners of whom I am chief” then I can not avoid the personal implication
of salvation.
Indeed the difference between Jesus
preaching to the thousands and sitting on the lip of a well talking to a single
woman is glaring. As far as we can tell by the stories the multitudes were not
greatly changed but the woman at the well was never the same. Indeed the whole
of Samaria was never the same. It was personal.
The personal nature of close contact
with Jesus
challenges and changes all our other relationships. One of Simon’s sons was
perhaps well known to the believers at Rome.
Rom
16:13
13
Salute Rufus chosen in the Lord, and his mother and mine.
Dear
Lord, carrying your cross removes me from being a spectator to a player. I feel
the weight of it, I smell the scent of it and the drops of blood fall upon me.
It is personal – and I am glad. AMEN
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