Thursday, March
17, 2022
PLEASE DON’T GO!
Matt 16:21-23
21 From that time forth began Jesus to shew unto his
disciples, how that he must go unto Jerusalem, and suffer many things of the
elders and chief priests and scribes, and be killed, and be raised again the
third day.
22 Then Peter took him, and began to rebuke him, saying, Be
it far from thee, Lord: this shall not be unto thee.
23 But he turned, and said unto Peter, Get thee behind me, Satan: thou art an offence unto me:
for thou savourest not the things that be of God, but those that be of men.
It is not easy for us
to grasp the oppression that was practiced upon the
people by the religious elite of that day. They walked about in royal robes and
added tax upon tax while working hand in hand with the oppressive Romans.
Rightly did Jesus advise his followers to listen to their teaching but to shun
their behavior.
The scriptures at hand
indicate either an end of the beginning or the
beginning of the end. Jesus began and kept on teaching his disciples that
immediately ahead was trouble. The very people who represented God to the
people would perpetrate unthinkable cruelty upon the Son of God. Jesus would be
killed and that is all that Peter could grasp. We wonder if he even heard the
last part of the message – “and be raised again the third day.”
What a burning rebuke
it was to hear Jesus call Peter “Satan!” I am sure
that Peter’s only motivation was the preservation of his Master but his resistance
to God’s clear plan was devilish. Confusion and wonder filled Peter’s mind. He
was not thinking spiritually but was thinking naturally.
If we stand before our
tilled garden with seeds in our hand, we are faced with a decision
and a choice. If we look at the seeds with a desire to keep them, we will have
no harvest. We must sacrifice them to the ground so that death might produce
life.
Thomas Jefferson, a great man,
nevertheless could not accept the miraculous elements in Scripture. He edited
his own special version of the Bible in which all references to the
supernatural were deleted. Jefferson, in editing the Gospels, confined himself
solely to the moral teachings of Jesus. The closing words of Jefferson's Bible are
these: "There laid they Jesus and rolled a great stone at the mouth of the
sepulchre and departed." Thank God that is not the way the story really
ends! --James S. Hewett
Dear Lord, Peter begged you not to go. I beg you now to return. AMEN
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