Contrast

Re:Verse passage – Luke 19:28-44 (day four)

While Jesus didn’t enter his coronation parade like a typical king, robed in purple and mounted on a war horse, he was still surrounded by pomp and circumstance. While Luke focuses on the reaction of the disciples, we know from the other gospel accounts that a large crowd had gathered, echoing the disciples’ praise, calling out Hosannas, waving palm branches and loudly worshipping.

In the student guide for this Re:Verse series, Patricia Beck points out the irony of this moment beautifully. While the disciples and the crowd are rightfully praising Jesus as king, Jesus isn’t reveling in glory, he’s filled with sadness. When he made the final turn in the parade toward Jerusalem, he wept over the city. We don’t know how the crowd reacted to this or who witnessed his emotion, but it’s a stark contrast to the mood of the triumphal celebration behind him.

Jesus laments over the city of Jerusalem, knowing that they would soon suffer violence and destruction. They had “missed the time of their visitation.” Their minds laid superficially elsewhere as they remained concerned about their political standing with Rome, not their spiritual standing with God. He had come to them, Immanuel, yet they missed it. How heartbreaking this scene is.

As the Holy Spirit constantly works and moves among us, may we not become so focused on earthly trials that we miss heavenly miracles. The promised one has come. Hosanna!

Vulnerable

Re:Verse passage – Luke 19:28-44 (day three)

The Lord has need of it.”

Jesus’s way of living in this universe never took an adversarial stance. You know what that is: You fight traffic; you slog through the day; you endure meetings; you gear up for a conversation; you avoid that issue. Fighting, slogging, enduring, gearing up, avoiding – these are not open-hearted, vulnerable, curious, and connected positions in interacting with the world. They are instead protective, apprehensive, and guarded. And there are good reasons you would approach life that way. When something appears harmful, you’ll do what it takes to steer clear. But Jesus lived differently. He says, “Ask and you will receive.” He says, “Let your yes be yes.” When he had need for a donkey, he instructed his disciples to state that need plainly. This seems simple, exposed, even dangerous. Yet it begets peace and provision. Learn from him.

Judge Not

Re:Verse passage – Luke 19:28-44 (day two) Some of the Pharisees in the crowd said to Him, “Teacher, rebuke Your disciples.” 40 But Jesus answered, “I tell you, if these become silent, the stones will cry out!” vv. 39-40

Have you ever been in worship and judged others? That’s a loaded question, I know, but hear me out. Have you ever heard someone shout ‘AMEN’ and you have thought, ‘wow, that’s a bit over the top.’ Or maybe seen or heard someone singing or being very demonstrative in their worship and felt it was for show? At some point we have all made these kinds of judgments rightly or wrongly. The Pharisees were eager to control any narrative that wasn’t their own, and they were quick to put down anything that strayed from their narrative. No one person will react to the Lord’s presence in the same way, and we are not in a place to wonder or worry about their motivation. Our focus should not be like the Pharisees, outward – on others. Our focus should be responding to the Lord as he calls. Let’s continue to be a place where we freely allow the Spirit to move, and respond accordingly. Otherwise…the rocks are warming up.

Monday Re:Vlog – 4/7/25

Re:Verse passage – Luke 19:28-44 (day one)

Join us as Senior Pastor Chris Johnson, Associate Pastor Aaron Hufty, and Associate Pastor Bryan Richardson walk us through Luke 19:28-44  in our Palm Sunday to Pentecost Re:Verse Series: “Encounter Christ – From the Cross to the Church.”

What Comes Out

Re:Verse passage – Mark 7:1-23 (day seven)

There is nothing outside the man which can defile him if it goes into him; but the things which proceed out of the man are what defile the man. vs 15

“Although it may not seem so now, this passage, when it was first spoken, was well-nigh the most revolutionary passage in the New Testament.” -Barclay

What makes this so revolutionary? The focus of many of the rules in ancient Israel, including parts of the the Law, were hyper focused on keeping the individual ritualistically pure as to differentiate them from a pagan society. To do so, they watched closely the things they took into their body. What Jesus begins to challenge them on is the idea that the things coming out of the body, the things we say and do, are a better reflection of the purity of the soul than the things we eat. Our hands may be clean, our hearts can still be dirty.

Even though we might not struggle with things that are Kosher in modern Christianity, we still struggle with the same mentality. Many in our churches today are more concerned with how others perceive them and how they appear than the actual cleanliness of their heart. When observed at a closer level, their words, their actions, and their fruit will tell a much different story. What are the things that come out of you?

When Traditions Get in the Way

Re:Verse passage – Mark 7:1-23 (day six)

Traditions can be beautiful. They help us express love, reverence, and belonging. Whether it’s dressing up on Easter morning or receiving ashes on Ash Wednesday, traditions shape the rhythms of our faith and bind us to one another.

But as helpful as they are, traditions should never take the place of loving people.

In Mark 7, Jesus challenges a group of religious leaders who had grown more concerned with keeping traditions than with caring for people. Their spiritual routines had become a substitute for true transformation.

It’s easy to fall into that same trap—mistaking outward piety for inward renewal. We can get so good at “doing church” that we forget the reason behind it all: love. Real, sacrificial, others-first love.

So here’s a question worth asking:

Would we be willing to change our traditions if it meant someone in the heart of the city could experience the love of Jesus?

Let’s hold our traditions with open hands, always ready to lay them down if it helps someone else take hold of grace.

Patient Graciousness

Re:Verse passage – Mark 7:1-23 (day five)“And He said to them, “Are you so lacking in understanding also? Do you not understand that whatever goes into the man from outside cannot defile him,”

‭‭One of the many reasons I love and regard the scriptures is because it gives honest accounts of the actions and attitudes of the human heart- including the disciples. They should “get it” (what Jesus is teaching and revealing) sooner and deeper than most, yet often times they don’t. Could Jesus have been any more blunt or clear?  He calls the crowd closer to listen again to His teaching. Then, He has even more to say to His disciples (goes over it again- because they were struggling to understand)-the darkness and sinfulness of the human heart. Some still didn’t get it. How do we know?  Because God continued to teach and challenge them until they did. For Peter it was years later (see Acts 10- same lesson). Praise God for His patient graciousness that continues to teach, convict, and encourage His children (for hours, days, years, and decades). He’s not finished or given up on any of His followers!!  Ready to listen and learn?  Search the Scriptures not traditions. He continues to teach and reveal!

Search

Re:Verse passage – Mark 7:1-23 (day four)

Jesus draws a very clear distinction between two forms of the inner life. One is prideful and self-absorbed, making an idol of oneself and “righteous” to a T. The other is one that prays Psalm 139:23-24, “Search me, O God, and know my heart; Try me and know my anxious thoughts; And see if there be any hurtful way in me, And lead me in the everlasting way.”

Ironically, the Pharisees would have known this Scripture. It is a vulnerable thing to ask the Spirit to search you, but the more you do, the more you experience God’s gentle conviction and loving kindness. The Pharisees in their pride were not gentle, though. They bullied others with their law-keeping and  condemned them with their self-righteousness.

Which inner life will you choose? What areas of your life do you need to ask the Spirit to search?

Police

Re:Verse passage – Mark 7:1-23 (day three)

You are experts at setting aside the commandment of God in order to keep your tradition.”

Jesus and the Pharisees agreed on at least one thing: their standing as experts. They touted their expertise in the law; Jesus pointed out their expertise in setting aside the law. It seems that often within the spiritual and moral realm there exists a drive for assurance that one is properly spiritual and moral. Assurance-seeking will always involve self-policing and then expand to the policing of others. Righteousness-policing becomes the touchstone of assurance rather than, you know, actual righteousness. Jesus declared that his disciples were experiencing an immersion in the pursuit of righteousness, while the Pharisees were immersed in the pursuit of assurance of righteousness. The former flows from a state of wonder at God’s goodness, the latter from a state of fear of God’s rejection.

Tradition

Re:Verse passage – Mark 7:1-23 (day two) Neglecting the commandment of God, you hold to the tradition of men. v. 8

This should hit everyone square between the eyes. Whether it is tradition of denomination, our own culture, our particular gather, we have ways of doing things “in the name of Jesus.” So much so that we often don’t remember how they became tradition in the first place, but they have become our stock and trade when it comes to how we do church. You won’t find a bigger advocate for tradition than me, but I also want to be the first to say that if we don’t run everything by scripture and the leadership of the Holy Spirit, we are running a risk of being far from God. Even more than that when our traditions become our doxology we teach others, ie our children, to worship the tradition first. This is a hard lesson for any institution that has been around for generations, but our litmus test should never be measured against our history, but against God’s authority.