Saturday, October 18, 2008

Luke 5

1 comment:

Unknown said...

v 8. "Go away from me Lord, I am a sinful man." Bang. So sinful we are, so gracious He is. Isn't He beautiful?

v13. "I will. Be healed." Bang. Again. How beautiful.

v17. "The Lord was giving Jesus power to heal people." Interesting. This somehow highlights Jesus humanity. He didn't have this "power" just charged inside Him to be thrown around like flashlight beams at the flick of a wrist. I mean, maybe He did, but if He did it was only because "The Lord was giving it". It does not make Him less human. Hard to imagine how much the creator and Lord of the universe abased himself in every way imaginable to come to us on our level.

v27. The tax collector. I love how the riff-raff flocked to Jesus and the hoity-toity intellectuals were offended at Him. His entourage was made up of many fishermen, tax collectors, prostitutes, rebels (zealots), Harley Davidson types (the sons of thunder). Gives one food for thought.

v39. Noone after drinking old wine wants new wine because they say "The old wine is better." I have wrestled trying to understand this passage for years. This is the first time I read it in my New Century Version and I tell you I am LOVING this devotional bible. Truly, it is so "comprehensible". Things just click and make sense and speak to me in ways they never have. I felt a huge lightbulb go on here that has always eluded me.

Old coat, old wine=the Mosaic law
New cloth, New wine=the law of love and grace
old wineskins=the people under the Mosaic Law
new wineskins=the lives of people under the law of love and grace.

So practically, He is saying, that the law of love and grace (the new covenant) is not a "patch" to be sewn on the old garment of the Mosaic law to spruce it up and improve it. No. It is a new coat entirely. Try it on for size.

And then to the people He was saying, what I am teaching you is not going to "fit" into your old paradigm (wineskin). The power of this stuff is going to split that wineskin at the seams. You need to shed that and receive this new wine in a new paradigm. A paradigm of grace and love.

And then He basically describes how people who had grown up in a culture seeped in the dregs of that "old" wine were repulsed by the "flavor" of the new. We are creatures of habit. We don't like to give up our paradigms and comfortable routines. We don't like to admit that we might not have it all together. We like being comforted by "what we think we know."

Insanely amazing devotional this morning. Paired with Yancey's "The Jesus I Never Knew" I am just walking on high places.