When The Hour Was Come


“And when the hour was come, He sat down, and the twelve apostles with Him” (Luke 22:14).
 
As we come to Thursday in Holy Week let us consider the events that likely took place on this day.
 
Consider the twelve apostles. Only a few years earlier they had left all to follow Christ. What an incredible experience they had: the wonderful teachings, the astounding miracles, the good food and fellowship they enjoyed together day after day.
 
Earlier in His ministry the opposition had tried to seize Jesus but could not, “because His hour was not yet come” (John 7:30). But this night was different. The careful historian Luke states “the hour was come.”
 
Now the Twelve leaned around a table and Jesus shared what surely must have been a confusing illustration as He inserted into the familiar Passover meal: “My body which is given for you, my blood which is shed for you.”
 
The disciples wondered what He meant as their eyes met one another around the table. You know what it’s like to be in a group with friends; you don’t want to let on that you don’t get it, but … you really don’t get it. You look at others in a guarded way to assess if they are catching on. You’re hopeful that some brave soul feels the same as yourself and will bravely ask the question, “Just what did you mean when You spoke of dying?” Just days earlier He had come into Jerusalem to great fanfare and shouts of praises from the crowd proclaiming that He was the King. They had surely thought this was the time He would set up His Kingdom. But this was not the case.
 
“The hour” was that singular moment in space and time for which Christ, “the lamb slain from the foundation of the world” had come to this sin-filled world. Oswald Chambers states, “The cross is the crystallized point in history where eternity merges with time.”
 
May all we who believe and follow Christ reaffirm our commitment to this great and loving God.    May the desire of Paul’s heart also be the theme of our prayer: “May I never boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world” (Galatians 6:14).
 
In the cross of Christ I glory, tow’ring o’er the wrecks of time;
All the light of sacred story gathers round its head sublime. *
 
Be encouraged today,
 
Stephen & Brooksyne Weber
 
Daily prayer: Father, I glory in the Cross of Calvary from which Your Son, my Lord and Savior, died for my sins. I boast only in Jesus who lifted the heavy chains from my enslaved soul freeing me to soar in newness of life. Thank You, God, for demonstrating Your love toward me in that You gave Your one and only Son to die for me. At just the right time while I was still powerless, Jesus died for me, while I was unlovely and unable to save myself. Because of this incredible act of love and forgiveness I have reconciliation with my Father in heaven. Praise be to God! Amen.
 
* “In The Cross Of Christ I Glory” Ithamar Conkey / John Bowring © Public Domain
 

Chaplain Stephen and Brooksyne Weber serve with Transport for Christ. Click here to contact the Webers.

 

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A Grave Word Of Caution


“Watch out that no one deceives you” (Matthew 24:4).
 
Have you ever bought a large box of crackers or cereal only to open it and find that the contents fill no more than 1/3 of the packaging? Brooksyne brought home a large box of Calla bulbs she purchased for gardening this year. She is so excited to start her spring gardening! I curiously opened the box expecting to find it full of bulbs, but was amazed to find the box nearly empty as the bulbs didn’t even cover the base of the box. I initially felt somewhat deceived in the oversized packaging of the product, though to be fair, it was advertised by the count of the bulbs not the size of the large box!
 
Today’s message about deception may seem a bit unusual for this week when we especially focus on the sacrificial death of Christ, but I believe it is fitting since it is a major part of Christ’s teaching only days before His death.
 
After the Triumphal Entry and just before Jesus went to the Cross He shared two lengthy teachings recorded in our Bibles. All three synoptic Gospels record a teaching known as the Olivet Discourse that was likely given on Wednesday of Holy Week. The Olivet Discourse is so named because the Lord shared this as He was sitting on the Mount of Olives. The other lengthy teaching is found in John’s Gospel which records our Lord’s close personal instruction to the disciples in the Upper Room (John 13-17). This likely took place on Thursday of Holy Week.
 
The Olivet Discourse is a long message that has a lot to say about the Church Age and the end times. However Jesus begins with a solemn warning: “Watch out that no one deceives you.” Although I believe we do well to listen and heed this in a general sense concerning all forms of deception, Jesus goes on and expounds with a description of a very specific form of deception: “For many will come in My name, claiming, ‘I am the Christ,’ and will deceive many.” Thus foundationally we need to be on guard so that we are not falsely indoctrinated into believing in a counterfeit Christ. Instead we are indeed following and serving the genuine Christ.
 
Deception abounds in our world today. Actually it was first introduced in the Garden of Eden when Satan planted doubt in Eve’s heart causing her to question God’s ruling regarding the forbidden fruit. I read a letter to the editor written by an avowed secularist who asserted that a person holding a Bible-based outlook on life such as myself is deceived. Indeed from his perspective and belief system (worldview) he feels that he is right and anyone holding a view contrary to his is deceived. Of course I would assert that it is the other way around. He is the one deceived!
 
Since Christ gave His loving and instructive caution to the disciples many false christs have appeared all through the ages of the Church. And this is still true today. This may be a self-proclaimed individual or a belief system contrary to revealed Biblical truth. In my own lifetime false christs have come and gone and surely more will be coming, culminating with the antichrist.
 
Today we need to not only listen but heed the words of the one and only genuine Christ. We have in the Holy Scriptures a most certain and dependable record of His life and His call to each one of us. Let us ever be on our guard, watching out that no one deceives us. This is a grave word of caution that believers all through the Church age should solemnly take to heart. “Watch out that no one deceives you.”
 
Be encouraged today,
 
Stephen & Brooksyne Weber
 
Daily Prayer: Father, we are confronted with deception on many fronts every day, so much so, that we can be deceived without even realizing it. Would You help us to watch out and be on our guard so that we are not deceived by man’s words, no matter how convincing they are, how charming their personality, or how cunning their craft. Help us not to fall for Satan’s deceptive tactics that have brought down believers throughout the church age. We seek You for strength and discipline. We search the Scriptures for discernment and the true revelation of who Jesus is; the Son of the Living God. It is in His name that we pray, Amen.
 

Chaplain Stephen and Brooksyne Weber serve with Transport for Christ. Click here to contact the Webers.

 

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