With friends like these

“…the one who endures to the end will be saved. ” Mark 13:9-13 ESV

There’s an old song that goes something like this: “you only hurt the one you love.” Another way to look at it is: you can only be hurt by those you love, those whom you’ve let into your life, cared for, and nurtured. These are the ones Jesus brings up now in his discussion of the times of the end on the Mount of Olives.

Mark starts off by saying “they” will turn you over to the authorities, both religious and civil. These authorities think they have you on trial, but God sees it the other way around. They are on trial and you are the star witness.

So who are the “they” that Mark mentions? Those who are near and dear to you. Brothers, fathers, sons. Children will rise up against their parents. No one wants to be betrayed, but the betrayal of a friend stings worse than the worst an enemy can do.

The stakes are high – beatings and death. But the threat that you pose as a believer in Jesus Christ is so extreme that they can justify it. The real offense is Him. Anything that reminds them of Him must be eliminated and they will stop at nothing to accomplish it. It may be organized and systematic. It may be utter chaos, boiling with mob-driven rioting. It doesn’t matter. They will come for you.

How do you defend yourself against such frenzy? You don’t. First, you must be smart. Stay on your guard. Don’t be tricked into sacrificing yourself needlessly. Then when they haul you before the judge, don’t panic. Don’t worry about what to say. Jesus is on trial, not you. He will provide the words. His Holy Spirit will speak through you.

Thankfully, we are not yet faced with such wide scale opposition, but it is beginning to happen. There is still time and opportunity to accomplish our mission: spreading the good news. This is our first priority and the focus of our energies and efforts. This race may be long and arduous, but run it to the finish.

Walking on water

“…they all saw him, and were troubled.” Mark 6:45-52

Today we joke about walking on water as reserved for those who are exceptionally pure or righteous. But to the disciples it was not a joke. In fact it was unsettling.

Immediately after feeding 5,000 miraculously, Jesus packed the disciples in the boat and told them to meet him on the other side of the lake. Mark doesn’t record any questions or need for explanation. They just go, leaving Jesus alone to dismiss the crowd and then to retreat to pray on a nearby mountain.

The disciples had a hard pull across the lake since the wind was against them. During the fourth watch (between 3 and 6 AM), Jesus paused in his praying and noticed they were still struggling to cross Galilee. He got up and went to them. Not by walking around the shore, but by walking across the lake. On the water. We’ve heard the story so often, it may not strike us how unnatural this was, and how utterly unprepared the disciples (or anyone, for that matter) were to witness such an act.

Mark tells us Jesus intended to pass by them, probably hoping to greet them when they reached the shore, but the disciples caught sight of him walking on the sea. There was no natural explanation for what they were seeing. It went against all they knew about how things on earth worked. In a moment, their powers of rational thought skipped a beat and resorted to the primitive superstitions of their day. They supposed they were seeing a ghost and cried out.

Jesus knew their fear and immediately spoke to them as he drew near. “Take courage! It is I – do not be afraid.” He climbed into the boat. The wind stopped. The disciples were astonished. We are told the reason for their astonishment – they had not yet gained any insight from the miracle of the loaves and their hearts were hard. Not that they were bitterly set against him, but they had not yet fully opened themselves to receive all that Jesus was and could do.

It may be tempting to take the disciples to task, but there isn’t any indication that Jesus did this. The disciples followed his instructions and persisted despite the arduous and exhausting rowing against the wind.

Too often we think that if we encounter opposition when following God’s will that we must have missed a turn and gotten off the path. We fear that we have not been following his voice but that of our own deceptive hearts or the voices of our neighbors. It is then that Jesus comes and says, “Take courage!”

Copyright 2019 David J. Cooley