Thursday 25 April 2019

Twelve Years of Joy and Twelve Years of Sorrow


Twelve Years of Joy and Twelve Years of Sorrow

Luke 8:42, 43 - For he had one only daughter, about twelve years of age…And a woman having an issue of blood twelve years…

    In this section of Scripture, it appears that we have an interesting comparison of a season of time in two lives; that of Jairus’ daughter and the woman with the issue of blood.

     The young girl is the only child of Jairus and his wife, and we can just imagine how much joy she brought to them. We don’t know, but it is possible that they had tried for more than one child, however, their daughter was all they were given and so she became the only precious little one; the bright light bringing great meaning to their lives. Anyone who has had the privilege of having children born into their family knows that life is never the same again. Life takes on a new focus and all of it is centered on the care, nurture and protection of that sweet little one. Even hard-hearted men are quickly softened by the arrival of a baby and especially so when that baby is a girl.

    Twelve years of having a beautiful little girl in the house. Twelve years of joy and laughter. Twelve years of snuggles and giggles and playing house. Twelve years of innocent curiosity about the world. The first words, the first steps, the first day of school; all such joy-filled moments fixed in the memory and cherished by parents.

    Twelve wonderful years were spent watching this beautiful girl grow into a young woman. Jairus may have thought of the day when a young man would come knocking on the door looking for his daughter. Our little treasure. How will we ever let her go? Raising children is a bittersweet experience because, at some point, you realize that they will not remain in this place of young innocence for long.

    Every life is like a river; it is constantly moving and the current never stops. The water is never the same each moment; truly we never step into the same river twice. The water has gone by us unable to be contained in our hands. The lives of our children are like the river; they also flow by us and we cannot hold on to them; we cannot keep them at a certain age. Oh, how we would love to keep our little ones in the place of innocence where the world can never hurt them, but alas, it cannot be so. To live is to love and to love is to give away and give away we must, or we will hinder our children and limit their future. The truth is these little ones are not ours; they are the children of God; they belong to Him; we are simply stewards.

    Jairus and his wife had enjoyed those years and they seemed to have gone by so quickly, but for a certain lady who lived in the same region, the last twelve years were not enjoyed and did not go by quickly; they were a long, drawn-out and dark nightmare.

    Twelve years she had this condition and no matter how she sought relief, it never improved, it only got worse. Twelve years of struggling to keep her hopes up that, one day, life could go back to normal. Twelve years of physicians, poking and prodding and asking questions. Twelve years of various treatments, some of which, in those days, may have bordered on torture. Twelve years of suffering the loss of friendships and simple pleasures.

    Up until the time when her affliction came, she was most probably a wife and a mother and had enjoyed the blessing of family life. We know that she was a woman who had a measure of wealth and, no doubt enjoyed the social status that comes with having means. The community events and fundraisers, the family gatherings and celebrations had all become a faint memory.

    The loss of blood ran parallel to the loss of everything else in her life; her blood ebbed slowly away; her dreams ebbed slowly away; her strength receded little by little; her faith receded little by little. As she grew weaker, it seemed her misgivings grew stronger. Why has this happened to me? Have I done something wrong? Has God forsaken me?

    The strict and harsh religious people loved to look down their noses and point fingers at the suffering ones; indeed, their religious relatives still live today. She endured twelve years of accusation and judgement; misunderstanding and mishandling; criticism and condemnation. Twelve long years.

    What season of life are we in? Is it a season of joy or a season of sorrow? For undeniably, life brings both, and Jesus is present in both. As a friend, He laughs with us in our joys and records them so we can remember, and as a comforter, He cries with us in our sorrows and removes the pain from our memory. He is the Great Companion and Consoler who never abandons or forsakes us. Twelve years of joy, twelve years of sorrow.








Tuesday 16 April 2019

The Weeping Jesus

John 11:35 – Jesus wept.

     Jesus is the perfect picture of a man created in the image of God and He is the only man who has never lost his God-given identity and purpose. He represents all that the Father God originally intended for us.  He came to live a life before us and exemplify the heart of the Father God. As this man-of-all-men stood before the grave of His dear friend, Lazarus, He wept.

    Jesus wept because death was never part of the plan of God; it was, and still is, an enemy, a bully and an intruder into the life of mankind. Death and all that is associated with it is foreign to God, it is not in His heart or His plan. God is light and in Him, there is no darkness and He is also life and in Him, there is no death.

    Jesus wept because of His friend. He wept because of Mary and Martha. He wept because the loss of a loved one and the heavy sorrow that comes with it was never His heart for us. Just as any good parent does not want their child to suffer sorrow and heartache, so Jesus felt the loss of Lazarus and his family, and He felt the collective loss of all humanity.

    Jesus wept for Lazarus because he had been taken much too soon. He wept because the religious culture had taught them that God was the one who had taken him. Our gracious Father has been lied about, He has been misrepresented and slandered throughout the centuries. He does not take; He is the supreme giver. He does not need to kill people so that He can have them in Heaven with Him; wouldn’t that be considered extremely selfish? Let it be said with great emphasis and constant repetition; He is not the taker. He does not take, however, He does receive those that leave. God is not the author of death!

    Jesus wept because of humanity’s loss of faith; they could not believe in the power of His resurrection life. They could not see beyond what their senses were telling them. They could not see how God could answer this situation. They could not see past the horizon of their own knowledge; they were imprisoned in their hopelessness and because of who He is, our compassionate Christ shed tears for them.

    Jesus wept because mankind had lost their identity and purpose for living. The people of Earth have been lied to and the lie has brought untold misunderstanding, it has distorted our once-clear vision. Confusion and despair, indeed, the death of hope has brought us to the brink of self-destruction.

    Jesus wept because He wasn’t afraid to weep; He wasn’t ashamed of His emotions and deep feelings. He wept because He felt the sting of God’s plan gone awry. He wept because He came to bear the burden of all men; He identified so keenly with the universal human struggle. He wept because things were not as they should be, and He longed to put things right. He wept because He was and still is the Intercessor who pleads with God for lost and downtrodden souls.

    Jesus is the ultimate Man and so all who follow Him will also follow Him in His weeping over all of mankind. His weeping was a prayer and His tears were a plea; it was a way of drawing close to the sufferer and it was a wordless appeal to the Father’s heart. We must follow Him in this tearful compassion for others.

    Oh, that the heart of Jesus would manifest through us in weeping, groaning, pleading and claiming. Weeping for the wayward ones, groaning over the destruction of precious lives, pleading the merits of the sacrifice of Christ and claiming the fulfilment of the promises of God.


    Jesus wept and the Father heard. Jesus wept and the Father responded.  Jesus wept and Martha hoped, Mary trusted and Lazarus rose. Jesus wept!