Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Fred's Devo #37 Jesus Suffering Saves Us

Today's devotional comes from a guest "devotionalist" , Rev. Bill Bauerle.

He talks about the fact that even though Jesus was fully God, he also became a man so that he could identify with our suffering: I especially appreciate this quote. "Christ's suffering is able to save all who obey him."
Read and be blessed!
Fred Williams

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Good morning friends,

Hebrews 5:7-9
"In the days of his flesh, Jesus offered up prayers and supplications, with loud cries and tears, to him who was able to save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverence. Although he was a son, he learned obedience through what he suffered. And being made perfect, he became the source of eternal salvation to all who obey him.'

There are times the question of whether Jesus could disobey God is posed. The writer here seems to anticipate that question himself and points out the reality of Christ being in the flesh. While Christ was not born with a sin nature, he was true humanity none the less. Jesus offered up prayers and supplications, not with some kind of show, but with real anguish. This most likely is a direct reference to the garden, but I don’t think we need to limit it to just the garden. I think that we, at times, discount the hard reality of Christ’s temptations and sufferings as being something less because of His deity. We have already read that Jesus was tempted in all points and this temptation was not just an abstract, but real. We read here that Jesus, though fully God, learned obedience. He did not learn obedience through His Sonship, but through his suffering in His humanity. We read here that it is Christ’s perfect humanity that is what was able to
merit eternal salvation. It was in the fact that he actually struggled with being true humanity, and I think with the bare possibility to fail, that Christ’s sacrifice is able to save all that obey Him. As we consider the humiliation of Christ let us not discount lightly the real anguish and suffering that Christ experience to merit our salvation. As we take the cup and the bread consider the level of anguish and suffering Christ suffered.

Bill Bauerle