Daily Bible Readings:
Monday, April 19. Read Genesis 4:1-16. 1) What was the relationship of Cain to Abel? 2) What obligation do you think Cain felt for his brother? Verse 9. 3) What did Cain do to his brother?
Tuesday, April 20. Read John 13:5-15. 1) What did Jesus do for his disciples in this text? 2) How did Peter react to this? 3) What did Jesus say his objective was? See vss. 14-15.
Wednesday, April 21. Read John 3:14-17. 1) What OT image did Jesus use to predict what was about to happen to himself? 2) What role did God play in Jesus’ future? 3) What did Jesus prove in his crucifixion? Verse 16.
Thursday, April 22. Read Matthew 22:34-29. 1) What question did the Pharisees ask Jesus in order to “trap” him? 2) What command/s did Jesus say are of paramount importance? 3) How do you think religion, in general, may have misunderstood Jesus’ teachings? In what way?
Friday, April 23. Read 1 Corinthians 13:1-13. 1) What does Paul say a loveless person is like? 2) Name five characteristics of love? 3) What three virtues are the greatest in Paul’s thinking? Why?
Saturday, April 24. Read 1 John 3:16-24. This is Sunday’s sermon text.
Prayer for the Week:
God of steadfast, unyielding love. We give thanks to you for the way in which you have pursued and hounded us in order to win back the love you hoped we would have. May we become more kind, generous, and loving as we live this temporary life. May we look for ways to demonstrate your love to this old world, and by so doing may others seek to enjoy and possess this love. In Jesus’ name. Amen.
Hymn of the Week:
O Sacred Head
by Bernard of Clairvaux, Translated 1829
O sacred Head, now wounded,
with grief and shame weighed down,
now scornfully surrounded
with thorns, thine only crown!
O sacred Head, what glory,
what bliss till now was thine!
Yet, though despised and gory,
I joy to call thee mine.
What thou, my Lord, hast suffered
was all for sinners’ gain.
Mine, mine was the transgression,
but thine the deadly pain.
Lo, here I fall, my Savior!
’Tis I deserve thy place.
Look on me with thy favor,
and grant to me thy grace.
What language shall I borrow
to thank thee, dearest Friend,
for this, thy dying sorrow,
thy pity without end?
Oh, make me thine forever,
and should I fainting be,
Lord, let me never, never
outlive my love to thee.
Be near when I am dying,
oh, show thy cross to me,
and for my rescue, flying,
come, Lord, and set me free!
These eyes, new faith receiving,
from Jesus shall not move,
for one who dies believing
dies safely, through thy love.
Devotional Article of the Week
God at Our Feet
Here’s a place it’s hard to imagine God, but it is the place God often chose to be!
by Cathy Messecar
Our friend had quadruple bypass surgery and his first hospital stay. Instead of parking in the ministers’ reserved area and visiting the sick, he lay in an airy hospital gown and received visitors. Later, his sweet wife listed the kindnesses extended from hospital staff, family, and friends because many rallied to “bless” this godly couple. Their helpers bowed their knees to them, not in worship but in service.
When God called Abram, one of the promises he made was to “bless” him. The primary root for “bless” means “to kneel” or “to bow the knee”:
Once source* explains, “The idea of blessing may come from several factors including that of bending the knees to give or to receive.” Both elements of giving and receiving are present in God’s call to Abram.
First, God bowed his knees and served Abram so Abram could accomplish God’s will for his life. Eventually through Abram’s lineage, God gifted the entire earth with Jesus Christ. Abram believed God’s promises, used God’s provisions, and bowed his knee in service to his family and foreigners.
I easily imagine Abram bowing his knee to serve God and his contemporaries. However, I have difficulty when I picture God on his knees, serving Abram, not in worship but through the keeping of his promises to bless Abram.
While the picture of God kneeling to serve might be difficult to visualize, testimonies of God’s gracious service appear all through scripture. From the earliest days, God has served his creation and expressed his all-out love through provisions and justice. The Creator seeded the earth and set up an atmosphere to support plant life and humans. He didn’t let Cain get away with murder. For thousands of years, God has nurtured humanity, yet we as humans have continued to ignore or bite the hand that feeds us. In addition, God planned a complete demonstration of his love through Jesus Christ — a demonstration of love that would impact us like nothing before or since.
Ultimately, God let us view his servant heart through his Son Jesus, and his three-year ministry held countless revelations of God’s truth and grace (John 1:14-18). On the evening before his crucifixion, Jesus assured his disciples, “Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father” (John 14:9).
Earlier that night, Jesus had demonstrated God-as-servant, showing his disciples the “full extent of his love” (John 13:1). When the Master Teacher had gathered to dine with his disciples in the upper room, street grime had come along on their feet. That’s when the God of Abram, “found in appearance as a man” (Philippians 2:8), got up from the meal, took off his outer garment, and wrapped a towel around his waist. After pouring water into a basin, the God of Abram knelt, and one at a time he would lift and clean 24 dirty feet. Wash and dry. Wash and dry. Wash and dry. Thomas. John. Thaddeus. Andrew. James. Bartholomew. Peter. Judas.
The cleansing wasn’t brief: The meal stopped. It took time. Minutes and more minutes ticked by as Jesus, found in appearance as a man, made himself nothing by taking the very nature of a servant (Philippians 2:6-8). Servant God knelt. Moved from man to man, foot to foot, and physically touched each disciple. Dipping water from a basin, scrubbing toes, toweling ankles, Jesus humbled himself one more time before he “became obedient unto death-even death on a cross!” (Philippians 2:8).
When Jesus reached the reluctant Peter, we find these words in John’s story of Jesus:
He came to Simon Peter, who said to him, “Lord, are you going to wash my feet?”
Jesus replied, “You do not realize now what I am doing, but later you will understand.”
“No,” said Peter, “you shall never wash my feet.”
Jesus answered, “Unless I wash you, you have no part with me” (John 13:6-8).
Later… the disciples comprehended. They remembered the night Jesus made himself of no reputation and took upon the form of a servant — the night he declared most of them were clean and set in motion a perpetual cleansing. They learned from God “found in appearance as a man” that protocol couldn’t hinder lavish love.
When Abram received his call, Servant God eventually furnished everything Abram needed to carry out the divine path for his life. Abram believed God and his belief equaled righteousness in God’s court (Genesis 15:6).
I find it easy to picture looking up into the heavens and praying to God. I can even clearly picture God at my side walking in a garden as we talk about life. However, the image blurs when I look down into the eyes of the God of Abram fashioned as a man washing my feet.
I’m ready for a new portrait. I’m praying that God will place in my mind and heart the knowledge of a towel-draped Savior at my feet who will equip me to bless — bow my knees to others.