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Repost: Crucify Him

I shared this post from Moe last year right before Easter.  It was one of the most read.  I love Moe’s thoughts here and wanted to share them again as we again celebrate His resurrection.  We have all been given a second chance at life and at grace because of the sacrifice that Christ made.

He was unlike any man. There was nothing dangerous about Him. He brought hope that was never seen in anyone ever before. He spoke differently. He uttered words with compassion, yet with authority. He spoke as if the very words were His — truly they were.

In my eyes, he was no threat. He didn’t have an army or government. He didn’t even have a place to rest his head. His very friends betrayed Him and so did this crowd.

“Crucify Him, crucify Him!” they cried out.

They let their Messiah slip away right under their noses. He did greater things than any prophet, any man that ever lived. His compassion threatened them. His love scared them. His words often angered them. “A simple carpenter’s son” they cried out. With the same breath they gathered against him, yelling:

“Crucify Him, crucify Him!”

The people gathered impatiently witnessing his trial. There was no charge worthy of death. He wasn’t guilty of any crime. But the crowd cried out for justice… fake justice:

“Crucify Him, crucify Him!”

How can they be so foolish?

“Crucify Him, crucify Him!”

But… why?How dare they demand death?

“Crucify Him, crucify Him!”

I grew angry, and confused. How dare they condemn Him? How dare they demand death?

“Crucify Him, crucify Him!”

I was angry!

After trying to make sense of this event, I began to understand one very important truth. We blame the crowds for the crucifixion of Jesus. But that is not a correct assessment of the greater picture.

That crowd didn’t kill Jesus. The Romans didn’t kill Jesus. The Jews didn’t kill Jesus. He himself said:

“No one takes it [life] from Me, but I lay it down of Myself. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again.” (John 10:18)

If I want a second chance at living as God had intended from the beginning, something had to be done. That something is to have Jesus, the messiah, bear the burden of my sin. That burden was death!

So, I too had to join this crowd. There is no other way I can get God without His crucifixion. It was my sin to pay. The father had laid my sin upon His shoulders. This sin had to be punished, had to be atoned for. Only Jesus was the perfect lamb of God.

If I wanted God, I needed Him to die. This was the only way. As much as I hated to hear those awful condemning words:

“Crucify Him, crucify Him!”

I understood that this was the only way to get God.

I joined that crowd, “crucify him, crucify him!” because by this very act (and later his resurrection), I get a second chance at life. I get God. All of Him. Forever.

Moe is a God lover & fearer, husband & father who in his spare time living in NYC writes at occasionally at Beta Christian and this year is focusing on a new adventure Discipulus.

{abiding} in hope

My darling husband had the genius idea to have someone guest post for me today while I’m in Oklahoma.  My best friend, thought this idea was just as genius, and agreed to write for me today.  Since Fridays are devoted to my One Word, I saw an opportunity to meld my One Word: Hope with her’s: Abide.  She’s sharing how she’s abiding in hope in the midst of one of the biggest changes they’ll ever face.

i spent my valentine’s day in the baby aisle of target, trying not to morph into a teary ball from anxiety and excitement.

you see, my husband and i are adopting, and we got the call yesterday afternoon that our home study will be this saturday. we weren’t planning for saturday. to be honest, i don’t even know if i was planning for february. maybe march?

but there we were, our valentine’s day hijacked in the best possible way. i kept on having to remind myself to breathe.

because you can say “we’re adopting!” and it be real. you can smile at people’s misunderstanding and turn away from the too-personal questions that suddenly seem like the center of conversation. but when you grab the box full of pieces that make up what your baby will sleep in, what your baby will touch, you suddenly find yourself realizing just how real it is to hope. 

and for those of you who don’t know me or my story, realizing hope is real kinda makes me feel like i wanna throw up.

you see, i have this weird tendency to look for the worst in every possible situation when it comes to my future. i can look at a problem at work or for someone else and see the silver lining. for me? it’s always worst case scenario. the reasoning for this is about the length of a book, so i won’t dive into it here. here’s what’s important::

what i have experienced through my adoption forces me to abide in the hope that God meant it when He asked me to pursue jubilee.

jubilee was my word for 2011. it haunted me. chased me. pulled me through one of the toughest {if not THE toughest} years i’ve known. i grew stronger from it, but when the year started to wind down i knew the healing process wasn’t over for me. i didn’t feel like jubilee would still be my word, but i didn’t feel released from it either.

and that’s when He gave me {abide}

just like with jubilee, the word came and wouldn’t let me go. it scared {scares} me to death to sit still. i’m not good at resting. i’m good at running – in the figurative sense, mind you – and i’m good at denial.

but abiding?

i’ve learned a lot over the past month. just like with 2011, my word for this year already has called something deep within me out of slumber. and last night, when i faced the tension between my fear of becoming a mom and my deep-rooted hope of smothering my soon-to-be newborn with kisses, i chose to abide in hope.

Elora Ramirez is a warrioress-storyteller who lives in Austin, Texas with her chef-husband Russell. A self-proclaimed story-theorist and champion of beauty, she poses as an English teacher during the day and writes by night. You can find out more on her blog where she writes about her journey of healing and recovery and encourages others, specifically women, to find beauty in brokenness and the strength of leaning into grace.

If you don’t follow Elora on Twitter you should do so here. :)

Home (a guest post)

Home.

What does it mean to you?

What defines home in your own words?

My friend & sewing extraordinaire Mandie has invited me to join her at her place today and we’re discussing what home means to me.

I can’t wait to hear your thoughts.

Read mine here.

Word Fast – Guest Post

Sometimes the only words our heart speaks are for our ears alone.  Sometimes  our heart is silent.  She longs for rest.

Today I’m at Paul’s site talking about writing and the soul & heart nourishment that comes in the word fasts of our heart.

You can read it here.

The Claustrophobic Noise

As an introvert I crave silence.  I crave those alone moments on my couch.

Life often gets noisy.  My skin crawls and I as if with all the noise I could implode.

Today I’m posting at Elora’s site, Love Wins.

I share more about this claustrophobic pressure and the grace God gave.

Read here.

Usual Suspects Guest Post at Beta Christian

I have the privilege honor of being of at Moe’s place of residence – Beta Christian – today.

Moe has a weekly series called Usual Suspects in which he takes a closer look at Biblical figures, through an often quirky lens.  Through the series, I believe he strips away the facade we often ascribe to Biblical persons and makes them more relate-able to us living in the 21st century (22nd if God’s continued to tarry & you stumble upon this in the year 3011).

You can read my post on the demonic of Gerasenes here:  “Naked: Memoir of a Formally Demon Possessed Man

 

Crucify Him, Crucify Him – Moe

He was unlike any man. There was nothing dangerous about Him. He brought hope that was never seen in anyone ever before. He spoke differently. He uttered words with compassion, yet with authority. He spoke as if the very words were His — truly they were.

In my eyes, he was no threat. He didn’t have an army or government. He didn’t even have a place to rest his head. His very friends betrayed Him and so did this crowd.

“Crucify Him, crucify Him!” they cried out.

They let their Messiah slip away right under their noses. He did greater things than any prophet, any man that ever lived. His compassion threatened them. His love scared them. His words often angered them. “A simple carpenter’s son” they cried out. With the same breath they gathered against him, yelling:

“Crucify Him, crucify Him!”

The people gathered impatiently witnessing his trial. There was no charge worthy of death. He wasn’t guilty of any crime. But the crowd cried out for justice… fake justice:

“Crucify Him, crucify Him!”

How can they be so foolish?

“Crucify Him, crucify Him!”

But… why?How dare they demand death?

“Crucify Him, crucify Him!”

I grew angry, and confused. How dare they condemn Him? How dare they demand death?

“Crucify Him, crucify Him!”

I was angry!

After trying to make sense of this event, I began to understand one very important truth. We blame the crowds for the crucifixion of Jesus. But that is not a correct assessment of the greater picture.

That crowd didn’t kill Jesus. The Romans didn’t kill Jesus. The Jews didn’t kill Jesus. He himself said:

“No one takes it [life] from Me, but I lay it down of Myself. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again.” (John 10:18)

If I want a second chance at living as God had intended from the beginning, something had to be done. That something is to have Jesus, the messiah, bear the burden of my sin. That burden was death!

So, I too had to join this crowd. There is no other way I can get God without His crucifixion. It was my sin to pay. The father had laid my sin upon His shoulders. This sin had to be punished, had to be atoned for. Only Jesus was the perfect lamb of God.

If I wanted God, I needed Him to die. This was the only way. As much as I hated to hear those awful condemning words:

“Crucify Him, crucify Him!”

I understood that this was the only way to get God.

I joined that crowd, “crucify him, crucify him!” because by this very act (and later his resurection), I get a second chance at life. I get God. All of Him. Forever.

Moe is a God lover & fearer, husband & father who in his spare time living in NYC writes at Beta Christian and shares a modern look at Biblical figures every Friday (as well as teaching his children gang signs at dinner much to the dismay of his wife).

To Be A Dad Every Day – JC Wert

It’s not good blogger etiquette to put the main point of the entry at the beginning.  We’re supposed to tease you, massage you, guide you and then hit you with the point like Mike Tyson at the end of the drum break in Phil Collins’ “In The Air Tonight.”  We’re not supposed to be hostile, pointed or really risk offending anyone until well into the piece when most people think “well, I’m this invested, I’ll rest the rest anyway.”  But I can’t do that.

I think people who don’t value second chances are idiots.

We live in a world where your likelihood to get a second chance is in inverse proportion to your age and whatever you did that necessitates that second chance.  A twelve year old who steals something from a store?  They’ll take some heat, a slap on the wrist, perhaps some juvie time if a prosecutor wants to make a name for themselves but most people will say “he’s a kid.  Give him another chance.”  The 40 year old dude who steals something?  You might as well have Chris Hansen walking around behind him waiting to drop the hammer.

I know in my life, I’ve blown a lot of second chances.  Thirds.  Fourths.  Probably six hundred fifty-thirds.  However, as I’ve gotten older, I’ve come to see the rarity of second chances and the value that comes from grabbing them by the lips and yanking them as hard as you can.

When I went through my divorce and had little choice but to let my sons live with their mother because one son needed therapy where we had been living at the time, it was like someone cut off body parts.  I love my sons.  Every day when I wake up and don’t hear Eli saying “good morning, daddy” I get sad.  When I don’t walk into the living room and find Dale on the Wii I get a twinge of pain.  They are daily reminders of how I screwed up and contributed to the downfall of a marriage.

And then I feel the painful thump on my lower back.

And then I hear the giggle.

And I hear Julie’s mother say to her “did you ask if you could jump on daddy’s back?”

And usually, I’ll just say “she’s fine” even though Julie never asks permission to jump on my back.

You see, Julie biologically isn’t mine but she calls me “daddy.”  Before her mother ever broke down and realized she needed to lower her expectations of a husband and thus marry me, Julie was calling me “daddy.”

Julie gave me the second chance to be a daddy every day.  Her choosing me made me realize the value of second chances on a level that I never truly appreciated before that day.  It made me realize what an idiot I had been for the times I took a second chance and ran it into the ground in the pursuit of my pleasures or wants or what I thought was “right.”

Now, for the Jesus Juke.

Prudy mentioned to me in an e-mail that she believes Easter is “epitome of second chances.”  I could not agree with her more.   Jesus’ resurrection and giving us the chance to spend eternity with God is the biggest chance we can have with our lives.  The opportunity to take all the sin that stands between us and Holy God and make it essentially disappear.

But I’m not going to Jesus Juke you on salvation here…I’m going to Juke you on what you do with it.

Because if you have accepted Christ, you’ve been given that second chance.  To love.  To give.  To care.  To share.  To be God’s hands and feet to the lost, the hurting and even the person sitting next to you in the pew on Sunday morning who doesn’t realize turtleneck sweaters went out of style in October 1983.  (November 1983 if they were a nice cashmere.)

Do you value it?

Jason is a father, husband, and God lover living in the light of God’s second chances.  He writes at the Mustard Seed Year.  Daily essays on God’s work in his life.

Heart Conditions

My daily reading plan includes three chapters in the Old Testament and one in the New Testament.  I’m currently reading through Genesis, 2 Chronicles, Psalm, & Acts.

Last night I was reading 2 Chronicles 18.  It is the story of King Ahab, the king of Israel and King Jehoshaphat, the king of Judah.  In short King Ahab asks King Jehoshaphat to go to war with him.  Both kings bring in their prophets to ask if they should go into battle and if they will be successful.  All the prophets say that they should go and that they will be successful.  Only King Jehoshaphat’s prophet tells King Ahab that he will die in battle.  Needless to say, Ahab dies.  At the beginning of chapter 19, a different prophet comes to King Jehoshaphat and rebukes him.

The rebuke was that he helped the wicked and love those who hate the Lord.  A similar rebuke happened in chapter 16 of Jehoshaphat’s father, King Asa.

King Asa ended up getting a serious foot disease.  The chapter ends with Asa’s death.

I was thinking about the difference in the rebukes.  They are similar, but different.  They were delivered by the same man.  Asa receives a serious health condition.  Jehoshaphat receives an encouragement.

The only major difference I can see is the difference of heart.  Asa refused to repent.  Samuel doesn’t say whether Jehoshaphat repented or not, but as far as I can tell with what I’ve read he must have.

Lack of repentance has serious consequences.  God is always ready to forgive.  Why do we refuse to repent especially when we know the consequences may be worse than if we did repent?

Story Time : Cookie Run Season by Elora

Our lives are a multitude of stories.  Some are sad tales, some are filled with stomach wrenching laughter, and some are family legends that grow more epic each time they’re told.  Join me this week as we curl up in our favorite spot in our virtual living room.  The tree casting a twinkling glow.  Hot chocolate, eggnog, and cookies sit in our laps.  Our friends & family sit with us as we laugh, rejoice, & begin to share our tales of Christmas.

I know it’s coming when I call home and I hear the clanging of pots and pans in the background.

“You guys baking?”

My mom goes silent for half a second and laughs. “Yes.”

My dad, most likely at the stove stirring chocolate sauce or cutting shapes out of cookie dough, calls out from behind her…

“We’ve been baking since yesterday morning.” It’s now my turn to laugh as I think about the piles of cookies on the kitchen table, the flour on every inch of countertop, and my brother stealing Hershey’s kisses out of the bowl.

This is all common place, and I can synchronize my calendar on the events. It’s Christmas, which only means one thing in the Jacobson household.

Cookie Run Season.

We’ve been doing this for as long as I can remember – maybe ten, fifteen years. [and that right there makes me feel really old.]

It started small: a few friends, family members, and our pastor. We usually left the house around 7:00pm and were home by 10:00. Over the years, it got more elaborate. Our list grew. Not only were we delivering to my parents’ friends, but my friends. And then when Blanche and Christina got old enough, we began delivering totheir friends. Which, normally? Wouldn’t be that bad – but there’s a secret about private schools most people don’t realize.

Your friends can live anywhere – not just your neighborhood….not even your district.

We had to push back times of departure because it was just taking too long. My dad, organizer that he is, would start working on google maps weeks ahead of time, charting the most gas-efficient and sanity keeping route.

Sometimes…we would be in the car long enough to drive to Oklahoma.

We eventually added in our own traditions within this night of cookies extravaganza. We’d make up games like “How many Christmas parties are we going to interrupt this year?” or “Who can give the best hint for dinner choices?” or my personal favorite, “How long will mama be talking to this person?”

There were years where stomach bugs hit the Jacobson clan, and so the cookie run was cut short.

There were years where the list was so long, dad cursed the idea the entire time only to celebrate our victorious delivery during dinner at the local Mexican joint.

There were years where, after two days of  a diet of entire sugar, we all bit our lips to keep from throwing up on the winding roads of the hill country. [Russ likes to correct me here. He likes to describe it as not "winding" but speeding down roads at elevations not necessarily welcomed by even those with the strongest intestinal fortitude]

There were years where my sisters and I drove my brother and father crazy with our giggles. We couldn’t help it. Locked in a car, for hours on end with nothing but Christmas music to listen to…you’re gonna get a little silly. And many of our inside jokes originated in some way during these mini-roadtrips.

We aren’t the only people who have experienced the joy of cookie runs. Both men married into the family have experienced the trial by fire of Jacobson’s cookie run. [There's been others who didn't fair so well.] They’ve ridden the entire time, eyes wide and mouth ajar, only to look into our eyes afterwards with I’m sure a better understanding of our background. My friends in college heard about these nights all four years – and by the time I graduated – it had become a bit of a campus folktale. It’s the one thing that pops into my head when people ask me about holiday traditions – outside of grandma’s singing bird perched delicately in her Christmas tree.

As crazy as it sounds, and as much merriment and insanity and disorganization goes into one of these events with my family, it’s the one thing I miss the most.

I haven’t been able to be at the last few cookie runs. This year I’m missing it by a thread of previous engagements. I’ll be thinking of them, though. I’ll giggle at the texts my sisters and brother send me. I’ll remember serious discussions my father led while driving through the night roads. I’ll remember my mom’s look of absolute radiance with her entire family in the car – singing, laughing, talking…

And the entire time, I’ll be thinking of future traditions my own family will begin – the stories that will birth out of repetition and clockwork. The stories of home.

Elora is a story teller at heart and DNA.  She is the wife of Russ.  Her heart longs to see the end of the plight of the orphan and to bring freedom to the slave.  You can check out her blog and follow her on Twitter.

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On Friday, Dec. 24th, we will have a link up for all of us to share our Christmas stories, and I’ll have a giveaway.

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