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Why Holy Week is Holy
Two thousand
years ago, a man traveled into Jerusalem on the back of a young
donkey. It was the beginning of the end. He would be crucified
on a cross at the end of the week. Those in the crowd did not
understand this. They could not understand that Jesus was going
to die. His closest disciples did not understand that Jesus had
come to Jerusalem because he knew that time had come for him to
be nailed to a cross and die for the sins of the world.
As Jesus
entered Jerusalem on the day, people lay their cloaks and palm
branches on the road as he passed. The people that were
gathered there that day began to joyfully praise God for the
miracles they had seen.
We know that
later in the week, that same crowd would cry out “Crucify him!
Crucify him!” The Pharisees did all they could to encourage the
people’s cries for the death penalty.
But on this
day, on the day that Jesus entered Jerusalem, the people praised
God. The people praised God and the religious leaders of the
day tried to make them stop.
Luke 19:37-40,
“When he came near the place where the road goes down to the
Mount of Olives, the whole crowd of disciples began joyfully to
praise God in loud voices for all the miracles they had seen:
‘Blessed is the king who comes in the name of the Lord!’ ‘Peace
in heaven and glory to the highest!’ Some of the Pharisees in
the crowd said to Jesus, ‘Teacher, rebuke your disciples!’ ‘I
tell you,’ he replied, ‘if they keep quiet, the stones will cry
out.’”
The religious
leaders of the day did not want people to praise God. They told
Jesus to put an end to this but he would not. If Jesus stopped
people from praising God and bearing witness to his name, the
stones themselves would cry out.
This is more
than simply idle words. In Romans 1:20, we learn that all of
creation does bear witness to God. “For since the creation of
the world God’s invisible qualities – his eternal power and
divine nature – have been clearly seen, being understood from
what has been made, so that men are without excuse.”
All of creation
points to God. Man cannot look at nature in all of its beauty
and complexity and deny that there is a creator who caused all
of this. To do this is to lie to ourselves, to go against all
mathematical probability, and ignore what is clearly written in
scripture. All of creation points to a creator. Even the rocks
themselves point to a creator.
If everyone was
to remain silent, men would still be without excuse for
rejecting God. However, we are not to remain silent. Jesus did
not tell the crowds around him to be silent and simply let
creation bear witness to God. Jesus commissioned his disciples
to go and make more disciples. Jesus instructed his disciples
to go into all of the world and spread the gospel.
I’ve spoken a
lot about evangelism recently, but this isn’t another call to
get out the message into the world. Instead, this is a call for
holy living. Just as all of creation bears witness to God just
by being what it is, creation, so we ought to bear witness to
God by being what we are. Our lives should be a reflection of
God. We are made in the image of God and we are called to be
holy. When people look at us, they should see God because they
should see holiness. As we celebrate holy week, our hearts and
our thoughts should be on living holy lives.
To be holy is
to be set apart. God is holy. He is set apart from everything
else because he is perfect. Holy week is also set apart. God
knew exactly what was going to happen from the beginning and had
set apart this time for Jesus to die.
From the moment
sin entered the world, God had the solution. In Genesis 3:15 we
have the protoevangelium, or the first gospel. In Genesis 3:15
we hear the first good news, the first time we are told that
Jesus would be coming to save us from sin. “And I will put
enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and
hers; he will crush your head, and you will strike his heel.”
God had plans
to bring Jesus into the world to crush the head of Satan and it
was this week that had been set aside.
In Psalm 22
David describes in detail the crucifixion, centuries before the
form of death had been created. God had in mind to bring Jesus
into the world when crucifixions were the form of punishment.
Daniel
prophesied seventy ‘sevens’ for the people of Israel. It is
this week, this very day that the prophetic calendar came up and
it was time for the Anointed One to be cut off. This week was
set aside, and it was made holy because God was going to bring
salvation to the world.
Just as this
week is holy to God, so we are holy to God. The process of
being made holy is called sanctification. It is from this word
that we get the word saint. There are actually three types of
sanctification in the Bible. Upon our salvation, we are made
holy in the eyes of God. This process of sanctification is done
by the Holy Spirit. In 2 Thess 2:13 we are told, “But we ought
to thank God for you, brothers loved by the Lord, because from
the beginning God chose you to be saved through the sanctifying
work of the Spirit and through belief in truth.”
While the Holy
Spirit does the work of sanctification, it is only made possible
by the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. Hebrews 10:10 tells us, “...
we have been made holy through the sacrifice of the body of
Jesus Christ once for all.”
We also look
forward to one day when we will be completely sanctified. This
moment will come only at death or rapture. At this moment we
will be sanctified “through and through” according to I Thess
5:23. One day, according to Ephesians 4:13, we will “reach
unity in the faith and in the Son of God and become mature,
attaining to the whole measure of the fullness of Christ”. We
will also “be blameless and holy in the presence of Our God and
Father when our Lord Jesus comes with all his holy ones” (I Thes
3:13). But while we have been made holy upon salvation and
await perfect sanctification, we are constantly struggled to be
holy.
Peter implored
his readers to live holy lives. He wasn’t asking for his
readers to give their lives to Christ because he was writing to
those who were already believers. Instead, he wanted them to
grow mature in Christ and admonished them to be holy just as God
is holy.
1 Peter 1:13-16
says, “Therefore, prepare your minds for action; be self
controlled; set your hope fully on the grace to be given you
when Jesus Christ is revealed. As obedient children, do not
conform to the evil desires you had when you lived in
ignorance. But just as he who called you is holy, so be holy in
all you do; for it is written: ‘Be holy, because I am holy.’”
If we are to be
obedient children, we need to do as our Heavenly Father asks.
As Peter calls us to be holy, he also gives us a few thoughts on
how to do this and what this entails.
We are not to
conform to the evil desires we had when we lived in ignorance.
What is this? This is simply another way of calling us to be
holy. As I said, to be holy is to be set apart. What is the
Christian set apart from? It is the sinful world that we are to
be set apart from.
A Christian
should stand out in a crowd because we are different. A
Christian should be able to be spotted from a mile away.
Sometimes we mistake this for placing Christian bumper stickers
on our cars and wearing Christian apparel. But I’m not talking
about outward appearances.
A Christian
should speak differently than other people, and not because they
are always talking about God, but rather their topics of
conversation avoid spreading rumors and demeaning people.
Christians
should be set apart from everyone else because we should be the
most joyful people in the world. Christians have a hope that
the rest of the world does not have. We have a God who answers
our prayers and never abandons us. We will have bad days but
our hope in a home in heaven will never change.
When a person
is saved, there is often a dramatic change in their life. It is
because they have stopped doing the sinful things that they once
did. They are now filled with the love of Christ and a desire
to do what is right.
We know what is
right and what is wrong. Our conscience tells us the difference
between what is good and bad. God gave us ten rules to follow.
Jesus later summed them up into two. Love the Lord your God
with all your heart soul, mind and strength. And love your
neighbor as yourself.
We don’t sin
for a lack of knowledge of what God wants us to do. We sin and
fail to be holy because we simply do not live every moment for
God and take up our cross daily. While we strive to live a holy
life, we encounter a paradox. As Christians, we have the aid of
the Holy Spirit in our lives to direct us and instruct us in
what we should do. And yet we still sin. We try to live holy
lives and we still sin. Each and every time we sin, we made a
choice to sin. We could have chose not to do so. In theory,
with the help of the Holy Spirit, each and every time we are
given the option to sin or not, we could choose not to sin. But
this doesn’t happen. We still struggle against the world, the
flesh, and the Devil. Unfortunately, until the time when we are
made perfect, we are still going to sin and holiness is going to
be a battle for us.
Does this mean
we should simply accept that we are going to sin and forget
about holiness? Certainly not! Rather, we keep striving for
holiness and we present ourselves to God as a sacrifice. In
Romans 12:1-2 Paul says, “Therefore I urge you brothers, in view
of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy
and pleasing to God – this is your spiritual act of worship. Do
not conform any longer to the pattern of this world but be
transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able
to test and approve what God’s will is – his good, pleasing and
perfect will.”
We are
transformed by the renewing of our minds. We need to constantly
be going to our Bibles, listening to the Word being taught, and
participating in discussions if we are to renew our minds. The
more we read God’s Word, the more we understand it. The more we
hear it, the better we remember it. The better we remember it,
the better we can apply it and live it out in our lives. When
we know God’s word, then we can go further in our quest for
holiness.
Most of you
know what the Bible says. You may or may not have read it all
the way through, but you know the message. But it is the
repetition that renews your mind.
There are a
couple of movies that I’ve seen like a thousand times now. The
first time I watched it, I understood the plot. I didn’t have
to watch it again to gain any new information. But because I
repeatedly watched these movies, I can quote them. My brother
and I can joke about a number of the lines in the movie.
Because I have seen this so many times, it has become a part of
me. When we transform our minds, God’s word becomes a part of
us as well and helps us to live holy lives.
There’s a lot
more that can be said on just this passage from Romans but time
will not allow for it now. This is the time for us to
concentrate on living holy lives though. What better time can
there be than to renew our commitment to living our lives for
Christ?
A holy life is
a testimony to God. A holy life cries out to everybody just as
much as the crowds did when Jesus entered Jerusalem on the back
of a colt. Then they shouted Hosanna, Hosanna. Today, our
lives should shout that we serve Jesus our Lord and that we have
hope in his death and resurrection.
We don’t need
for the rocks to cry. What we need is for our lives to be holy
and for them to cry out and bear testimony. |