Saturday, June 4, 2011

the note that was taken from me

A criminal in the Greco-Roman world was issued, as a record of debt, a written note of indebtedness. When the crime warranted death, that note was fastened to the cross by the Roman authorities, declaring the crime for which the criminal was being executed.

Colossians 2:13-14 takes on fresh meaning in this light:

"And you, who were dead in your trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, God made alive together with him, having forgiven us all our trespasses, by canceling the record of debt that stood against us with its legal demands. This he set aside, nailing it to the cross."

The soldiers who crucified Jesus fastened His accusation on His cross: "King of the Jews." Guilty of being the One True God.

The Father who allowed Jesus to be crucified fastened my accusation on His cross: "Proud, self-righteous rebel. Critical, judgmental, unfaithful idolator. Slothful skimper. Hypocritical, self-centered, egotistical user of people. Ungrateful, cowardly, sensual manipulator. Deserving of death by cruel torture." Guilty of cosmically offending and defaming the One True God.

Jesus forfeited His identity and took on mine at the exact moment that the wrath of God was coming for me. He absorbed it all, and in the sweet exchange of grace, His identity was offered to me. The One who had not sinned had become sin on my behalf, so that I might become the righteousness of God in Him (2 Corinthians 5:21).

"Because a sinless Savior died
My sinful soul is counted free
For God the just is satisfied
To look on Him and pardon me"
~Before The Throne

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

words.


Dearest country overseas,
I am sending you my heart.
Please appreciate his presence
That will keep us far apart.

For God's glory and your good
I'll give the one my heart holds dear,
And I pray he'll come back wholly
When he's mine again next year.

Dearest Jesus, Here's my heart.
I give it back to you each day.
It is Yours and so please move it
in Your sweet and gentle way.

Years at distance, hours of wrath,
Are the deployment that it cost,
So let my heart stand on this Rock
Once-for-all found cannot be lost.

Monday, May 2, 2011

and I thought my wedding was a big deal!


Friday was a magical day for a significant percentage of the world's population. Some reports indicate that Prince William's marriage to Kate Middleton was viewed by billions of people all over the globe. Though I did not rise to watch it live, the coverage was gripping even when I joined in at 7:30 on Friday morning.

Throughout the day my mind reeled with the reality this fairy tale reveals.

We all yearn for a royal wedding.

The Cinderella strand is embedded in our DNA whether we admit it freely or not. Women tend to subscribe more passionately and freely. Men attempt to play it down. But we are all captivated by the story of a commoner's heart being desired by, pursued by, and united to the heart of the future king.

We love this union because Kate was one of us. She was common. Her parents were both flight attendants in their earlier days and have only more recently come into entrepreneurial success as online retailers of party supplies. She grew up as any other 80s-born girl around the globe, dreaming of marrying one of the two handsome princes left, but without much reason to believe it would happen (though it certainly helped that she is British).

The pauper-to-princess tale grips our hearts. Whether we have heard it before or not, we all know, etched on our souls, that this story is ours. That at last we will become treasure to the King and be invited to the throne room.

The story of Jesus and His bride.

We are enthralled by her dress and his attire, because our dress is His righteousness and He is adorned with victory and praise.

We are enthralled by the grandeur, because the wedding feast of the Lamb will fill our hearts as they were made to be filled.

We are enthralled by the ring, because rather than a lovely heirloom, our Groom has left us with His Spirit as His pledge to return for us.

We are enthralled by the pomp and circumstance of regality, because we were made to love the King and find life in His glory.

We are enthralled by the happily ever after, because we long so achingly for the only wise King to declare, "Behold, I am making all things new."

Friday, April 22, 2011

my brother, Barabbas

Dear Barabbas,

You're on my mind today. I feel a strange connection to you that I've never felt before.

For a moment I want to see what you saw, feel what you felt. I think it would shake me to the core. I would never be the same.

Did you know? Did you ever realize what happened that Friday?

You woke up in prison. You went to sleep in your own bed.
The sun found you a prisoner. The moon found you a free man.

How did you do it? What words did you say? Did you treat the other prisoners nicely? Were you respectful of the guards? Did you do enough good things to outweigh your mutiny against Rome? Did you protect enough people to excuse your murderous reputation?

Somehow, I doubt it.

In a way I am jealous of the perspective you had, because our stories are the same on that day.

When your eyes first opened that morning, you were sentenced to death, resigned to justice, awaiting the punishment you knew you deserved. You had seen crosses. You knew what your treachery would earn if ever you were captured. Traitors to the crown of Rome lined the streets, the barely living and the long dead, vivid reminders of the wrath that awaited those who threatened the emperor. You had earned that status, that sentence, that misery.

How did you feel when you learned you were chosen? Were you shocked when the guard brought you out at their request? Were you proud and self-confident? Did you gloat as you left?

Or did you see Jesus on your way out? You must have known who He was. Were you astounded to see that His freedom was given to you? Had you any idea just how innocent He was?

You see, as you walked away to resume your life, He was led away to allow others to end His own. All the miracles, all the sermons, all the Scriptures He had memorized, all the acts of mercy were as nothing to Him. Everyone ignored His impeccable record. And all of the good that He had accomplished was credited to you. Certainly no one was actually thinking that you had behaved so well, but you found yourself reaping the benefits of perfect living in an instant.

Did you realize what was happening? You, and you alone, had any semblance of a notion what Jesus was doing that day. Whether you realized it or not, while everyone else was baffled by His horrifying torture and death, you alone were already walking in the shadow of the cross, covered by the blood of the Lamb.

You see, a transaction was made that day. The wrath of God was coming. Let there be no doubt. The wrath of God was always coming. From the apple in the garden to the hills outside your city, the vengeance of Almighty God was coming against those who rejected His love and established their own kingdom. Wrath was coming for you and me. For the mutinous, calloused-hearted, self-exalting race. Because a holy God, one who truly loves, cannot allow wickedness, Love's antithesis, to prevail. He would not be loving at all if He did.

So heaven's fury made a date with the earth. Retribution.

And heaven's flesh-clad Love accepted the invitation. Substitution.

To those who looked on, He appeared weak and passive, but in bewildering humility, the King of kings held His tongue and let you walk free in His place. And after watching your reentry into freedom, Jesus set His gaze on the hill. He dragged His self and His fuel to the altar of Calvary to intercept the punishment you traded Him for, I traded Him for.

Perhaps watching your freedom fanned His flame. Perhaps the faint reflection of the grander task at hand was the hope He clasped as He started down the road. Because He was not merely taking your punishment, though your guilt was exceedingly great. And He was not merely setting you free, though His love for you did compel Him. He was taking my guilt and punishment, and your cousin's, and my brother's, and the teenage boys who were looking for trouble at the park today, and the beautiful preschool girl who sits angelically through the service at church each week, and every person who has every lived. He was setting free the entire race, not from mere physical imprisonment in this life, but from the cast-iron bonds of slavery to sin and from the unspeakable agony of eternity apart from Love.

Oh Barabbas, His love for you was overwhelming! And yet it speaks but a faint whisper of the love He has for all humanity, a love He would shout with all His might from the cross: "It is finished!"

Your name, Barabbas, is altogether gripping. From the Aramaic root words "bar" and "Abba," "son of Abba," "son of a father or master." Privileged. Favored. Heir. As one who represented all who would accept the substitution offered by Jesus, all who would exchange freedom with Him, your name is the one we have all inherited. "When the fullness of time had come, God sent forth his Son, born of woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law, so that we might receive adoption as sons. And because you are sons, God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, "Abba! Father!" So you are no longer a slave, but a son, and if a son, then an heir through God."

I hope you realized who you were, my friend. I hope to meet with you one day when days are endless and hear how your frozen heart was thawed on that one good day for you.

I am grateful for your identity, Barabbas, for your presence in the story that is mine as well. All glory be to God--for Your Word, for Your Love, for Your goodness on display on Friday.

Daughter of Abba,
Katie

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

sand I am

When everything around me
seems to cruelly fall apart,
When my weakness, striving, failure
rend asunder my frail heart

Then I realize my foundation
has not been steady land
But I've built upon myself,
forgetting I am naught but sand

Shifting, tricky, flaky grains,
far too tiny to give strength,
The best I had to offer
returned a dismal lack of length

Something stronger, Someone sure
must support my weight of life
For tiny grains of sand
hold not this woman, friend and wife

Though I'll give wholehearted effort,
my foundation e'er must be
Jesus, crucified and risen,
Solid Rock, my Hope is He

"Everyone then who hears these words of mine and does them will be like a wise man who built his house on the rock. And the rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and beat on that house, but it did not fall, because it had been founded on the rock. And everyone who hears these words of mine and does not do them will be like a foolish man who built his house on the sand. And the rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell, and great was the fall of it." Matthew 7:24-27

Monday, February 21, 2011

stones

Staggering,
the weight of sin,
She crumples to the dust
Calloused hands of calloused hearts
Jolt her with a final thrust

Scorching sun and blinding light
The last her eyes will see
She bows her head, her tears make mud
And waits for gravity

Then He steps in
He intervenes
Not because she's innocent
More because all stones on earth
Fail to afford atonement

If every stone that could be found
Were hurled against her sin
Still too heinous, grievous shame
Would plague her from within

With sin too great
Rebellion's breach
Healed and mended by just One
Superseding stones and surface splints
The Father sent His Son

And all the pain of stonings past
And all those to be earned
Broke the life of God's own Son
At the cross His Father spurned

One large stone
Now rolled in place
To seal the sting of death
One large stone, the angels sing
King Christ reclaims His breath

Heretofore her verdict death
Ever after life and light
All sins washed and all stones rolled
Away in Jesus' might

Thursday, January 27, 2011

waiting on the sun

the sleepy sky is dark
but not without illumination
clouds are dull and grey
but sing anticipation

the sun is on its way
and with it mercies new
to light the morning sky
to saturate it through

to bless the weary eye
whose heart is dull and grey
with hope in vivid light
the sun is on its way

ever softly comes the bright
warming wonder of each ray
heating tendrils, wisps and swirls
brand new pigments on display

myriad grace He now unfurls
dripping from the newborn day
filling eyes and heart with life
hugging near the faraway

and to think these glories rife
tender mercy's own bouquet
breaths ago were dull and dark
but the Sun is on its way