Our Powerless God (4)
Devotional for Wednesday, October 21, 1998 by Ken Stright
Luke 23:35 - And the people stood by, watching; but the
leaders scoffed at him, saying, "He saved others, let him save himself
if he is the Messiah of God, the Chosen One!"
The powerlessness of the manger becomes the powerlessness of the cross
and the taunts and jeers of the crowd were correct: "He saved others; he
cannot save himself." Indeed he cannot save himself.
He hangs there, his flesh torn apart by lead-filled whips, his heart
broken by the rejection of his friends and abuse from his enemies, his
mind tortured by anguish, his spirit shrouded in the darkness of
abandonment -- total weakness, total powerlessness. That's how God chose
to reveal to us the divine love.
Nouwen calls this a Theology of Weakness -- not a theology for
weaklings or doormats and or those lacking in self-esteem. It is a
theology of weakness which has as its only strength the love of God
revealed in Jesus Christ our Lord. It rejects the power of the world,
the bureaucratic nightmare and political infighting and religious
superiority that mark our world, divesting itself of everything except
Christ, and him crucified. And so a theology of weakness is actually a
theology of divine empowerment, a theology for women and men who claim
for themselves the power of love that frees them from fear and enables
them to do all things through Christ who strengthens them. Out of his
powerlessness Jesus was able to be filled with all the power of God, a
power to transform and heal, exorcize devils and bring new life to the
downtrodden and dispossessed. And Jesus says greater things will we do
because we have believed.
Prayer: God of salvation and crucifixion, in our
powerlessness, fill us with divine purpose. In our weakness, fill us
with divine love. In our emptiness, fill us with Jesus Christ. Amen.
Ken Stright <kennethstright@yahoo.ca>
Sherbrooke, Nova Scotia, Canada
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Today's Music:
Crown Him With Many Crowns.
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