Poem inspired by Ephesians four and the day..
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Even while acknowledging the broken walls of God’s own church,
The Word of God points beyond, to what the church is becoming.
And when the broken body of Christ,
Feels distorted beyond recognition,
It’s true that when we set our eyes on what the church is becoming,
We could fall in love with each broken part of the tearing body of Christ.
For when the body that you knew turns into something you saw not,
When nails go right through hands and clothes fall exposing scars,
When all the church of God hangs naked and exposed,
This is hard... to hold hope when the story feels lost.
But what tragedy never knows is the beauty that follows,
So while we grieve at the feet of what is exposed,
We remember what beauty followed Your tragedy on a hill,
And how Your risen life can bring hope to any loss,
And the promise you give the becoming family of the cross.
Turn our gaze to the kingdom that is becoming,
Even while we grieve the loss of yesterday.
Teach our hearts to fall in Love with every last part
Of the scarring and beautiful body of Christ.
Devotional inspired by Jesus' rock for the church and the day...
The Word of God points the gaze of the church beyond its broken walls.
My heart does not know how to remember, and it is hard to keep coming back. The Bible is not there to fix us. To fix me. To fix us.
To seek after the kingdom of God is not a quick fix for the problems that are, but a continual turning toward what we are becoming as a people of the cross. And when we feel out God’s description of the beauty of his church in Ephesians chapter four, the cracks are there... acknowledged. But the cracks are not the focus. And our gaze is turned from the cracks, to the beauty of what the body of Christ is growing into, to what the entire body is becoming altogether.
It’s easy to look for quick fixes in this life. Easy to want the kingdom of God to be the quick fix to our problems. Yet, the kingdom of God isn’t coming to fix the broken things in us, but to allow our brokenness to become into the beauty of the kingdom.
And I cannot stop needing the story of Peter. And the story of the friendship between Peter and His Jesus is an utter gift to all of us forgetting hearts.
Peter loved to fix the story. Peter wanted to strive after leaps of faith, and was vulnerable to growing weary of small, steady steps. He wanted to right the wrongs right now. To get the story under control.
He was quick to speak and draw conclusions, when God had more to say. Peter was quick to be sure of himself, and slow to hold space for the mysteries of faith. But... perhaps the call of holding space for the mysteries of faith was something he was always growing into.
I keep coming back to a specific rebuke that Jesus spoke to Peter. Because as strong as Jesus’ words are to Peter in this passage, I think they shine a spotlight on the very places in our hearts, in my heart, that struggle to open to the mysteries of God.
Jesus was telling his disciples about all of the things he would suffer and how he would have to die. But Peter… Peter wanted Jesus to stop talking like that. This must not happen. That was how Peter saw it.
I can relate to Peter when I point to awful things that are happening in my life, in my surroundings and think… this cannot be happening. God, why are you letting this happen? God, stop this from happening.
I don’t think these are simply moments when we’re grieving the sadness of life. Peter was rejecting this part of the story.
When I am not accepting the way that the story is going, I am also rejecting grief.
Peter wasn’t speaking to Jesus as a submissive learner honestly coming in his overwhelm of not understanding why this horrific thing must happen.
Peter was rejecting all of it. He wouldn’t have Jesus be the person who allowed his own death. Jesus was not being who Peter wanted him to be.
But Jesus knew who He had to be.
He called Peter out sternly… “Get behind me, Satan! You are a hindrance to me. For you are not setting your mind on the things of God, but on the things of man.” Matthew 16:23.
It was none of Peter’s business to tell Jesus who Jesus needed to be.
Peter wanted for Jesus and all of them to do everything in their power to stop the bad things from happening. Peter’s heart was closed to the story of Jesus looking any other way than the way that Peter wanted it to look.
Peter’s passions were misplaced. Just as Jesus exposed, Peter’s mind was on the things of man, rather than on the things of God.
In contrast, Jesus’ passion was the will of God and the story that God was writing.
The rebuke that Jesus’ spoke shines a spotlight on our hearts that asks… Where does my heart want to insist that the story God is writing must look this specific way that I think must look? Where is my heart not open to the possibility that the story God is writing could look different than anything I’ve ever expected?
And yeah, Peter was the one who drew his sword when they came to kill Jesus. Because Jesus, you know that sometimes, we, Your sheep, need a thousand and one corrections to start having a faint idea of what direction You want us to go.
When Peter cut off the ear of one of those who came for You, You lovingly corrected again… “Put your sword into its sheath; shall I not drink the cup that the Father has given me?” John 18:11.
Put your sword into its sheath.
Peter knew that Jesus had flipped over tables and spoken in anger at the wrongs of the Pharisees before. And Peter must have wondered… how could this be so different? It was after this that Peter denied knowing Jesus. And again, Jesus wasn’t being what Peter thought Jesus was or what he wanted him to be.
This was a habit of Peter’s, to think that He knew who Jesus needed to be. But Jesus loved Peter. Jesus never told Peter to stop trying to learn. And Jesus never abandoned Peter no matter how many times Peter got in the way.
Peter hadn’t stopped receiving the rebukes of Jesus. Even when it may have felt at times like he was dying inside. Maybe Peter felt that the most this time when he was told to put his sword away. When he didn’t know how to say that Jesus was his friend.
How do you let yourself die inside? Peter did learn through all the times he got in Jesus’ way. Peter’s mistakes could not thwart Jesus Love for him.
Which of us cannot relate to Peter?
Jesus, teach us to set our hearts on the story that You are writing, when it will likely look nothing like what our limited imaginations could come up with.
God, keep showing us when we get in your way. Keep loving us through the story. And teach us when it’s time to put our sword away.
Teach us to take up our cross and let ourselves die inside. Just as you took up your cross and died for all of us.
Remind us of your Love when we get in Your way, for as many times as Peter got in your way Jesus, you never stopped giving Peter space to learn.
And just as You weren’t asking Peter to be happy that You had to die, teach us that we don’t have to like anything that is happening in order to humbly receive it and accept it as something that is a part of the beautiful story that You are writing.
Because as we set our minds on where the story is going with You as the gracious and trustworthy Author, You will teach us to accept the truth of where the story is.
And now, right now… Peter’s own life story is a bedrock that broken places in the body of Christ can always build on.
Jesus’ own words spoken even amidst all the ways he had to continually call Peter out and away from the things of man: “And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.” Matthew 16:18.
Jesus never took His eyes off the value of what God was writing with the story of Peter’s life.
When Peter failed in every way trying to take the story into his own hands, Jesus always saw the worth of Peter’s own story. Despite the many times that Jesus had to rebuke Peter sternly for his lack of trust in what Jesus was doing, Jesus never walked away.
And when Jesus rebuked Peter, Peter ultimately did stay by Jesus, because deep down in his heart, Peter’s desire to learn from Jesus, to have his own darkness exposed to the light of Jesus, was greater than his desire to be right.
As Jesus rebuked his ignorance, Peter learned through the story, to trade the version of the story that he had gripped onto, for the story that God was actually writing.
And through all of the mess of it, Peter learned to trust Jesus, not because Peter was strong, but because even though it was so hard for Peter to see, the blazing Love of Jesus taught Peter that the weakness inside him desperately needed the light of Jesus. Peter kept staying close to Jesus, when all the light of Jesus exposed all of Peter’s darkness. And eventually Jesus called Peter the rock for the church.
How many cracks in the foundations of the church happen because we can so easily become more consumed with passion for the story that we are gripping onto, than with a passion to trust and obey when the story God is writing goes all different than we thought. To trust in the story God is writing even when it all seems wrong to our human eyes. And to obey Love.
Every story God is writing is a part of His Gospel story because every little thing in this world will point somehow to this. God is always writing the story of the good news of His grace. The redeeming power of His Life.
If we are to be passionate about the Gospel, we can trust in the story that God is writing. We don’t have to like what is happening when we can’t understand where it’s going, but we can learn surrender in accepting the story when it all looks blown to bits, feeling all of it and giving it to God to keep writing the story while we do just what is ours and obey Love the best we know for today.
In the end, Peter wasn’t just a life, He was there for a body.
In the end, Peter’s life, holds us together, the body of Christ. A people who each have our version of how we want to insist that this story goes. How I want to insist that this story goes. And we are each learning through the death of our own individual stories, to hold instead to the story that is all of ours to share when we hold to the Head. That Head is Christ.
Until we come to the end, His Love will keep giving us, giving me, opportunities to die again and again to the story we want to hold onto. Because He Loves us that much.
I think perhaps, it wasn’t until Jesus was dead, when all of Peter’s version of the story was dead and the rooster crowed thrice… that Peter felt Jesus’ rebuke most of all and let it sink into his heart. And sometimes the parts of life that we cling to have to die… before we can see.
There is an Author. And He knows what He is doing.
In finality… a portrait painted with God’s own words. Here is the essence of the body of Christ, the church...
“And he gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the shepherds and teachers, to equip the saints for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ, until we all attain to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to mature manhood, to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ, so that we may no longer be children, tossed to and fro by the waves and carried about by every wind of doctrine, by human cunning, by craftiness in deceitful schemes. Rather, speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in every way into him who is the head, into Christ, from whom the whole body, joined and held together by every joint with which it is equipped, when each part is working properly, makes the body grow so that it builds itself up in love.” Ephesians 4:11-16.