The Bible with Nicky and Pippa Gumbel, Classic Version, 2015Sample
The Wonder of God's Great Love
Shane Taylor was considered one of the most dangerous men in the UK prison system. Originally jailed for attempted murder, he had his sentence extended by four years when he attacked a prison officer with a broken glass, setting off a riot.
He was put in a segregation unit inside a maximum security prison. He was given his food through a hatch. His door was not opened unless there were six officers armed with riot shields waiting outside.
Later, he was transferred to Long Lartin maximum security prison where he was invited on Alpha. During the course he prayed, ‘Jesus Christ, I know you died on a cross for me. Please, I don’t like who I am, please forgive me, please.’ At that moment he was filled with the Holy Spirit. Everything changed overnight. He said, ‘I knew God existed, I knew Jesus had touched me and I was going to live for him forever.’
His behaviour changed so much that he went from living in total segregation to getting a trusted job in the prison chaplaincy. He started sending money to a charity in Africa. He prayed for the prison officers and for his enemies and, when he came out of prison, he got involved in a church. He met a girl called Sam, who had also had a tough life and had been involved with drugs and criminal activity. She also came to faith in Jesus. Now, they are married and have two children.
Talking to Shane now it is hard to imagine that he is the same person who terrified so many people in the past. He has experienced the wonder of God’s great love. He says, ‘Jesus has shown me how to love and how to forgive. He has saved me. He has forgiven me for what I have done. He has changed my life around.’
Psalm 17:6-12
1. Know that you are loved and treasured by God
God’s love is so great because it is so intimate. David calls on God and asks him to ‘show the wonder of your great love’ (v.7). He prays, ‘Keep me as the apple of your eye’ (v.8a). The ‘apple’ of the eye is the pupil (the opening of the iris in the eye through which light passes to reach the retina), the thing most treasured. This is a remarkable picture of God’s wonderful love for you.
Then he goes on to another picture to describe the wonder of God’s great love. He prays, ‘Hide me in the shadow of your wings’ (v.8b). Again, this tells of God’s love, intimacy and protection. Jesus picked up this image as he looked over the people of Jerusalem in the days leading up to his crucifixion and longed for them to come and hide under his wings (Matthew 23:37).
David is surrounded by ‘enemies’ (v.9), people with ‘callous hearts’ who speak arrogantly against him (v.10). In the midst of his difficulties though, David knows that he can rely on God. There may be times in your life when you literally face enemies, but whatever struggles or difficulties you may face, you too can rely on God’s intimate love for you.
Lord, I call on you today. Give ear and hear my prayer. Show the wonder of your great love. Keep me as the apple of your eye; hide me in the shadow of your wings.
Matthew 20:1-19
2. Experience God’s love, generosity and grace
Jesus tells a parable that demonstrates again the wonder of his great love. The parable of the workers in the vineyard shows the extraordinary generosity and grace of God, who gives to those who enter the kingdom last the same blessings that he gives to everybody else. This sometimes makes us ‘envious’ (v.15b). We are happy with our situation until we hear of someone else doing better. Then, we are tempted to envy them.
The landowner in this parable overturns all the normal commercial practices. He does this, not to make extra profit for himself, but for the very opposite reason. He wants to be generous and pay more than justice demands. God is like that landowner, and his blessings and forgiveness are always more than we could ever deserve.
We sometimes hear testimonies from people like Shane Taylor who have lived terrible lives. Then, at the ‘eleventh hour’ (v.9), they repent and believe in Jesus. They are totally forgiven and receive all the benefits of Jesus’ death and resurrection (v.19). Sometimes, people complain that this is unfair, or that those like Shane are given too high a profile. Yet God uses their testimonies greatly, often seemingly more than those who have borne ‘the heat of the day’ (v.12b).
As we saw yesterday, God’s kingdom is an upside down kingdom: ‘So the last will be first, and the first will be last’ (v.16). Jesus is saying this is not a reason to be envious. Rather, it is a reason to marvel at the generosity of God. In his great love he is generous to all. It is all grace. It is all undeserved. It is all a result of what Jesus foretold (vv.17–20).
The reality is that it is not just other people like Shane to whom God is generous. He is generous to me and to you. If God gave us only what we earned, we would be far worse off. Yet if we accept the generosity that God showers on us, the result is staggering.
Through his death and resurrection (Matthew 20:18–19), Jesus makes it possible for all of us to be forgiven and to enjoy the wonder of his great love into eternity.
Lord, thank you for the wonder of your great love. Thank you for your extraordinary generosity to me. May I never be envious of those you seem to be blessing even more than me. Thank you that, in the wonder of your great love, you forgive us all when we turn to you and you give us all the possibility of enjoying the wonder of your great love into eternity.
Job 11:1-14:22
3. Hold on to his love through the difficult days
Job, in the middle of a long period of intense suffering, holds on to the wonder of God’s great love. He says, ‘Though he slay me, yet will I hope in him’ (13:15).
Although Job had lived a blameless and upright life, fearing God and shunning evil (1:1), he was not perfect. He speaks here of ‘the sins of my youth’ (13:26) and says, ‘My offences will be sealed up in a bag; you will cover over my sin’ (14:17).
The mistake that Job’s friends made was to think that his suffering was linked to his sin. In this passage we see Job’s increasing frustration with his friends. They go on about ‘sin’ (11:6,14) and effectively heap condemnation on Job (v.5). They talk in platitudes, which do not offer any real comfort.
Eventually Job turns around and replies, ‘But I have a mind as well as you; I am not inferior to you. Who does not know all these things?’ (12:3). ‘What you know, I also know’ (13:2). He points out to them that their best policy would be to say nothing: ‘If only you would be altogether silent! For you, that would be wisdom’ (v.5).
We need such wisdom when people are suffering, not to speak in glib platitudes but to ensure we demonstrate God’s wonderful love by our actions and are very careful in what we say.
Job has a far healthier attitude than his friends. In his intense suffering he experiences that awful feeling of aloneness and cries out to God, ‘Why do you hide your face?’ (v.24). After C. S. Lewis’ wife died, he wrote a book called A Grief Observed. In the book, he likens this kind of experience to ‘a door slammed in your face.’
Yet, in the midst of all this, Job is able to say to God, ‘Even if he killed me, I’d keep on hoping’ (v.15, MSG). He knows God and trusts him enough, even in the very depth of despair.
He knows and trusts that the length of his life is ultimately determined by God and that ‘the number of his months is wholly in Your control’ and that no one can ‘pass the bounds of his allotted time’ (14:5, AMP).
At the same time, Job seems to get a glimpse of life beyond the grave – that nothing, not even death, can separate us from God’s great love: ‘If we humans die, will we live again? That’s my question. All through these difficult days I keep hoping, waiting for the final change – for resurrection!’ (v.14, MSG; see also 19:25 onwards).
As the story of Job unfolds we see that he is right to keep trusting in God. God never explains to Job why he allowed him to go through so much, but Job’s confidence in God’s love is vindicated. In the midst of suffering, somehow we have to hold on to ‘the wonders of your [God’s] great love’ (Psalm 17:7).
Lord, thank you that although there is so much that I do not understand in this world, I can trust in the wonder of your great love. Help me to say, like Job, ‘Though he slay me, yet will I hope in him’ (Job 13:15). Thank you that I am so much better off than Job because I know about the cross and the resurrection of Jesus, and I have a sure hope of eternity in the presence of God – enjoying his love forever. Help me today, and every day, to enjoy the wonder of God’s great love.
Pippa Adds
Matthew 20:16
‘So the last will be first, and the first will be last.’
I have taken this verse out of context many times. When the children were young and lost running races, or didn’t do well in an exam or competition, I would recite, ‘The first shall be last and the last first’. It was a sort of joke, but also a reminder that what we value in life – success, achievement, getting to the top – will not be valued in the same way in the kingdom of heaven.
Notes:
Unless otherwise stated, Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version Anglicised, Copyright © 1979, 1984, 2011 Biblica, formerly International Bible Society. Used by permission of Hodder & Stoughton Publishers, an Hachette UK company. All rights reserved. ‘NIV’ is a registered trademark of Biblica. UK trademark number 1448790.
Scripture quotations marked (AMP) taken from the Amplified® Bible, Copyright © 1954, 1958, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1987 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission. (www.Lockman.org)
Scripture marked (MSG) taken from The Message. Copyright © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002. Used by permission of NavPress Publishing Group.
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Start your day with the Bible in One Year, a Bible reading plan with commentary by Nicky and Pippa Gumbel. Nicky Gumbel is the Vicar of HTB in London and pioneer of Alpha. ‘My favourite way to start the day.’ – Bear Grylls ‘My heart leaps every morning when I see Bible in One Year by @nickygumbel sitting in my inbox.’ – Darlene Zschech, Worship Leader
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