A Life of Thanks-Giving預覽
What Paul Is Grateful for #2
One of my colleagues, Rod Botsis, once commented to me that he felt that every funeral he conducted was an act of spiritual warfare - that we proclaim the resurrection in the face of the doubt, fear and darkness that come with the bullying tactics that death uses to intimidate us.
In Graeco-Roman times life was cheap. The Romans had no hesitation to crucify hundreds of men along the roadside to crush a slave-revolt, life expectancy was low and infants could be abandoned in the street simply for being the wrong gender.
Even today we still use a number of euphemisms when talking about death. Some attempt to be humourous, others try to reduce its seriousness or to soften the blow. We are uncomfortable when it comes to talking about terminal illness, death and pain.
But Paul offers powerful hope in the face of death's bullying. He takes his cue from the physical resurrection of Christ.
- Perishable becomes imperishable.
- Mortal becomes immortal.
- Death has been swallowed up in victory. (Resurrection Life makes death insignificant)
- Death's sting has been pulled. The "poison sack" on the "bee sting" of death is sin. Sin makes death a separation from God. When Jesus died on the cross, He took our sin. Now the sting of death can be pulled - the poison is gone.
And so Paul is thank-full - we don't have to fear death. Death is defeated - its sting is pulled - we have victory.
關於此計劃
This plan deals with Thanks-giving. I was tempted to call the series "An Attitude of Gratitude" but there is something about the idea of Giving Thanks that appeals to me. Gratitude and Thankfulness are not limited to emotions that we experience from time to time, but are choices we make and gifts that we give.
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