Scripture: 2 Samuel 7:1-14a and Psalm 89:20-37 • Jeremiah 23:1-6 and Psalm 23 • Ephesians 2:11-22 • Mark 6:30-34, 53-56
This week Jesus invites his disciples, and us, to rest, get away to a quiet place, all by ourselves. He had sent the disciples out to spread the good news, and had just heard the bad news of the unjust death of John the Baptist, who prepared the way for Jesus and his journey to the cross. The crowds were pressing him so much - they were so hungry for his teaching, his healing, his peace. And Jesus knew that he, the disciples, and us, need rest and renewal. In the 23rd Psalm, the Shepherd Lord " maketh me to lie down beside still waters."
Just as he was about to shove off in a boat, he saw people with needs. With gut wrenching compassion he could not leave without what? He did not feed them first. He first taught them. What did he teach them? What need did they have more than food? What needs do we have? How do we respond to needs of others? How do we get our rest? Read what The Rev. Rick Morley has to say in "Jesus' Man-Cave, a reflection on Mark 6:30-34; 53-56." Read also Debie Thomas' "The Gift of Rest."
And just when we think we have it all together, all figured out, and resting on our accomplishments, we are reminded, even when we think we are doing the Lord's work, that our agenda is not necessarily God's agenda. David, a man after God's own heart, whom God loved although a murderer and adulterer, thought he was doing God a favor when he wanted to build God a house. What did God tell David through the prophet Nathan? See Sam Rowen's "Whose Agenda Is It Anyway?" Even though David did not get to do what he wanted to do to honor God, God blessed him beyond his wildest hopes and dreams. Through Christ, from the line of David, God has blessed us beyond our wildest dreams, too.
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