Saturday, 01 August 2009

  • An Epiphany: Turn Your Eyes Upon Jesus

    willowleaf by mr willow

    More about worship in a bit. If you want a good article to keep you thinking about it, which I intend to do as well, you must try this fantastic piece on the hymn "Holy Holy Holy" and the doctrine of the Trinity.

    Meantime, I think I've just had an apostrophe. (“Epiphany, Smee!”) Whatever. Every once in a while I see things very clearly. This was one of those times. I was reading the comments on my previous post on worship, which were among the best I've received lately (thanks!). While I was thinking them through, I thought of this verse:

    Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith,
    who for the joy set before him endured the cross, scorning its shame,
    and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.
    (Hebrews 12:2, NIV)

    And then I saw it.

    Here it is.

    The Gospel is the message that we should fix our eyes on Jesus.

    Ministry is anything we do that helps someone fix their eyes on Jesus.

    Worship is anything we do when our eyes are fixed on Jesus.

    Sin is anything we do when our eyes are not fixed on Jesus.

    Any other definitions are extraneous.

    That’s all.


    The old hymn puts it very well, except for one word:

    Turn your eyes upon Jesus,
    Look full in His wonderful face,
    And the things of earth will grow strangely dim
    In the light of His glory and grace.

    The wrong word is "dim." Perhaps the author meant that our problems, worries, and temptations that seem so large fade into insignificance when we consider the glorious grace of Jesus-- true enough, then. But in general the "things of earth," rather than growing dim, grow strangely and newly vivid in the light of the glory and grace of Jesus.

    We have an entire cliche condemning the people who are "so heavenly minded they're no earthly good." But I've traveled all around the country and talked to people of faith from every background you can name, and I've never met a one whose problem was that they were so occupied with thoughts of God that they never gave a care about the world around them. I have, however, met many people who were so occupied with cares of the world around them that they never gave a thought to heaven. And I have met a few people, a precious few, who are so full of thoughts of heaven that they shine joy and love into the world around them. Apparently, it never works the other way, yet that's the way we're constantly warned against. I wonder why.

    It works like this. When we "turn our eyes upon Jesus," and see the "light of His glory and grace" (not the fakey religious version-- the real one such as you get in the Gospels), some remarkable things start to happen....

    ...Suffering becomes an opportunity to feel our closeness to God's constant care.

    ...Nature becomes a work of art by a Master Craftsman.

    ...Boring theology becomes a chance to see Jesus with more clarity (or, if too stuffy, is cheerfully set aside).

    ...The Bible becomes a book that has Jesus in every line and grace on every page.

    ...That material thing we're tempted to ruin our life for becomes a worthless trinket that's going to wind up in the ash-heap anyway.

    ...A discussion about faith becomes a chance to make friends, not win arguments.

    ...Your neighbors become people you can love like Jesus would... or love like they are Jesus.

    ...That annoying person next to you (yes, that one) becomes someone who needs to be shown grace and forgiveness.

    ...That person everyone looks down on as a "sinner" becomes someone who can be turned into a saint.

    ...That person nobody likes becomes a person Jesus loves.

    ...That repetitive worship chorus becomes a chance to praise the Lord.

    ...The times when we feel weak are the times we know best that God is strong.

    ...The times when we feel strong are the times when we can laugh at ourselves.

    You can insert your own examples here, because if you believe in Jesus at all, you've certainly had those moments of transformational clarity. What I'm saying here is nothing new, except perhaps for the phrasing. I can easily quote you lines from Scripture that support each of my points, and I look forward to hearing how you've seen this in your own life. All I'm suggesting is that we take those little moments of insight and make them the structure of the way we live.

    It's not What Would Jesus Do? (TM). It's making everything we do start from Jesus and end in Jesus, and along the way, pointing to Jesus. it's "For me, to live is Christ" (Phil. 1:21). It's "the summing up of all things in Christ" (Eph 1:10).

    And this has a tremendous bearing on the way we approach worship. More on that later, if you're interested. Maybe even if you're not.

Comments (7)

  • MagisterTom@xanga

    Great post! Thank you for the reminder to keep our eyes upon Jesus our Lord!

  • sarahzthoughts@xanga

    I really needed this today. Thank you

  • PastorDan

    Thanks for the great post!  Very well done, and very edifying.  It's difficult for me to understand how some groups that claim some sort of Christianity can be anti-Trinitarian, especially if they've studied the Bible at all.  The doctrine of the Trinity is so clear.

    Regarding the line from the hymn you mentioned:  "And the things of earth will grow strangely dim, in the light of his glory and grace," I think this is more poetical than anything.  The things that have worldly allure and earthly glory are no match for the glory of Jesus Christ. In Luke 21:33 Jesus says:  "Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will never pass away."

    Thanks also for the link to the excellent article about Reginald Heber's hymn, "Holy, Holy, Holy."  I have it bookmarked, and I shall definitely use it in the future.

    Thanks again for your words.  I leave you with the often repeated words of 2 Corinthians 13:14: "May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all."

  • IMChurchmouse@xanga

    I read.  I liked.
    justme
    cm

  • MC_Shann@xanga

    Good stuff.... The only thing I would change is where you write


    "The Gospel is the message that we should fix our eyes on Jesus."


    I would change it to


    "The gospel is the message that Jesus fixed His eyes on us."


    The admonishment of Paul to fix our eyes on Jesus is not the gospel. The second half of the verse is. Jesus is the "author" and "finisher" of our faith. The gospel is what Jesus did for us. Not what we do for Him or for others. I love the encouragement that Paul puts forth to the readers of Hebrews. Pointing them (and us) toward everything that God accomplished in Christ and how so many others endured in the past despite not ever seeing the promise. But knowing by faith (also a gift from God) that all He promised would come to pass.



    Grace and peace!


    ~Michael

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