(L)Perhaps...
Illustration
(L)
Perhaps the most important thing that the writer of the letter to the Hebrews says in this majestic passage is the admonition to consider Jesus. "Consider" means much more than just casually wondering about Jesus, or noticing that there indeed was such a person. It carries the meaning of "ultimate discovery." To consider Jesus means to understand that God is revealing himself totally through Jesus. To consider Jesus means to make one's own commitment. It involves one's life.
Years ago Origen wrote:
If you believe that Christ has risen from the dead,
you must believe also that you yourselves
have likewise risen with him ... and if you believe yourselves
dead with Christ,
you must believe that
you will also live with him;
and if you believe that Christ
is dead to sin and lives to God,
you, too, must be dead to sin
and alive to God.
To consider Jesus means accepting the new kind of life that Jesus offers to us all -- a life lived in the realization that the death of sin and alienation has been overcome. We have been forgiven, so we can be alive.
-- Aber
Perhaps the most important thing that the writer of the letter to the Hebrews says in this majestic passage is the admonition to consider Jesus. "Consider" means much more than just casually wondering about Jesus, or noticing that there indeed was such a person. It carries the meaning of "ultimate discovery." To consider Jesus means to understand that God is revealing himself totally through Jesus. To consider Jesus means to make one's own commitment. It involves one's life.
Years ago Origen wrote:
If you believe that Christ has risen from the dead,
you must believe also that you yourselves
have likewise risen with him ... and if you believe yourselves
dead with Christ,
you must believe that
you will also live with him;
and if you believe that Christ
is dead to sin and lives to God,
you, too, must be dead to sin
and alive to God.
To consider Jesus means accepting the new kind of life that Jesus offers to us all -- a life lived in the realization that the death of sin and alienation has been overcome. We have been forgiven, so we can be alive.
-- Aber
