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BETHANY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: Daily Lenten Devotional – April 10, 2020

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Bethany Presbyterian Church recently issued the following announcement.

Greetings in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. Today’s meditation is from Lynne Baab:

God’s peace to you on this beautiful and sad day that we call Good Friday.

You are probably quite familiar with two verses from Lamentations: “The steadfast love of the LORD never ceases, his mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is your faithfulness” (Lamentations 3:22-23). Those words come almost exactly in the middle of the book, a high point between descriptions of deep sadness. Lamentations, often attributed to Jeremiah, describes the emptiness and pain of Jerusalem after its people were carried into exile in Babylon in 586 B.C.

One of the lectionary readings for today includes several verses before and after those well-known verses, and you will be amazed at the relevance for Good Friday. Verses 1-9 and 19-20 enable us to ponder the sadness that Jesus must have experienced. I want to invite you to enter into the depth of emotion expressed here as a way to feel some of Jesus’ pain as he goes to his death.

“I am one who has seen affliction

   under the rod of God’s wrath;

he has driven and brought me

   into darkness without any light;

against me alone he turns his hand,

   again and again, all day long.

He has made my flesh and my skin waste away,

   and broken my bones;

he has besieged and enveloped me

   with bitterness and tribulation;

he has made me sit in darkness

   like the dead of long ago.

He has walled me about so that I cannot escape;

   he has put heavy chains on me;

though I call and cry for help,

   he shuts out my prayer;

he has blocked my ways with hewn stones,

   he has made my paths crooked. . . .

The thought of my affliction and my homelessness

   is wormwood and gall!

My soul continually thinks of it

   and is bowed down within me.”

After all that pain and sadness, the writer of Lamentations shifts the direction of his thoughts: “But this I call to mind, and therefore I have hope.” What he calls to mind is the steadfast love of the Lord, and God’s mercies that are new every morning.

The passage then goes on to describe waiting and hoping in God. Notice the many aspects of human life that are described as “good.” I invite you to use these verses to ponder why we add “Good” to “Friday” to describe this holy day.

“‘The LORD is my portion,’ says my soul,

   ‘therefore I will hope in him.’

The LORD is good to those who wait for him,

   to the soul that seeks him.

It is good that one should wait quietly

   for the salvation of the LORD.

It is good for one to bear the yoke in youth,

   to sit alone in silence

   when the Lord has imposed it,

to put one’s mouth to the dust

   (there may yet be hope),

to give one’s cheek to the smiter,

   and be filled with insults.

For the Lord will not reject forever.

Although he causes grief, he will have compassion

   according to the abundance of his steadfast love.”(verses 24-32)

Lord Jesus, thank you for this beautiful and painful day, when we remember the glory and sadness of your death on the cross for our sins. Thank you for dying for us. Thank you for the abundance of your steadfast love and your mercies that are new every morning. Help us to honor you with our lives, as you have honored us with your life. Amen.

Peace in Christ,

Original source can be found here.

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