God Who Delivers

Scripture

Matthew 27:45-46 (NIV)

From the sixth hour until the ninth hour darkness came over all the land. About the ninth hour Jesus cried out in a loud voice, “Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani?”—which means, “My God, my God, why have your forsaken me?”

Consider

When Jesus cried out in anguish from the cross, in what way did his Father respond? Or did he?

God’s answer to my prayer may not be in the form I want or expect. Jesus, the beloved Son of the Father, suffered and died on that cruel cross. God did not stop his death, but he delivered him from death by raising him three days later.

Mary stood watching her son die in agony. Loving her son, she may well have prayed that God would send angels to deliver him from his torment. Yet the cross was part of God’s bigger plan that Mary did not understand.

If God had stepped in and stopped Pontius Pilate from ordering the execution, or had miraculously rescued Jesus from the cross, there would be no Easter morning nor the promise of resurrection for you and me. Unlike Mary, Jesus understood God’s plan. In the garden before he was taken prisoner, Jesus prayed, “My Father, if it is possible, may this cup be taken from me. Yet not as I will, but as you will” (26:39).

Jesus’ prayer from the cross, in fact, was not that he be released from the cross but that the Father would not leave him to suffer alone. Jesus’ astonishing strength and courage throughout his trial and execution—indeed, throughout his entire earthly ministry—came from his unshakable union with the Father and his trust in divine sovereignty and the rightness of the Father’s plan for his life, as well as for his death.

When we ask God for deliverance from a painful circumstance, we may not recognize the answer. God does not promise deliverance from our suffering but from the tyranny of death that sin brought into the world. In God’s way and in God’s timing, we are delivered into our inheritance of eternal life and freedom from the forces of evil that plague us now. We can trust God’s promise of victory because God did deliver Jesus, not from the cross itself but through the cross, defeating death with death and giving us the glorious hope of Easter.

Pray

FATHER, I praise you for your good and perfect plans. Thank you for the gift of Jesus, who accomplished on my behalf what I could never achieve for myself. Help me to trust that you hear my prayers and always act in my best interest, even when I don’t understand why things happen the way they do.

Reflect

Isaiah 55:8-9; Romans 5:6

Ponder

When did God fail to deliver you from a difficult circumstance? What sort of “deliverance” might God have intended for you instead?

Someone Knows

Scripture

Psalm 56:8 (NLT)

You keep track of all my sorrows. You have collected all my tears in your bottle. You have recorded each one in your book.

Consider

When we’ve been hurt in a relationship, we naturally want justice. We want to see the offender punished. We want compensation for our injury. We want an apology. Perhaps more than anything, we want to set the record straight. We need the relief of saying out loud what happened to us and to know that our truth has been heard, believed, and valued by another human being.

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Good Like God

Scripture

Psalm 145:8-9 (NRSV)

The LORD is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love. The LORD is good to all, and his compassion is over all that he has made.

Consider

David composed this song to praise his Creator God. Elsewhere in the psalm he describes a sovereign God who inspires awe and obedience in his people. In the verses quoted above, David describes a personal God, whose goodness draws us into loving and grateful relationship with him.

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Worthy to Judge

Scripture Ecclesiastes 7:13; 8:16-17 (NLT) Accept the way God does things, for who can straighten what he has made crooked? In my search for wisdom and in my observation of people’s burdens here on earth, I discovered that there is ceaseless activity, day and night. I realized that no one can discover everything God is […]

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Heirs to the Promise

Scripture

Galatians 3:28-29 (NLT)

There is no longer Jew or Gentile, slave or free, male and female. For you are all one in Christ Jesus. And now that you belong to Christ, you are the true children of Abraham. You are his heirs, and God’s promise to Abraham belongs to you.

Consider

What was God’s promise to Abraham, and what can it mean for us?

God’s Old Testament covenant with Abraham was twofold. There was the material promise that Abraham would father a great nation and inherit property in the land of Canaan. More important for us was the spiritual promise.

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