Easter Timeline and Geography

In what order did the events of Passion Week occur, and where?  Here are some interesting attempts to visualize the answers to those questions.  

First, Bible Gateway has created a Holy Week Timeline.  You can get a glimpse of it below.  For more information and to see details, visit here

Meanwhile Crossway has put together a google map with possible locations of the various events of Jesus’ last week.  You can see a glimpse below.  See here to access the actual map and descriptions of each location.

Thanks to Justin Taylor for noting these visual resources on his blog.  Of course there is disagreement on the order and exact location of some events, but these still give us helpful visuals of when and where these events may have occured.  For a more detailed discussion of the order of events for Good Friday and Easter, I recommend John Wenham’s excellent book Easter Enigma.

More Reason To Praise

On Sunday we reviewed the story in Mark 11:7-10 of the triumphal entry of Jesus into Jerusalem.  The people had lined the way into Jerusalem with palm branches and their own cloaks.  They were shouting and singing and celebrating.  There was excitement in the air.  They saw in Jesus the long awaited king who would save them from Roman oppression. 

But we know something they didn’t.  In less than a week, Jesus would die on a cross, because he came not to save them from the tyranny of Rome, but from the tyranny of sin.  He came to save us by becoming our sacrifice for sins so we could be forgiven and reconciled to God.  He came to rise again so we too could be raised from the dead someday.  He rose to reign not merely as the king of Israel, but as the king of the whole world, for he is not only in the line of David but also God in the flesh. 

If Israel had reason to gather to shout and sing and celebrate Jesus, how much more reason do we have to gather to shout and sing and celebrate Jesus? 

But is that why we gather on Sundays?  Do we gather to praise the Lord?  Do we come ready to shout and sing and celebrate?  Really?  Is it in our minds?  Is it on our hearts?  The Israelites had been anticipating that day for years.  Do we anticipate during the week that time when we can gather with God’s people to praise him together?  Can we hardly wait?  Are we excited to come together to praise our great King and Savior? 

We have more reason to praise Jesus than the Israelites did.  Let’s act like it as we gather this Sunday to praise our risen Savior and King. 

And yet we need not wait until Sunday.  Let’s get warmed up during the week.  As we reflect on the cross this week, let’s shout and sing and celebrate in our personal times with the Lord.  Let’s praise the Lord in our own homes as families.  We have more reason to praise Jesus this week.  Let’s live like it!

Passion Points

Hi all!  A few good reads for the weekend:

First, what do you do when you are struggling with your faith, or trials seem to be shredding your faith?  How do you get your faith back?  How do you press forward in your faith?   Mark Altrogge has some wise words to guide us.

Second, let’s think about worship.  Better yet, let’s prepare for gathering to worship with our church family tomorrow.  Bob Kauflin gives us three good reasons to sing in church.  And Mark Altrogge reminds us that the words matter.

Third, as we prepare for Passion Week, Ray Ortlund gives us a helpful quote from John Stott on one way the cross changes us.

Hope you have a great Lord’s Day building your faith, worshipping the Lord, and reflecting on your Savior!

Passion Week With Children

Easter bunnies, easter eggs, easter baskets, candy, gifts, and so much more.  Nothing wrong with these things in and of themselves.  But they can be a distraction from the true meaning of Easter.  In the midst of all these things, how can we help our children focus on what Easter is really all about?  Thriving Family magazine offers daily crafts and activities to do together as a family during Passion Week to help your family focus on Christ.  Check it out here.

Hosannah To Christ

I have a book with a couple hundred hymns by Isaac Watts, and I found this one that goes along with Palm Sunday.  We are planning to sing it this Sunday using the familiar tune to O For A Thousand Tongues To Sing (both hymns share the same meter and the music fits well).  Read the words and notice their theological depth in reference to the person of Christ that leads to the call to praise him.

Hosannah To Christ
Isaac Watts

Hosannah to the royal Son
Of David’s ancient line!
His natures two, his person one,
Mysterious and divine.

The root of David here, we find,
And offspring is the same:
Eternity and time are join’d
In our Immanuel’s name

Bless’d he that comes to wretched men
With peaceful news from heav’n!
Hosannahs of the highest strain
To Christ the Lord be giv’n!

Let mortals ne’er refuse to take
The hosannah on their tongues,
Lest rocks and stones should rise and break
Their silence into songs.

Passion Week Reflections

Passion Week is quickly approaching.  A couple years ago I wrote some daily reflections to help me retrace the steps of Jesus from Palm Sunday to Resurrection Sunday.  You can make use of them by clicking on the appropriate links below:

Palm Sunday: Praise – Rejoice in the Messiah

Monday: Preaching – Give All To Him

Tuesday: Predictions – Take Up Your Cross

Wednesday: Prophecy – Be Alert

Thursday: Passover – The New Covenant
Perfect Servant – Follow His Example
Prayer – God’s Will, Not Mine

Good Friday: Plot – The Plans of God and Men
Pardon – In My Place
Passion – Remember the Cross

Saturday: Pain of Loss and Failure – Struggling Without Hope

The Pursuit of Joy

Paul tells us to rejoice in the Lord always (Philippians 4:4).  But that is often easier said than done.  In the midst of the storms of life, how can we pursue joy in Christ?  Mark Altrogge gives us 25 helpful suggestions which include praise, prayer, the Word, serving, giving, and more.  Read the whole thing here, and find help to rejoice in the Lord always.

My Mighty Rock

For God alone, O my soul, wait in silence,
for my hope is from him.
He only is my rock and my salvation,
my fortress; I shall not be shaken.
On God rests my salvation and my glory;
my mighty rock, my refuge is God.
Trust in him at all times, O people;
pour out your heart before him;
God is a refuge for us.

– Psalm 62:5-8

Passion Points

Here are some good posts for your weekend reading.

The Gospel

Trevin Wax outlines six counterfeit gospels – and I suspect each of us are tempted to lean towards one of them. 

Tim Chester discusses our desire to be our own Savior.

Tullian Tchividjian reminds us that our identity is not found in possessions or position or anything but Christ (we need to be reminded of this again and again!).

Family

Sam Crabtree discusses the importance of affirmation in marriage.

Mark Altrogge suggests several ways that we provoke our children to anger (do some of them sound a bit too familiar?).

More Good Stuff

Stephen Altrogge considers how we should respond when someone confesses sin to us.

John MacArthur offers some helpful questions to ask related to issues that Scripture does not specifically address.

Hope you have a wonderful Lord’s Day worshipping the Lord with your church family!