Passion Week Devos: Thursday

Thursday (in 3 parts)

Morning: Passover – The New Covenant
Read Luke 22:7-23

Prayer: Father, thank you for the new covenant you have made with me through Jesus Christ.  Thank you that his body was broken and his blood poured out to pay for my sins that I might walk with you.  Thank you for the regular reminder given to us in the Lord’s Supper.  Amen.

Noon: Perfect Servant – Follow His Example
Read Luke 22:24-30

Prayer: Father, your Son came to serve, and too often I join the disciples seeking to be the greatest, seeking to exalt myself.  Help me to humbly serve as Jesus served.  Help me to be a servant to my family, to your church, wherever I go.  Amen.

Evening: Prayer – God’s Will, Not Mine
Read Luke 22:35-46

Prayer: Father, like the disciples I too am weak, and I need your help to overcome temptation.  Awaken me from my spiritual slumber that I might pray.  Let me join my Savior in seeking your will.  Too often my way is not your way.  Help me to submit to your way no matter what the cost.  Dear Father, not my will, but yours be done.  Amen.

Reflect/Discuss: In what current situations do you need to submit to his will?

Praise: Sing “Have Thine Own Way Lord”

 

Passion Week Devos: Wednesday

Wednesday: Prophecy – Be Alert
Read Luke 19:41-44, 21:5-38

Prayer: Father, your Son predicted the Fall of Jerusalem, and it happened.  Your Son predicted his return – help me to be ready.  Help me to be alert.  While I wait, help me to be ready and watchful for opportunities to bear witness for Christ.  Help me not to get so weighed down with the cares of this life that I fail to be alert to your opportunities and your return.  Even so, come Lord Jesus!  Amen.

Reflect/Discuss: What keeps us from being more alert to his coming?

Praise: Sing “Christ Returneth!”

Passion Week Devos: Tuesday

Tuesday: Predictions – Take Up Your Cross
Read Luke 9:18-27, 18:31-34

Prayer: Father, your Son knew what was coming, yet he willingly gave himself up for me.  He was rejected, mocked, shamefully treated, spit upon, flogged, and killed for my sins.  Let me give myself for him.  Help me deny myself – stop living for myself, and take up my cross – be willing to suffer for Christ, and follow him wherever he leads.  Amen.

Reflect/Discuss: What are some practical daily examples of what it might look like to deny yourself for Christ?

Praise: Sing “Am I A Soldier of the Cross”

Passion Week Devos: Monday

Monday: His Preaching – Give all to Him
Read Luke 19:45-21:4

Prayer: Father, they dragged buying and selling even into your house. How easy it is for me to get caught up in the buying and selling of our culture. Help me be like the widow who willingly gave all to you. All that I have is from you; it is yours – do with it as you please. Even my life is from you, and you made me in your likeness, so help me give myself to you – even as your Son gave himself for me. Amen.

Reflect/Discuss: What would it look like to live according to this prayer?

Praise: Sing “Take My Life”

Consider His Sacrifice

But he was pierced for our transgressions;
he was crushed for our iniquities;
upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace,
and with his wounds we are healed.
All we like sheep have gone astray;
we have turned—every one—to his own way;
and the LORD has laid on him the iniquity of us all.
– Isaiah 53:5-6

Consider Jesus our Savior. Consider his sacrifice.

Like sheep, we had all wandered away from the Shepherd to do our own thing. We chose the path of selfishness instead of loving God and people. We rebelled against our Creator and King. We chose what was evil and wicked. And all of our sins were laid on Jesus.

Jesus took our sins upon himself there on the cross. He paid the price for our sins. And consider the price for our sins. He was wounded. He was crushed. He bore our punishment, and the stripes we deserved. For us. In our place.

He bore the chastisement that we deserved to bring us peace – peace with God. In Jesus, we are reconciled to God. In Jesus, we can have a relationship with our Creator. We can draw near and commune with him as his children. We can know his daily presence in our lives, and the joy he alone can give.

And by his stripes we are healed, healed from the infection of sin and all its dire consequences. We are healed from the guilt of sin which was paid on the cross. We are healed from the power of sin, so we can live a new life with Jesus. And we will one day be healed from the presence of sin and all of its results. When Jesus returns, there will be no more sin, no more sorrow, no more sickness, no more suffering, no more pain, no more death.

Consider Jesus our Savior. Consider his sacrifice to pay for our sins to bring us peace with God and healing from sin.

Father, thank you for Jesus who paid the price for my sins.
Help me to live in the peace and healing that was purchased for me,
even as I look toward the day of final healing when Jesus returns.

Consider His Suffering Again

As many were astonished at you—
his appearance was so marred, beyond human semblance,
and his form beyond that of the children of mankind—
so shall he sprinkle many nations;
kings shall shut their mouths because of him…
– Isaiah 52:14-15a

Consider Jesus our Savior. Consider his suffering. He was beaten. A crown of thorns was pressed onto his head. He was scourged with a whip that ripped open his flesh forty times. He was hung on a cross with nails in his hands and feet. The extent of his suffering was so great that our passage tells us he didn’t even look like a man. He didn’t even look human, but rather a bloody mass of flesh hanging there on the cross. Consider his suffering.

And in his suffering, he sprinkles the nations. The high priest would sacrifice an animal and sprinkle the blood to cleanse, to purify, to make clean. And in the suffering of our Savior, his blood was spilt to be sprinkled on the nations, to cleanse us from our sins, to make us pure and clean. Consider his suffering that cleanses us from our sins.

And in his suffering, he shocks the nations. As people looked upon this suffering servant, they were astonished. They shut their mouths in shock and dismay at this spectacle of suffering. And yet the shock goes beyond the suffering to the salvation that flows from it – that we would be saved by his shed blood. How strange is this salvation!

And we ought to wonder. The cross can become so familiar to us. But stop and wonder at his sufferings on your behalf. Wonder at his incredible love that endured such suffering. Wonder at this great salvation that flows from his suffering. Stop and wonder.

Father, thank you for the suffering of Jesus that cleanses us from our sins.
May we wonder anew at his suffering and the shocking salvation
that flows from his blood.

Consider His Suffering

He was despised and rejected by men;
a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief;
and as one from whom men hide their faces
he was despised, and we esteemed him not.
– Isaiah 53:3

Consider Jesus our Savior. Consider his suffering. He was despised and sentenced to die. He was rejected by his own people, forsaken even by his own disciples. He was a man of sorrows. He was acquainted with grief. He was familiar with suffering.

And what about you? Do you feel despised? Rejected? Forsaken? Do you know sorrows? Grief? Suffering? Jesus has been there. He knows how you feel. He knows the hurt you are experiencing. Our God is not a distant God who cannot be touched by our weaknesses. But he became one of us and can identify with us. And he did it because he loves us, because he cares about us. So in your trials run to him – he knows and he cares.

Father, thank you that Jesus can identify with us in our weaknesses.
Thank you that you care about us in our trials.
Help us to run to you and find rest for our souls.

Passion Week Collection

Here are some good posts for Passion Week:

The Passion Week Infographic – Josh Byers
A chronological timeline of the major events that happened during Jesus’ last week before he died and rose again.

Eater Timeline and Geography – Three Passions
This collection of two resources from a few years back is already the most popular post on my blog right now.

The Savior’s Tears of Sovereign Mercy: Palm Sunday – John Piper (DG)
Jesus Turns The Tables: Holy Monday – Jonathan Parnell (DG)
The King We Needed, But Never Wanted: Holy Tuesday – Marshall Segal (DG)
Presumably further reflections will be forthcoming from Desiring God during the rest of the week to help you ponder our Savior’s path to the cross.

Consider His Rejection

Who has believed what he has heard from us?
– Isaiah 53:1a

The gospel goes out, but few believe. The good news is preached, but few respond. This verse is quoted in John 12:37-38 in reference to people’s response to Jesus’ ministry. Jesus was indeed despised and rejected by men (Isaiah 53:3). This verse is also quoted by Paul in Romans 10:16 in reference to the many who refused to believe the gospel message as he preached it. And we might yet quote it today in our own context – who indeed has believed what he has heard from us? The good news of Jesus is all too often despised and rejected by men.

And yet Calvin suggests that this verse is not merely describing the refusal of people to believe in Jesus back then or today. Rather, it is Isaiah groaning before the Lord and crying out – who has believed what he has heard from us? Isaiah proclaimed the message of the coming Suffering Servant, but most refused to believe. And so he groans before the Lord.

We too ought to groan before the Lord for those who have not believed. We too ought to cry out to Him on behalf of unsaved family and friends, our neighbors and our communities. We too ought to groan, cry out, plead with God to open blinded eyes that they might see Jesus and believe.

Father, help us to groan for the lost.
May we be faithful in crying out to you on behalf of those
who desperately need a Savior.