Flashback Episode — Spiritual Bias: Luke 22:66-71


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Moving from the night of Jesus’ arrest and to the morning Jesus was ultimately crucified, we arrive at Jesus’ trial before the religious leaders. In order to condemn Jesus to death, the religious leaders needed to find something Jesus was guilty of.

While many of the gospels share different details about what happened during the twelve hours between the garden and the cross, the way Luke’s gospel frames Jesus’ trial is fascinating. Let’s read what happened.

Our passage is found in Luke’s gospel, chapter 22, and we will read from the New Living Translation. Starting in verse 66, Luke tells us:

66 At daybreak all the elders of the people assembled, including the leading priests and the teachers of religious law. Jesus was led before this high council, 67 and they said, “Tell us, are you the Messiah?”

But he replied, “If I tell you, you won’t believe me. 68 And if I ask you a question, you won’t answer. 69 But from now on the Son of Man will be seated in the place of power at God’s right hand.”

70 They all shouted, “So, are you claiming to be the Son of God?”

And he replied, “You say that I am.”

71 “Why do we need other witnesses?” they said. “We ourselves heard him say it.”

In Luke’s version of Jesus’ trial, I am amazed at what the religious leaders actually latch on to as a condemnation of Jesus. While other gospel writers share this event differently, if we were to take and focus on Luke’s gospel alone, nothing in Jesus’ response sounds worthy of death in my mind.

Oddly enough, according to what we just read in Luke’s gospel, Jesus doesn’t really even claim to be the Son of God.

In case this didn’t stand out for you, let me read this passage again and pay close attention. Reading again from verse 66:

66 At daybreak all the elders of the people assembled, including the leading priests and the teachers of religious law. Jesus was led before this high council, 67 and they said, “Tell us, are you the Messiah?”

But he replied, “If I tell you, you won’t believe me. 68 And if I ask you a question, you won’t answer. 69 But from now on the Son of Man will be seated in the place of power at God’s right hand.”

70 They all shouted, “So, are you claiming to be the Son of God?”

And he replied, “You say that I am.”

71 “Why do we need other witnesses?” they said. “We ourselves heard him say it.”

In this passage, all that these religious leaders actually hear is Jesus predicting that God would honor Him, which might not be acceptable in their minds, but it certainly isn’t worthy of death in my mind.

The only other thing Jesus says is that the religious leaders themselves are pressing the specific title onto Him. Jesus calls Himself the Son of Man, while the religious leaders are claiming Jesus’ title is the Son of God.

However, is there something happening behind the scenes in this passage that the religious leaders understand but we might not fully grasp living in a different culture and thousands of years removed from the first century world?

I suspect the answer is a yes.

While the conclusion of this trial was a clear setup according to Luke, because Jesus never really says what they claim to “hear” Him say, perhaps there is something lost in translation, or perhaps this was really the only sliver of an opening these leaders had to condemn Jesus.

The something I suspect that gets lost on us living so far removed from this event is that it appears as though Jesus references back to the unanswerable question He asked the Pharisees just a few days earlier. In Luke, chapter 20, verses 42 and 43, Jesus quotes David from the Old Testament who said: “The Lord said to my Lord, sit in the place of honor at my right hand until I humble your enemies, making them a footstool under your feet.

While this passage also doesn’t sound that significant, it is believed that David was quoting this conversation as being from God the Father to God the Son. With God the Son being the one to be honored at God’s right hand, we now have a solid context for why these religious leaders were upset with Jesus’ claim.

David has predicted that God’s Son would be the one to sit at God’s right hand, and Jesus has just stepped into claiming that position for Himself from that point forward.

When reading this passage, I am continually amazed at the religious leaders. I am very confident that these leaders understood Jesus’ reference to the position He would be given as equal to Jesus claiming to be God’s Son – even if nothing Jesus directly says claims this title. The religious leaders were smart enough to connect the dots when they wanted to find Jesus guilty of something.

However, the religious leaders were not smart enough to keep connecting the dots to realize that the Messiah God was sending to them would be rejected and killed by them. They didn’t realize that they would ultimately reject the Messiah that they were desperately longing would arrive.

It is the same with us today. Too often, we get so focused on one way of thinking that we stop being able to think there are other options, or other ways of interpreting the facts. Like these religious leaders, we know lots of information, but we have overlaid this information with a thick layer of bias that we cannot begin to see that the same information could really be telling other stories. It is this way when two people with different worldviews look at the same fossil record, or when two different people who are both very opinionated on opposite sides of the political spectrum describe the same political event.

The lenses we have on our eyes called our biases filter our lives through our beliefs. These biases lead to the religious leaders in the first century ultimately killing the Messiah God sent to them because Jesus didn’t fit their biased picture of who the Messiah would be.

Our biases today can just as easily cause us to miss out on signs God is sending or on amazing things He is doing in the world around us. Because our biases and beliefs filter the world around us, we must be extra diligent about what we use to form our biases and our beliefs. If left unchecked, our biases will stop us from truly learning anything new, and these same biases will trap us into missing out on seeing God.

The best way to combat bias in your life is to open up the Bible and read it for yourself. The amazing thing about the Bible is that it challenges every single bias we might have. The Bible challenges every area of science, every angle of politics, every angle of service, every angle of business, and every area of human interaction. The only thing the Bible doesn’t really cover is technology. The only way for you to know whether what I just said is actually true or not is to pick up the Bible and read it for yourself.

With that said, let’s wrap up this podcast with some direct challenges related to this big truth:

As I always begin by challenging you, intentionally seek God first in your life and intentionally place your faith, hope, trust, and belief in Jesus. Ask God to help remove any unhealthy biases from your life and ask Him to help you better reflect His love and His character to the world around you!

Also, always pray and study the Bible for yourself. Everyone has an opinion of the Bible, and it can be easy to simply take someone else’s opinion about what the Bible says and agree with it. However, with eternity on the line, accepting someone else’s opinion about the Bible is the worst thing you could do. It is like having a beautifully wrapped present in front of you and a stranger telling you it is just an empty box. If you believe the stranger and never open the gift, you will never truly know what was inside the box!

It’s the same way with the Bible. Don’t let someone else trick you out of discovering God’s gift to you through the pages of His Word.

And as I end every set of challenges by saying in one way or another, never stop short of, back away from, chicken out of, or fall away from where God wants to lead you to in your life with Him!

Flashback Episode: Year in Luke – Episode 47: When looking at Jesus’ trial before the religious leaders on the morning He is crucified, discover how the religious leaders’ bias causes them to actually condemn an innocent Jesus, or perhaps rightly condemn Someone who claimed much more than they should have.

Keeping His Promise: Isaiah 44:1-5


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Following Jesus being seated at the right hand of God that we focused our last episode on, it makes perfect sense for us to start this episode by looking at one of the first things Jesus does after stepping, or sitting, in this position – especially since what Jesus does is clearly foreshadowed and prophesied about.

To start this episode off, let’s look at the Old Testament prophecy that Jesus then references. Our Old Testament passage is found in the book of Isaiah, chapter 44, and let’s read it using the New American Standard Bible translation. Starting in verse 1, Isaiah writes:

“But now listen, O Jacob, My servant,
And Israel, whom I have chosen:
Thus says the Lord who made you
And formed you from the womb, who will help you,
‘Do not fear, O Jacob My servant;
And you Jeshurun whom I have chosen.
‘For I will pour out water on the thirsty land
And streams on the dry ground;
I will pour out My Spirit on your offspring
And My blessing on your descendants;
And they will spring up among the grass
Like poplars by streams of water.’
“This one will say, ‘I am the Lord’s’;
And that one will call on the name of Jacob;
And another will write on his hand, ‘Belonging to the Lord,’
And will name Israel’s name with honor.

Part way through these first few verses describing God’s people at some point in the future, Isaiah draws attention to God pouring out His Spirit on a later generation of His people. God promises to give His Spirit and His blessing on His people.

While the context for this prophecy could refer to the time of Jesus’ disciples, or much, much later, I won’t speculate exactly when this prophecy was or will be fulfilled. However, because of the ambiguity present, as well as a pretty generic sounding way this prophecy could be understood, I wouldn’t be surprised if this prophecy could be fulfilled multiple times in multiple generations.

However, how does this prophecy relate specifically to Jesus’ ministry?

Let’s jump into the New Testament, and into the gospels to find out. Part way through the night Jesus was betrayed and arrested, John’s gospel dedicates a significant portion of space to the message Jesus shared with the disciples as they were finishing up their supper, and walking to the Garden of Gethsemane.

In John, chapter 16, starting in verse 1, Jesus tells His disciples:

“These things I have spoken to you so that you may be kept from stumbling. They will make you outcasts from the synagogue, but an hour is coming for everyone who kills you to think that he is offering service to God. These things they will do because they have not known the Father or Me. But these things I have spoken to you, so that when their hour comes, you may remember that I told you of them. These things I did not say to you at the beginning, because I was with you.

“But now I am going to Him who sent Me; and none of you asks Me, ‘Where are You going?’ But because I have said these things to you, sorrow has filled your heart. But I tell you the truth, it is to your advantage that I go away; for if I do not go away, the Helper will not come to you; but if I go, I will send Him to you. And He, when He comes, will convict the world concerning sin and righteousness and judgment; concerning sin, because they do not believe in Me; 10 and concerning righteousness, because I go to the Father and you no longer see Me; 11 and concerning judgment, because the ruler of this world has been judged.

12 “I have many more things to say to you, but you cannot bear them now. 13 But when He, the Spirit of truth, comes, He will guide you into all the truth; for He will not speak on His own initiative, but whatever He hears, He will speak; and He will disclose to you what is to come. 14 He will glorify Me, for He will take of Mine and will disclose it to you. 15 All things that the Father has are Mine; therefore I said that He takes of Mine and will disclose it to you.

Let’s stop reading here. In this passage, Jesus reemphasizes the prophecy given in Isaiah about a later group of God’s people receiving the Holy Spirit. Jesus even takes the prophecy, and applies it to Himself, saying that He, referring to Himself, would send the Holy Spirit after He had arrived in Heaven.

However, Jesus also shares the sobering truth that the only way for the Holy Spirit to be poured out in the way that Isaiah prophesied, was if He left and returned to Heaven.

This is a powerful idea. If Jesus had not returned to Heaven, He would not have been able to be seated at God’s right hand, and prior to Him sitting in that position, He would be unable to send the Holy Spirit. While a little oversimplified, this is one understanding of the details as they are laid out.

Looking within the first few chapters of the book of Acts, we discover that not long after Jesus returned to heaven, somewhere in the range of 10 days, the disciples received the Holy Spirit as promised in an amazing and significant way.

However, does this then mean that the Holy Spirit was not present prior to that point, or that we don’t have access to the Holy Spirit in our own lives if we have not experienced a clear and special event like the disciples have?

I suspect that the answer is no to both of those possibilities. I believe the Holy Spirit has been present and working throughout all of history, from the very beginning, moving forward through Jesus’ life and ministry, and also in every generation following Jesus’ return to Heaven. I believe that every passage that ultimately made it into the Bible, as well as messages for specific people at specific times that were not included in the Bible, are examples of the Holy Spirit’s presence and guidance during the times leading up to Jesus. In my mind, every prophecy that came to pass was directly because the Holy Spirit prompted a prophet or messenger to write it down, and then also crafted history to move in that specific way.

The big reason for this is to draw attention to Jesus!

When we look at how Jesus describes the Holy Spirit’s role, one big role He has is pointing people to Jesus. In the Old Testament times, much of what the Holy Spirit did was working through prophets and prophecy to help the people return to God and pay attention to the signs that would take place in the early part of the first century. As our year focusing on prophecy has shown us, there are no shortage of connection points between Jesus’ life and ministry and the Old Testament writers and prophets.

However, what about the point in history we are living right now? What is the Holy Spirit’s role for the span of time following the Old and New Testament generations? In my own mind, the Holy Spirit, which was clearly given to the disciples shortly after Jesus ascended into Heaven, is actively working in the world today. In my mind, from reading Jesus’ description of the Holy Spirit’s role, I get the picture that the Holy Spirit is actively pointing people to pay attention to the Jesus described in the Bible, while also reminding people of Jesus’ soon return. We are challenged to read and study what the Bible teaches so we will be able to recognize Jesus when He appears, because there will be no shortage of imposters as time nears the end. The best way for us to be able to recognize any fake Jesus is to be very familiar with the genuine Jesus who came in the first century.

Jesus stepped into history at the moment prophecy specified, and His life and ministry fulfilled an amazing amount of prophecies. When we let the Holy Spirit lead and guide our focus, we will be led to grow closer to Jesus both today, and every day moving forward into eternity!

As we come to the end of another podcast episode, here are the challenges I will leave you with:

As I always open by challenging you in one way or another, intentionally seek God first in your life. Choose to accept the Holy Spirit into your heart and mind and let the Holy Spirit lead and guide you to pay attention to Jesus.

Also, as I always challenge you to do, keep praying and study the Bible for yourself to grow your personal relationship with God. While other people have plenty of ideas about God, Jesus, and the Bible, only when you study the Bible for yourself will you know personally what it teaches. Don’t let eternity rest on the opinions of someone else!

And as I end every set of challenges by saying in one way or another, never stop short of, back away from, chicken out of, or abandon where God wants to lead you to in your life with Him!

Year of Prophecy – Episode 47: After sitting down at the right hand of God, Jesus’ first task would be to keep one of the last promises He gave His followers leading up to His death. Discover how Jesus keeping this promise is powerful and relevant for us living today!

Join the discussion. Share your thoughts on this passage.

Flashback Episode — Facing Temptation with Jesus: Luke 22:39-46


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Following the meal Jesus eats with His disciples, the eleven remaining disciples have a little bit of time alone with Jesus while Judas Iscariot is off getting the soldiers and mob to arrest Jesus. While John’s gospel describes in detail what Jesus shares with the disciples during their trip to the garden, the remaining gospels focus on what Jesus does after they have arrived at Gethsemane.

Let’s read our passage and discover what we can learn from what Luke tells us happened. Our passage is found in Luke’s gospel, chapter 22, and we will read from the Good News Translation. Starting in verse 39, Luke tells us that:

39 Jesus left the city and went, as he usually did, to the Mount of Olives; and the disciples went with him. 40 When he arrived at the place, he said to them, “Pray that you will not fall into temptation.”

41 Then he went off from them about the distance of a stone’s throw and knelt down and prayed. 42 “Father,” he said, “if you will, take this cup of suffering away from me. Not my will, however, but your will be done.” 43 An angel from heaven appeared to him and strengthened him. 44 In great anguish he prayed even more fervently; his sweat was like drops of blood falling to the ground.

45 Rising from his prayer, he went back to the disciples and found them asleep, worn out by their grief. 46 He said to them, “Why are you sleeping? Get up and pray that you will not fall into temptation.”

As we read this passage from Luke, several things jumped out at me. The first thing is how passionately and fervently Jesus prayed. Verse 44 describes Jesus’ sweat was “like drops of blood falling to the ground.” Some people point to this detail and say Jesus was literally sweating blood or that blood was mixing with His sweat. While this sounds crazy, this is actually something that is possible and has been documented on a number of occasions. I don’t remember what this is called, but if I did, I doubt I’d be able to pronounce the word correctly.

Another way I can understand this description of Jesus’ sweat that only Luke includes is that Jesus was sweating so profusely that it was dripping off Him like blood might drip out of a wound.

However, whichever way we want to view this small detail that sounds crazy, this detail isn’t very significant in the big picture of this passage.

Another big detail that I see in this passage reflects a big theme we looked at last week about persisting within God’s will. Looking closely at Jesus’ prayer reveals the powerful truth that Jesus was willing to follow God’s will even through what is likely the worst abuse and death imaginable. Jesus prayed in verse 42, “Father, if you will, take this cup of suffering away from me. Not my will, however, but your will be done.

Jesus’ prayer to God reflects how we are challenged to pray. When we come before God in prayer, it is worthwhile to bring our requests to Him. However, we also are challenged to frame our requests as being less important or significant that His will. While we might try to push forward in our own strength what we believe to be God’s will, our timing and our perception doesn’t always mirror God’s.

Jesus prayed a prayer with a request for help, but He also prayed that He would remain firmly within God’s will for His life – even if that meant that He would face the cross the following day. Jesus’ prayer here in the garden is a powerful example for us when we decide to go before God in prayer. Jesus’ prayer teaches us how to bring our requests to God while also praying that we stay within God’s will for our own lives.

Speaking of prayer, this leads us to what might be the biggest truth and challenge I see tucked within this event. In verse 40, prior to Jesus walking away from the group to be alone to pray, He tells the group of disciples to “Pray that you will not fall into temptation.

This is powerful when we look closely at it. Of all the nights these disciples would face, and of all the nights in the history of the world, this night was likely one of the darkest. While the following night would appear to be a victory for Satan with Jesus in the tomb, the night before the cross was filled with more temptation directed towards Jesus and all those closest to Him than we likely could imagine.

Leading into this night filled with temptation, Jesus challenges His closest disciples to pray for strength to avoid temptation. While it is difficult to know whether all His followers heeded His words or not, we do know that the two big predictions Jesus made about that night came true. Peter ultimately denied Jesus even though he strongly denied Jesus’ suggestion about what would happen. Also, all the disciples scatter and leave Jesus to be arrested as the scripture predicted would happen.

Aside from these two fulfilled predictions, I suspect that these disciples did ultimately pray for strength to avoid temptation and they received help as an answer to their prayers. None of the disciples aside from Judas Iscariot the betrayer was ultimately lost from this group, and Judas Iscariot was only truly lost because he took his own life. I suspect that Judas Iscariot could have been forgiven if he had first forgiven himself, humbly repented before God in prayer, and not taken such drastic measures as he did. Suicide is sometimes referred to as the permanent solution to a temporary problem, and if given enough time, the problem faced is always less than the solution suicide provides.

In this event, we discover that at the darkest points in history, our prayers should be for help to avoid temptation. At the darkest parts of our lives, we are the most prone to falling into temptation and we should focus more intently on prayer for God’s help and guidance. I believe that when we come before God asking for help to stay away from sin and for help withstanding temptation, He is more than happy to double, triple, or in some other way multiply our own power to resist temptation.

I doubt God puts forth much effort to help us resist sin if we are only half-hearted in our request. However, if we are sincerely committed to resisting sin, I believe God is more than happy to step in and help when we ask Him for help and to fill in any gaps in our strength that might exist. With God’s help, we can have a willpower that is stronger than we might expect or realize!

When our lives are hard and when times are dark, lean into God and ask Him for help resisting temptation! I know that when we claim this prayer, God is more than happy to step in and walk with us along the path He has called us to walk!

As we come to the end of another podcast episode, here are the challenges I will leave you with:

As I always challenge you to do, continue to seek God first in your heart, in your mind, and in your life. When things get tough and times are challenging, lean into God asking for strength to keep moving forward with Him!

Also, continue praying and studying the Bible for yourself to grow a strong personal foundation. While praying and studying with others is beneficial, don’t neglect your personal prayer and study life. Through personal prayer and study, discover God’s truth for your life and open your heart to Him!

And as I end every set of challenges by saying in one way or another, never stop short of, back away from, chicken out of, or deviate away from where God wants to lead you to in your life with Him!

Flashback Episode: Year in Luke – Episode 46: On the night Jesus was arrested, He leaves the disciples with a challenge before He goes off to pray. Discover how this challenge is powerful and how we can claim it in our lives today!

Seated at God’s Right Hand Forever: Psalm 110:1-7


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Near the end of our last podcast episode, we briefly looked at the last two verses in Mark’s longer conclusion, and saw tucked within it, a reference to where Jesus would go in Heaven after His ascension. However, since the conclusion of Mark’s gospel has some controversy surrounding it, I thought it would make sense to focus one episode on the specific idea of Jesus being seated at God’s right hand, since this idea has both a connection point in the Old Testament, and it is referenced numerous times in the New Testament.

To remind us of the passage we concluded our last episode with, instead of starting with the Old Testament passage like we have typically done so far this year, let’s instead start briefly in Jesus’ ministry before looking back on the passage that serves as the foundation for this idea.

In our last episode, the last passage we looked at was in Mark, chapter 16, and we read it from the New American Standard Bible translation. Starting in verse 19, the author of this conclusion wrote:

19 So then, when the Lord Jesus had spoken to them, He was received up into heaven and sat down at the right hand of God. 20 And they went out and preached everywhere, while the Lord worked with them, and confirmed the word by the signs that followed.

In this conclusion, when Jesus is received into heaven, He takes the favored position of being at God’s right hand. While some people might understand why this would be, other people, including many religious leaders living in the first century, could not comprehend this thought.

However, we are in luck because during Jesus’ ministry, He has an opportunity to draw this topic into the open, and He does so in a way that silences the religious leaders’ vocal opposition.

Part way through the week leading up to the cross, several groups of religious leaders approach Jesus with challenges for Him to solve. The first group to bring a challenge to Jesus were some Pharisees who had temporarily allied with a group known as the Herodians and they came to Jesus with a seemingly unsolvable dilemma related to paying taxes.

Next, a group of Sadducees came to Jesus with a logical and very difficult challenge focused on the validity of the resurrection framed within a dilemma focused on marriage and remarriage.

After Jesus had answered the Sadducees, a religious expert appears to throw Jesus an easy question about what the greatest commandment was, but before this full challenge had finished, it appeared as though Jesus derailed His challengers with a question of His own.

In Jesus’ question to all the religious leaders present, He quotes from the following psalm. Reading from Psalm, number 110, starting in verse 1, we discover that:

The Lord says to my Lord:
“Sit at My right hand
Until I make Your enemies a footstool for Your feet.”
The Lord will stretch forth Your strong scepter from Zion, saying,
“Rule in the midst of Your enemies.”
Your people will volunteer freely in the day of Your power;
In holy array, from the womb of the dawn,
Your youth are to You as the dew.

The Lord has sworn and will not change His mind,
“You are a priest forever
According to the order of Melchizedek.”
The Lord is at Your right hand;
He will shatter kings in the day of His wrath.
He will judge among the nations,
He will fill them with corpses,
He will shatter the chief men over a broad country.
He will drink from the brook by the wayside;
Therefore He will lift up His head.

Here at the beginning of this psalm, David writes about the Messiah being seated at the right hand of God. Three of the four gospels include Jesus’ challenge to the religious leaders and the quotation He uses to stump them. Let’s read Matthew’s version of this event.

In Matthew, chapter 22, starting in verse 41, we read:

41 Now while the Pharisees were gathered together, Jesus asked them a question: 42 “What do you think about the Christ, whose son is He?” They said to Him, “The son of David.” 43 He said to them, “Then how does David in the Spirit call Him ‘Lord,’ saying,

44 ‘The Lord said to my Lord,
“Sit at My right hand,
Until I put Your enemies beneath Your feet”’?

45 If David then calls Him ‘Lord,’ how is He his son?” 46 No one was able to answer Him a word, nor did anyone dare from that day on to ask Him another question.

In this event, Jesus sets up a seemingly impossible-to-reconcile situation where David is shown that one of his descendants had existed before Him. While someone who believes in reincarnation would not see this idea as being strange in any way, nothing in the gospels, or even in the Bible, points to this as a logical probability. While some verses have been pulled out of context to make the Bible appear to support this idea, as well as a lot of other fringe ideas, the fact that these religious leaders are stumped by this dilemma is evidence that reincarnation was not something they gave any weight to.

However, in a strange twist, the idea of Jesus being seated at God’s right hand, as this quotation from the Old Testament suggests, ends up being used as one major foundation for condemning Jesus, after Jesus has been betrayed, arrested, and condemned by the religious leaders. In a fascinating way, Jesus’ impossible to reconcile framing of this psalm with the other prophecies about Jesus being David’s descendant becomes the foundation for putting Jesus to death. While the religious leaders could not do anything publicly to answer Jesus’ challenge, they saved their hostility towards this challenge and frame until they clearly had the upper hand.

But these religious leaders could only reject this Old Testament psalm, and by rejecting Jesus, they not only discount David’s prophetic insight into the Godhead, they also subtly reject the other big prophetic idea present in this psalm, specifically that the Messiah would be a priest forever in the order of Melchizedek. While there are no shortage of ideas for what this means, I suspect that David wants to draw attention to God having priests and people worshiping Him in a world prior to the Jews being freed from Egypt, and that being a priest of God is something that is not necessarily part of one’s genealogy.

If we stop to think about this idea for a moment, we will realize that this is a great thing. God is more than able and willing to welcome people into His family who might not have any shared genetic or ancestral connection to God’s chosen people. Jesus being a priest in the order of Melchizedek, who lived hundreds of years before Moses and Aaron, and who was someone who had no recorded beginning or end draws our attention to Jesus being someone who can bring us into a future that may have a beginning, but one that clearly has no end. Jesus, our Priest, has done everything for us to prepare the way for our salvation, and His sacrifice on our behalf opens the way for God to forgive our sins while remaining just.

God promised to elevate the Messiah’s role to be at His right hand, and the Messiah, Jesus, the Son of God, was granted this status when He ascended to Heaven. While there is plenty to debate about in Mark’s conclusion that we don’t have time to cover, don’t for a moment question where Jesus ended up when He entered heaven, because that truth is amazingly clear.

However, following Jesus’ return to Heaven and Him being seated at God’s right hand, Jesus had promised the disciples He would do something for them, and this promise will be our focus for our next episode.

As we come to the end of another podcast episode, here are the challenges I will leave you with:

As I always open by challenging you in one way or another, intentionally seek God first in your life. Choose to accept Jesus as your High Priest and as your Redeemer, and let His sacrifice for you be everything you need to be saved for eternity.

Also, continue to pray and study the Bible for yourself to grow personally closer to Jesus each and every day. Choose to let Jesus lead and guide your life, mind, and heart, and intentionally step forward each and every day with Jesus as you move together towards eternity.

And as I end every set of challenges by saying in one way or another, never stop short of, back away from, chicken out of, or give up on where God wants to lead you to in your life with Him!

Year of Prophecy – Episode 46: Leading up to crucifixion weekend, Jesus quoted an Old Testament psalm that describes the place He would go following His return to Heaven, and while this quotation succeeded in silencing the immediate challenge Jesus was facing, it also becomes a foundational accusation that led to His death.

Join the discussion. Share your thoughts on this passage.