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Mark 14:32-72
“And they came to a place which was named
Gethsemane: and he saith to his
disciples, Sit ye here, while I shall pray. 33 And he taketh with him Peter and James and
John, and began to be sore amazed, and to be very heavy; 34 and
saith unto them, My soul is exceeding sorrowful unto death: tarry ye here, and watch. 35 And
he went forward a little, and fell to the ground, and prayed that, if it were
possible, the hour might pass from him. 36 And he said, Abba, Father, all things are
possible unto thee; take away this cup from me:
nevertheless not what I will, but what thou wilt. 37 And
he cometh, and findeth them sleeping, and saith unto Peter, Simon, sleepest
thou? couldest not thou watch one hour? 38 Watch ye and pray, lest ye enter into
temptation. The spirit truly is
ready, but the flesh is weak. 39 And again he went away, and prayed, and
spake the same words. 40 And when he returned, he found them asleep again, (for their
eyes were heavy,) neither wist they what to answer him. 41 And
he cometh the third time, and saith unto them, Sleep on now, and take your
rest: it is enough, the hour is come;
behold, the Son of man is betrayed into the hands of sinners. 42 Rise
up, let us go; lo, he that betrayeth me is at hand. 43 And
immediately, while he yet spake, cometh Judas, one of the twelve, and with him
a great multitude with swords and staves, from the chief priests and the
scribes and the elders. 44 And he that betrayed him had given them a token, saying,
Whomsoever I shall kiss, that same is he; take him, and lead him away
safely. 45 And as soon as he was come, he goeth straightway to him, and
saith, Master, master; and kissed him. 46 And they laid their hands on him, and took
him. 47 And
one of them that stood by drew a sword, and smote a servant of the high priest,
and cut off his ear. 48 And Jesus answered and said unto them, Are ye come out, as
against a thief, with swords and with staves to take me? 49 I
was daily with you in the temple teaching, and ye took me not: but the scriptures must be fulfilled. 50 And
they all forsook him, and fled. 51 And there followed him a certain young man,
having a linen cloth cast about his naked body; and the young men
laid hold on him: 52 and he left the linen cloth, and fled from them naked. 53 And
they led Jesus away to the high priest:
and with him were assembled all the chief priests and the elders and the
scribes. 54 And Peter followed him afar off, even into the palace of the
high priest: and he sat with the
servants, and warmed himself at the fire. 55 And the chief priests and all the council
sought for witness against Jesus to put him to death; and found none. 56 For
many bare false witness against him, but their witness agreed not together. 57 And
there arose certain, and bare false witness against him, saying, 58 We
heard him say, I will destroy this temple that is made with hands, and within
three days I will build another made without hands. 59 But
neither so did their witness agree together. 60 And the high priest stood up in the midst,
and asked Jesus, saying, Answerest thou nothing? what is it which these
witness against thee? 61 But he held his peace, and answered nothing. Again the high priest asked him, and said
unto him, Art thou the Christ, the Son of the Blessed? 62 And
Jesus said, I am: and ye shall see the
Son of man sitting on the right hand of power, and coming in the clouds of
heaven. 63 Then the high priest rent his clothes, and saith, What need we
any further witnesses? 64 Ye have heard the blasphemy:
what think ye? And they all
condemned him to be guilty of death. 65 And some began to spit on him, and to cover
his face, and to buffet him, and to say to him, Prophesy: and the servants did strike him with the
palms of their hands. 66 And as Peter was beneath in the palace, there cometh one of the
maids of the high priest: 67 And when she saw Peter warming himself, she looked upon him, and
said, And thou also wast with Jesus of Nazareth. 68 But
he denied, saying, I know not, neither understand I what thou sayest. And he went out into the porch; and the cock
crew. 69 And
a maid saw him again, and began to say to them that stood by, This is one
of them. 70 And he denied it again.
And a little after, they that stood by said again to Peter, Surely thou
art one of them: for thou art a
Galilean, and thy speech agreeth thereto. 71 But
he began to curse and to swear, saying, I know not this man of whom ye
speak. 72 And
the second time the cock crew. And Peter
called to mind the word that Jesus said unto him, Before the cock crow twice,
thou shalt deny me thrice. And when he
thought thereon, he wept.”
What
Real Strength Is
We’re going to continue in Mark chapter 14
with verse 32, that’s where we left off last week. Mark 14:32-42, “Then they came to a place
which was named Gethsemane; and he said to his disciples, ‘Sit here while I
pray.’ And he took Peter, James, and
John with him, and he began to be troubled and deeply distressed. Then he said to them, ‘My soul is exceedingly
sorrowful, even to death. Stay here and
watch.’ He went a little farther, and
fell on the ground, and prayed that if it were possible, the hour might pass
from him. And he said, ‘Abba, Father,
all things are possible for you. Take
this cup away from me; nevertheless, not what I will, but what you will.’ Then he came and found them asleep, and said
to Peter, ‘Simon, are you sleeping? Could
you not watch one hour? Watch and pray,
lest you enter into temptation. The
spirit truly is ready, but the flesh is weak.’ Again he went away and prayed, and spoke the
same words. And when he returned, he
found them asleep again, for their eyes were heavy; and they did not know what
to answer him. Then came he the third
time and said to them, ‘Are you still sleeping and resting? It is enough! The hour has come; behold, the Son of Man is
being betrayed into the hands of sinners. Rise up, let us go. See, my betrayer is at
hand.’” When I was in college I had been
a little bit athletic in high school, I had run track and field. And when I got to college I was kind of a
little guy. I didn’t think I was as
small as I was until I got to college. I
remember getting into the elevator early there in the year and thought the Anakin
[a race of giant people, 10 to 11 feet tall] were still alive there from the
Old Testament. But there were some big
guys in my dorm that played on the football team, and I had never seen folks
that big before. And it really was a
humbling experience. I was intimidated
moving into Boston, like, some of these guys were so big, I didn’t realize
people grew that big. I had never seen
anybody that big. Well, a friend and I,
we were both little guys, we started to weight-lift. And just to the mechanics of it, the way my
arms are, I have a short upper arm which kind of helps, if you bench press--I
sort of really focused on the bench press because I was pretty good at it, I
had a short upper arm. And if you do the
mechanics of it, I have an advantage over other people because of that. But I did pretty well, and started to think I
was kind of cool. And one day I was bench
pressing, and you know you kind of “spot” [for] other people who are lifting
and take turns and things, and I usually felt pretty good after I was done with
some of the bigger guys--I could sort of keep up with them. But this one day this girl was weight lifting
with me, and she looked pretty tough, I could tell, big legs. Turns out she had been a javelin thrower,
throwing the javelin in the Olympics. And
I was working with her and I was of course going to take all the weights off
the bar and let her get started with just the bar, that was my mindset, but she
looked up at 45 lbs., probably be enough for her. But as we started to go, this girl just kept
keeping up with me. I kept stacking the
weight on to do the next step, and she’d sit down to do as many reps as I was,
and I was like, ‘this is amazing.’ And
the weight just kept going higher and higher, and I had to try with every bit
of my might, I didn’t want to be out-done by a girl. That was my attitude, to out-do this girl. She was strong. She got up to, I bet you, 270 lbs. on the
bench, or something like that. I had
never seen a girl do that much before. And
I was pretty amazed working out with her, intimidated and humbled by it too. And then there was this other guy the same
period that was in the gym, he was from Iran, and he was also an Olympic
lifter, and he was amazing. This guy
could ‘clean and jerk’ 450 lbs., which is a lot of weight. And he’d put 4 plates on the side of that bar
and a few other things, and actually right from the ground go right above his
head with 450 lbs. And he wasn’t that
big of a guy. So I admired this guy, my
friend, and we just thought he was the greatest, and I admired that type of
strength. Well, because I was into that
type of mentality, not that weight lifting is a bad thing, it’s really a good
thing. But if you get too over into it,
you can get the wrong perspective, and I sort of did. I thought I was kind of cool, and one day I
was working at a hotel in downtown Boston and thought I was kind of tough--and
a guy came up to me who was strung-out on drugs, mistook me for someone else,
and he began to kind of chew me out. And
because I had an attitude, I chewed him back. And what ensued in the next minutes is I ended
up in the hospital with a cracked head and blood everywhere, as this guy just
went to town on me real quickly. And
then I think an angel stepped in and helped me. But you know I had this wrong understanding
about what real strength is. If I knew
what strength was, I would not have gotten in trouble at that moment, I think
with that guy, because real strength would have stood there with this man
strung out on drugs and just loved him, responded quietly, prayed for him, and
I probably wouldn’t have ended up in the hospital. I had a misunderstanding about what strength
was, and it ended up getting me in trouble. You know as we look at Jesus here in Mark
chapter 14, he is an example of just incredible strength, real strength,
strength that now I desire in my life. I
used to desire more physical strength, and today I don’t focus on that at all,
as you can probably tell. I see value in
it, but I just in my time focus on other things and haven’t had much time for
that. The strength that I desire now is
the true strength you see in Jesus Christ, it’s just tremendous incredible
strength, it’s so strong to do the things that he does in these verses, it’s
just incredible. And you know Paul says
in some of his letters, he says ‘You know now as a spiritual athlete I
discipline myself to grow as a spiritual athlete and to become very strong.’
And the disciplines that he talks about
of course are different, you’re not working out with weights as much, which is
fine, or running which is fine, but now the discipline is like prayer [and
Bible study, and fasting], those things make you strong. Last week we talked about the secret of
strength and we talked about the first phase. The first phase to really begin to
comprehend and to experience strength in your life is to begin to realize you
are very weak. And if we don't
know that we are weak we’re never going to experience true strength. Because the second step is to realize
that God is strong, that he is powerful. And you’ll never get there until you’ve
got to the end of yourself, truly, and realize that you really need him.
Well, today we’re going to focus on the
same idea, but we’re going to focus on this bridge that gets you from step one
to step two. Step one, I finally got to
that point in my life that I’m realizing, I’m learning that I’m weak. How do I get to the second step where I
begin to really learn that God is strong?--and that the bridge to that second
step is prayer. In prayer I
begin to experience the strength of God. And we’re going to see that in Jesus’ life. I know in my life, many probably here would
agree, the days that I start off in a solid time of prayer, those mornings, I
go into that day and I have this sense to me, I have this peace to me, there’s
less anxiety, and I seem to go through the day a little smoother, I feel more
prepared for the day. The day that I don’t
start in solid prayer, or those periods that I don’t, you know I seem a little
spacey, I seem less confident in the day. My head seems to spin a little easier, I get a
little more confused about things. And
what happens is I mess up more. I get to
the end of the day and I have regret about things that I’ve said to someone, or
things that I’ve done. But I seem more
guarded and strong in the days that I really spend in the morning on my knees
before the Lord, and just calling upon him and just finding his strength. And when I do that I really see the impact in
my day. Maybe you’ve had those
experiences and are seeing the same thing in your life. David said in Psalm 27, he says, “Wait
on the Lord, be of good courage, and he shall strengthen your heart. Wait, I say, on the Lord.” (Psalm 27:14) [Read the whole Psalm.] He says, wait on the Lord, and he will
strengthen your heart. Wait on the Lord
and be of good courage. That’s such a
beautiful verse. And that waiting on the
Lord obviously is in prayer and being in the Word, as you wait on the Lord and
you seek him and you talk to him and he talks to you--you begin to get strong,
you begin to get confident and encouraged, encouraged in him. When I wait on the Lord in prayer, I find the
fears that are in my life begin to subside, I find the anxiety begins to just
fade away. I beget this courage and this
strength, my spirit is renewed, I find strength for the day ahead. When I don’t wait on the Lord I find that I’m
more susceptible to temptation as the day continues. But as I start my day with prayer, then
throughout the day I find times of prayer, I find strength. Isaiah declared, he said, “But those who
wait on the Lord shall renew their strength, they shall mount up with wings
like eagles, they shall run and not be weary, they shall walk and not faint.”
(Isaiah 40:31) He says those that
wait on the Lord shall renew their strength, they’re going to mount up with
wings like eagles. I tell you, as you
read these verses, you see something to the man’s eye, ‘This is real
weakness,’ but now in Christ I look, what incredible strength, there’s an
eagle just soaring through this passage, as I look upon Jesus, I see strength
that is so supernatural. Last week again
we saw “we need to learn our weakness,” step two, we need to learn that
Christ is the strength. He is, God is power. But today we’re going to
focus on that bridge, the bridge from one to the other is prayer. That’s how we
tap into that strength.
The Strength That Prayer Gives
Let’s
begin by reading verse 32. “Then they came to a place which was named
Gethsemane, and he said to his disciples, ‘Sit here while I pray.’” You know, if we were with Jesus at this
moment, we’ve seen him at different times, we’ve seen as we get near to
Jerusalem this heaviness in him. This
sense to him, that even the disciples are beginning to wonder and even begin to
have fear at times coming into their hearts as they’ve been with Jesus. Jesus knows where he’s going, there’s
absolutely no doubt as they come to this garden, that we read in Luke that they
would go to at other times. It means Olive
Press, interestingly, the word translated, Gethsemane. But as they’ve
come to this point, the city of Jerusalem is right there before them, it’s only
hours away from his betrayal. There’s no
doubt, and you can tell in these verses, there’s a tremendous heaviness upon
Jesus. And you would certainly be able
to sense it. You would see it in his
eyes, tremendous burden, anguish of heart. You could hear it in the shortness of his
breath. I don’t know whether you’ve ever
had that experience where you know something is coming that’s causing you to
just have this sense to you. ‘I know I have to encounter this,’
sometimes maybe a meeting with an individual that you know is not going to go
well and you’re speech begins to change. And there’s this heaviness there. There’s no doubt, there at this point his
disciples are really sensing something going on that’s very heavy here with
Jesus. And at this most difficult hour,
what do you find Jesus doing here? You
find him praying. He goes away, takes
the disciples, he says, ‘I’m going to go and pray, you guys come with me,
but you sit here and I'm going to go and pray.’ You know there’s many other methods and things
that we can turn to as people when the going gets tough, but here we find Jesus
in this most difficult hour, praying, calling out to the Lord, as you read,
calling out to God the Father. And as
you read you clearly see the result of that. As you watch him pray you also
find him growing in strength, even in the midst of it. Jesus was very much man, very much God but
very much man. And here as a man he
calls out to the Father, and in that finds tremendous renewal of strength. This is a great lesson for the disciples. The disciples watching this as they go on here
in the years ahead and endure some of the things they’re going to endure. They can think back to Jesus here at this very
difficult hour, understanding that Jesus knew he was going to be betrayed, and
they can see him on his knees, and see the importance of prayer and where Jesus
found his strength ultimately. Where and
how do you find strength in your life? How
do you do it? If you believe you find
your strength in God, then it would be reflected in your life of prayer,
because you’re going to find strength from God as you pray. That’s how you tap into him, because you’re
with him and you find that strength. If
there is not a lot of prayer-time in your life, I think it could be argued from
the Scriptures there’s probably not a lot of power of God in your life. Because prayer is that bridge that gets me
from “I can't do it Lord,” to “I begin to call on him and seek him,
and suddenly I find this courage, suddenly I find this tremendous supernatural
strength of God.” Maybe still you
aren’t quite comprehending the vastness, the difference between your weakness
and the strength of God. And it’s so
different what you can do and what he can do. Don’t be fooled in thinking that any of
whatever avenue or method could adequately renew you with strength and give you
victorious life, and also don’t believe a lie that maybe the situation you’re
in, that there’s nothing that you can do to find strength and victory. David said “Wait on the Lord and be of good
courage and he shall strengthen your heart.” Isaiah
said “Wait on the Lord and you’re going to soar on wings as eagles,”
as you do that. Learn, you and I need to
learn this new discipline, the true strength, and that’s prayer. And as we pray, man, we cross that bridge, and
we experience tremendous power.
It Appears Here That Jesus In
Prayer Admits His Fear & Terror In This Situation
Verses
35-36, “And he took Peter, James and John with him, and he began to be troubled
and deeply distressed. And he said to
them, ‘My soul is exceedingly sorrowful even to death. Stay here and watch.’ He went a little farther and fell on the
ground and prayed that if it were possible the hour might pass from him. And he said, ‘Abba, Father, all things are
possible for you. Take this cup away
from me, nevertheless, not what I will but what you will.’” Man there is an eagle, there’s wings to soar through
this passage. The strength is just
tremendous that you see there. Jesus
leaves eight of the disciples, Judas has left him, not with him at this moment.
He takes the inner circle, those three
guys, privileged guys, Peter, James and John, they just had incredible
privileges with Jesus--able to see him in ways no other person, from a vantage
point that others never had that privilege. And here they have another privilege of going
even further into the garden with Jesus, and able to see him right there as he
just cries out to the Father. Mark tells
us here that Jesus, in verse 33, begins to be very troubled, very distressed. And then he turns in verse 34, to the
disciples, and confesses that he is very heavy. In fact, you read, he says “My soul is
exceedingly sorrowful, even to death.” You ever been that sorrowful before?--even to
death?--just that low, emotionally? You
know, you look at the Greek tense of these words, you learn a little bit more. In those Greek words for “exceedingly
sorrowful” or whatever your translation has before you, those Greek words
suggest an element of surprise, an element of terror, an element of just sudden
surprise like being stunned. Jesus, when
he’s experienced this, so much emotion has come upon him, part of this
spiritual battle, I’m sure the enemy had something to do with it, but as he
knows what he’s just about to do, the emotion is so great that he is almost
stunned, just alarmed by all the emotion. And he turns to the disciples and says “I
am so heavy, I’m exceedingly sorrowful, even to the point of death.” It’s clear in verse 35 that Jesus is very
human. And with all that, he goes a
little bit further, he falls on the ground and he prays, and he says, ‘If
it’s your will, Lord, if it’s possible may, may this hour pass.’--‘You know,
this is not going to be easy, and if I don’t have to do this, I don’t want to
do this.’ You see very much
Jesus is a man, he doesn’t want to suffer, I mean, this is heavy, he knows what’s
coming. Obviously it’s the physical
suffering, physical suffering on a cross. You’ve heard the stories, just the tremendous
punishment that would go on, it was so tremendous. And we’ll go into that later, what it means to
be crucified, and all the things that will lead up to that. But even more so that’s what he’s going to
endure because of our sin, because of your sin, because of my sin. All the hideous sin that man has done he’s
going to take that on, and then experience the wrath of God that goes with
that--all the more he knows, beginning to just sense what that means. And there’s just a tremendous emotion that
goes with that. If you question the love
of God towards you, I mean you just have to read the Bible and that begins to
go away. The enemy’s a liar. But if you question the love of God just
consider Jesus right here. And realize
that he continues on, for you, from this point. He says ‘I’m going to do it because I
love you.’ God demonstrates for
you “That while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.” Jesus asked in verse 36, he says “Abba,
Father,” you know in a beautiful way, because of him you and I can say
that same thing, we read in Romans. He
says ‘Abba, Father, all things are possible to you, take this cup away
from me. Take it, take it, nevertheless,
not what I will--but your will Lord, your will Father.’ This cup is such a dreadful cup, filled
with all the sin that we have and then filled with the intensity of the wrath
of God. But Jesus incredibly, in
tremendous power and strength I’ve never seen in another person, he says “not
my will, Father, but yours.” I
was reading in Foxes Book of Martyrs recently again, and there’s
a story where a man is going to be burned at the stake. [I hate gruesome true stories like this, but
it does show the power of God just entering into a person, superhuman
strength.] If you have ever read that
book, if you haven’t, read it, tremendous book about folks that have endured
tremendous things because of their love for Christ. One particular story, a man is going to be
burned at the stake, simply because back in England in the days of Bloody Mary
he’s not going to accept certain doctrine, he believes in Jesus and Jesus only
[for salvation--true to the gospel of Christ found in the book of Romans]. And for that reason he’s been scheduled to be
burned at the stake. This was in the 1600s. And some other folks, other believers are
friends of his, and they want to come to him the night before. He’s in a similar place, in the garden, in
this book, night before, knowing he’s going to be burnt at the stake. Friends come to him and they say “You know,
listen, we’re in fear of this. You know,
we love Jesus, and it’s a good chance we’re going where you are. Can you just show us somewhere, somehow, that
while you’re there in the fire that we can also endure the fire.” So he says, “You know, if it’s possible I’ll
raise my hands in the fire.” I’ve
told this story before. Well the next
day they tie him to this post, put the wood underneath him, they light the
fire, as you can only imagine, the flames came up and began to consume his
body, and he stood there and the flames consumed him to the degree where his
arms began to burn off, the hands were gone, and it took a little while to die in
the fire, as you read Foxes Book of Martyrs, it took a little while for
some of the folks to die. But at the
point before his torso collapses in the flames he reached, lifted up his arms,
he just had stubs, and he stood there. And
just a praise went through the crowd, because crowds would gather, as everyone
understood what that meant. And even in
that moment he said “you can endure this, man, with the power of God.” Now Jesus has the same thing before him, but
even more so, that doesn’t even compare. He’s going to take on my sin, and endure the
wrath of God on top of that. And yet,
yet there in the garden he says “Lord, Father, your will be done, your
will be done”--tremendous, incredible strength. And verse 37, after he says that, we read in Luke
chapter 22, verse 43, that an angel then appears to him from heaven, and it
says specifically, the angel comes and strengthens him. If you and I are people of prayer, man those
angels come and strengthen us. And as
Jesus is praying, Luke says specifically right after that the angel comes and
ministers to him and renews him, gives him strength to carry on. Luke says as he prays even further, he now has
the strength to pray so earnestly that he prays so incredibly that the sweat
becomes like drops of blood. Evidently,
blood began to come out of his pores, he was in such anguish, considering, yet
able to endure that as he prayed and found strength. What a picture of strength. You know, it’s not
so much the gym like I used to think so, that’s fine, but it’s the strength
within, man, that’s power, tremendous power. Jesus found incredible strength to
overcome the deepest of emotions. Jesus
found incredible strength to overcome the greatest of fears. Jesus found incredible strength to overcome
the greatest of temptations. He
wanted to go out. If you and I were
there, we’d be like, “Out of here! I
ain’t staying in this garden thing, I ain’t going to continue on this road, I’m
outa here!” But he found strength to
endure that. And we see that he
accomplishes that, as he communes with the Father through prayer, through
waiting on the Father, as he waits on the Father he’s renewed in strength, and
the wings come out and he just soars, soars so beautiful, soars on the wings of
eagles. The Hebrew writer declares, Hebrews
chapter 5, “Who in the days of his flesh, when he had offered up prayers and
supplications with vehement cries and tears to him who is able to save him from
death and was heard because of his godly fear.” But the writer of Hebrews just says ‘he
cried out vehement cries in the garden and he was heard.’ And then the angel came and just strengthened
him, finding strength in prayer. How are
you going to overcome times of great racing emotions that do come upon us at
times with things that happen in our lives, those emotions come and sometimes
you can lose it because you don’t have the strength. How are you going to do it? How are you going to overcome those times of
great fear that do come into life? How
are you going to overcome those times of great temptation? By crossing the bridge from your weakness to
the power of God, and that bridge is prayer. As you pray you find
strength, you are renewed in strength. Not
only does God answer your prayers, he begins to strengthen your inner man with
power and might.
Not Only Does God Answer Your
Prayers, He Begins To Strengthen Your Inner Man With Power & Might
Verses
37-42, “Then he came and found them sleeping and said to Peter, ‘Simon, are you
sleeping? Could you not watch one hour? Watch and pray lest you enter into temptation.
The spirit is indeed willing but the
flesh is weak.’ Again he went away and
prayed and spoke the same words, and when he returned he found them asleep
again, for their eyes were heavy and they did not know what to answer him. Then he came the third time and said to them, ‘Sleep
on now, and take your rest, it is enough, the hour is come. Behold the Son of man is betrayed into the
hands of sinners. Rise, let us be going.
See my betrayer is at hand.’” Here we see already, these disciples, moments
before, Peter and the guys going ‘Jesus, you say we’re going to stumble. We believe your word is perfect, but in this
particular time you’ve missed it because we will not stumble.’ Peter said ‘I will not go down. You’re telling me I will, I won’t. I can stand, I can do it.’ But you know, it’s just a little time later
and what is Jesus coming over to Peter about, and he’s napping on him, he can’t
even stay awake. He’s expressing how
strong he is, he doesn’t even understand how incredibly weak he is. Now he can’t even stay awake and pray, when
Jesus needs him there, and desires him to be right there and watch and to pray.
Unable to overcome the flesh at the most
critical moment, yet Jesus comes and shares with him the secret again in
finding strength at this hour, he says, “Watch and pray, lest ye fall into
temptation,” watch, pray. If you watch and pray, the opposite of this
would say ‘You will not fall into temptation.’ These guys don’t know what’s coming, they’re
not praying, they’re not going to be prepared and ready for the hour that’s
ready to come upon them. But how
are you? Is there much time of prayer in
your life? Is it a significant part of
your spiritual being and life and experience? Are you a person of prayer? If you’re not a person of prayer, how are you
going to be ready? How are you going to
be prepared when temptation comes? Maybe
you already see that pattern in your life, because the spirit is willing, as a
person I’m willing, I want to be like Jesus. Yes, I just desire to be like him. But man, that flesh thing just comes out all
the time, it gets the upper hand every time. The spirit is willing but the flesh is weak. So he says “Watch and pray” and
you’ll be ready. You’ll find the
strength to stand when the temptation comes. Is prayer a significant part, a significant
concern to you? I hope it is. You know I’m thankful, we began to pray more
as a church a year ago. We prayed
before, we had prayer meetings, and then something stirred in us and we said “We’re
going to pray more. We’re going to get serious
about this prayer thing.” It’s
beautiful to see what happens on one of these Wednesday nights here, and
sometimes in the early mornings on Tuesdays and Thursdays. But you know, I believe we’ve seen the result.
Talking to Joe Coleman in Vermont,
he says, “You know, we recently began to focus all the more on prayer. And we’re having a lot of fun for a change.”
But I think that’s been our
experience. It hasn’t been perfect,
obviously, but more than ever there’s this freedom in this ministry as we pray
corporately and as we pray individually. Jesus says, “Watch and pray, lest you fall
into temptation.” That tells us a
lot. How are you going to endure trial
and temptation? Watching and praying. [To learn more on the subject of prayer, log
onto https://unityinchrist.com/prayer/
bibleway.htm.
This whole section is full of good material on the subject of prayer.]
The Discipline Of Prayer Is A
Necessary Part Of Our Walk With Jesus
Verse
37, Jesus calls Peter, Simon. That’s
interesting, his name’s changed but he goes back to the old one, because he’s
being too much like Simon. Jesus says ‘You’re
going to be Peter, the rock, but you’re not right now, we’ll get there. Right now you’re Simon.’ And that happens, doesn’t it?--the old man,
the old ways. Well, he says “watch
and pray,” he goes away and just begins to pray and speak the same words, “Oh
Lord, Oh Father, if it’s possible take this cup. Not my will but your will.” He prays the same types of things. And returns and what does he find? They are snoozing again. So weak, so feeble, faltering, his best
buddies around him. That’s hard, too.
When you’re having a hard time…It says in verse 40 that they did not even know
what to say, “And when he returned, he found them asleep again, for their
eyes were heavy; and they did not know what to answer him.” That just says they are ashamed. They failed, the spirit is willing, ‘OK
Jesus, we love you, we know something’s going on. We want to sit right here and pray with you.’ And you know, before you know it, they’re
snoring and sleeping again. And he comes
to them and wakes them up, there he is standing before them again, and they don’t
even know what to say. They’re just
ashamed, ‘Ah, we’re so weak.’ They can’t even get through this prayer thing.
You have to learn the discipline of
prayer. It’s a discipline, it’s running
that race. I’m going to learn it, I’m
going to discipline myself. I get up in
the morning and I start to zone out, I used to have that struggle a lot, I
still do. But it used to be a ton. You know I’d be like ‘Why get up if I'm
going to just fall asleep on the couch? I
might as well just stay in bed.’ That was my logic, I’d get up, I’d go on the
couch, get praying and fall asleep. I
was like, ‘Well I’d just as soon sleep on my bed.’ But you know, you begin to discipline
yourself. I think God’s been gracious
with me, he’s brought other guys into my life that are really early morning
people that have helped me, and they’re kind of like a chisel, and I began to
discipline myself more in prayer. And it’s
a blessing as we do that. Verse
41, he says he came to them a third time, and there they are sleeping
again. He says, ‘Are you still
sleeping? It is enough, the hour is
come. The Son of man is being betrayed
into the hands of sinners.’ Oh,
I bet the disciples thought back to this and like ‘Oh man, oh we weren’t
even there with him at this critical hour.’ And they loved him very much. I’m sure they thought back and were just
ashamed. And he says, “Arise and
let us be going. See my betrayer is at
hand.” What does the next hour
hold? You read that, the question comes ‘What
does the next hour for your life hold? What does the next hour hold for this church?’
Only God ultimately knows. But are we going to be ready for that
next hour? Are we going to be prepared? The way we’re ready, Jesus says, is to ‘Watch
and pray’ that you’re prepared, you’re ready, you’re not going to enter
into temptation.
It Is So Hard To Endure Betrayal
Verses
43-50, “And immediately, while he was still speaking Judas, one of the twelve,
with a multitude with swords and clubs came from the chief priests and scribes
and elders. Now his betrayer had given
them a signal, saying, ‘Whomever I kiss, he is the one. Seize him and lead him away safely.’ As soon as he had come immediately he went up
to him and said to him ‘Rabbi, Rabbi,’ and kissed him. And they laid their hands on him and took him.
And one of those who stood by drew a
sword and struck the servant of the high priest and cut off his ear. And Jesus answered and said to them ‘Have you
come out as against a robber with swords and clubs to take me? I was daily with you in the temple teaching,
and you did not seize me. But the
Scripture must be fulfilled.’ Then they
forsook him and fled.”
It is
so hard to endure betrayal. That’s got
to be one of the hardest things in life, especially to someone close to you,
Judas, with Jesus for three and a half years. It’s hard to endure. It’s especially hard to
endure in a godly manner. Usually, I
would say in my life, or our lives, when betrayal times come, we don’t do very
well. You know, the boxing gloves come
out. You know what Jesus says here to
Judas, as you read in the other gospels? He says, “friend,” he calls him “friend,”
even at this moment, knowing what he’s come to do. Judas comes up to him and kisses him. The Greek says that word is a passionate kiss,
it’s like you kissing someone you love. That’s
how Judas, that’s the Judas--that’s that poisonous kiss that comes up in a
tender kiss, and kisses him and betrays him. Yet Jesus, knowing all that, understanding all
that, says “friend” to him, says “friend, what have you
come here for?” ‘What is
your purpose?’ And then he says “Are
you betraying the Son of man with a kiss?” ‘Is that what you’re doing?’ Incredible strength, incredible strength,
incredible power. It takes the strength
of Jesus in my life, I cannot do what is written here unless I do it with him,
when these types of days come. You see
there Judas comes with a multitude, swords and clubs, come from the chief
priests and scribes, and he betrays him with this Judas kiss. Then they take Jesus, verse 46, and they take
him away, and as they’re doing that, here’s Peter--we don’t read it here, but
in another gospel--a guy who hasn’t been in prayer, a guy who’s not ready for
this hour, he does exactly what you do when you’re not ready--he pulls his
sword out and he lops off a guys’ ear. And
that’s what you do when you’re not ready for the hour, your reach for the
sword, you fight back. You do things
that you later regret. By God’s grace,
Jesus picks up the ear and goes to this servant and puts the ear back on [by a
miracle, probably the last physical miracle he performs]. I’m thankful for God’s grace in my life,
because I’ve done that, not being ready, I pull out the sword and whack, whack,
whack, I'm like ‘What did I do to that person? I wasn’t ready for that, that was a hard thing
to happen at that moment and I wasn't ready.’ ‘I didn’t do it in the manner God desired me
to do it, to handle that, and I didn’t do it in the strength of God.’ But I’m thankful for his grace, and you can be
thankful too if there’s some ears lying around you. Just know that God is gracious. But learn the secret to strength, learn, learn
from that, that mistake. I was in
college, my first semester, I was doing this class, I thought I was doing well.
It was physics. I thought I was doing pretty well. Most of my friends dropped out, it was a
tougher class. We just were getting used
to this college thing. But I thought I
was doing pretty well, my grades weren’t too bad. But when I went to the door of my professor at
the end of the class to see my grade, I’m glad it was my social security number
and not my name, I saw a nice “F” on the door. I said “F?” “How’d I get an F? I thought I was doing well.” I did well in everything else. But I went to a little teachers aid, it wasn’t
the professor, but somebody who worked for him and I said “I just want to
know, why did I fail that class?” She said, “You did OK on your homework, you
did OK on your midterm,” She says, “Oh,
you got a 2 on the final.” I said, “I
got a 2 out of 100?” It was a test
that I thought I did well on, but I actually got a 2. You know, figure that out. I was pretty humbled. I got a 2? I’m glad I didn’t have a big group with me, it
was just me and this lady. I got a 2, I’m
glad it was my social security number on the door and not my name. But I got a 2 and I failed the class. That was a real bummer, that was a real
humbling experience, just getting started in college, but I had to take that
class over, and I aced it the next time. And physics, in the degree coarse I was in,
was a basic course. And a lot of courses
stacked on top of that. And I did well
in those courses, because I had a good basis, I had a second time at it, and I
really learned it the second time around. And you through seasons, you mess up in the
Christian experience--I’m not doing this right--but you can learn. You can learn through that. And it can become a great strength for you
later. I think I learn mainly through my
mistakes, through those times of stumbling, that’s when I learn the most, for
some reason. I wish I’d do it the other
way, but that’s how I learn. But you get
stronger in that area after you’ve really goofed up. Verse 50, “Then they all forsook him and
fled.” The disciples aren’t ready
for the hour and they leave him, forsake him. They were so confident, but they didn’t even
understand their weakness, and they forsook him because they weren’t ready. Verses 51-52, “Now a certain young man
followed him having a linen cloth thrown around his naked body. And the young men laid hold of him, and he
left the linen cloth and fled from them naked.” This would be like my worst nightmare. I hope this guy didn’t live too far from here,
because he’s only got his birthday suit on, and he’s got to get home somehow. I can only imagine when you think that
through, what is this guy going to do? You
know, thankfully it’s night time, you can do the Adam and Eve thing and get
some leaves, you know, and make a little thing and run I guess. But this young man is only referred to here in
Mark, is believed by many commentators that it is Mark. That’s why Mark is putting his own little note
in here, of when he ran through the streets with no clothes, at this moment. But he was following Jesus. He was an eye-witness evidently. Younger guy, grew up in a godly family, and he
throws this point in, that he was there, around Jesus, and he had to bolt, and
all he got away with was his body, he didn’t have any clothing. Obviously, that is presumed. We don’t know for sure, but you know, only
Mark mentions this guy, and it’s an odd little thing to put in there. And it’s
believed by many, if you read a lot of commentators, that this is Mark. [The Bible’s first recorded streaker!]
Illegal Puppet Trial Of Jesus By
The Sanhedrin
Verses 53-65, “And they led Jesus away to the high priest and the elders and
the scribes. But Peter followed him at a
distance, right into the courtyard of the high priest. And he sat with his servants and warmed
himself at the fire. Now the chief
priests and all the counsel sought testimony against Jesus to put him to death,
but found none. For many bore false
witness against him, but their testimonies did not agree. Then some rose up and bore false witness
against him saying, ‘We heard him say, I will destroy this temple made with
hands, and within three days I will build another made without hands.’ But not even then did their testimony agree. And the high priest stood up in the midst and
asked Jesus saying, ‘Do you answer nothing? What is it these men testify against you?’ But he kept silent and answered nothing. Again the high priest asked him saying, ‘Are
you the Christ, the Son of the Blessed?’ And Jesus said ‘I am. And you will see the Son of man sitting at the
right hand of power, and coming with the clouds of heaven.’ Then the high priest tore his clothes and
said, ‘What further need do we have of witnesses? You have heard this blasphemy. What do you think?’ And they all condemned him to be deserving of
death. And some began to spit on him,
and to blindfold him and to beat him, and to say to him, ‘Prophesy!’ And the officers struck him with the palms of
their hands.” Wow, just strength,
incredible strength. Now they’ve taken
him, in the hands of the enemy. These
religious folks, that think they’re so religious, sometimes the hardest
persecution comes right in there at the hand of the religious. And they take him, Peter does follow. Peter has some courage left. He is a strong man. And he follows into the courtyard and sits
there with the servants and warms himself. And you read in verse 55 that the priests and
the counsel, they seek testimony to put him to death, that’s the whole purpose.
False witnesses stand up, they do not
agree. Then some others stand up finally
towards the end of this witnessing, they said they heard him say, ‘I will
destroy this temple made with hands and within three days I will build another
made without hands.’ If you
remember the Scripture, they’ve actually twisted his words. That’s not what he said. He didn’t say ‘I
will destroy the temple.’ He said, “Destroy
this temple and I will rebuild it in three days,” and they’re trying to say
this guy is going to try to destroy the temple. They’ve twisted his words, maybe you’ve had
that happen, and these types of things, when they start going around, suddenly
your statements come back to you and you’re like “I did not say that.” You’re missing a few key words there that make
it into a very different statement than what I actually did say. But Jesus kept silent, and he answered
nothing. Just the strength to be
there and be accused, to be there and be falsely accused, there’s no one there
to stand in his defense. This is an
illegal trial. There should be witnesses
on his end, there isn’t. It’s at
night and that’s also illegal. A lot of
things they do. This is completely a
set-up. And they have obviously very evil intent in doing it. But all this goes
on and Jesus just sits there quietly. And
I wish I could do that. I believe it’s
glorious when you can do that. You have
folks that are just ripping you to shreds, that you can stand there in the
power of God and just be quiet, and come back in love, turn the other cheek. I don’t do very well at it, I guess I don’t
pray enough, and I’m not watching enough. When people take a poke at me I usually poke
pretty well back. But Jesus just sits
there. That is such tremendous strength.
James says, “No man can tame the
tongue. It’s an unruly evil full of
deadly poison” (James 3:8). That
takes power, to control that tongue. It’s
not the guy lifting all the weights, it’s the guy that can hold that little
rudder and control that little rudder (read all of James 3 to see what this
pastor's talking about). And Jesus just
sits there, and does not say anything, and it’s tremendous supernatural power
to do that. I wish all the more for that
strength in my life. Then he’s asked a
question, and he gives a very straight answer. He’s asked ‘Are you the Christ, the Son
of the Blessed?’ He’s not trying
to hide anything, he’s just going to say the truth, “I am, and you will see
the Son of man at the right hand of power and coming in the clouds of heaven.”
He just says, ‘This is the truth.’
He’s not going to deny it. ‘I am the Messiah and I'm coming back
and you're going to know it.’ Right there in the midst of all of his
enemies, all these people, he’s alone yet so strong, such incredible strength. Well the high priest tears his clothes and he
says ‘What else do you need to hear, man?’ Of course that’s what they’re looking for. So they condemn him to death. Then folks begin to spit on him. Man that is degrading to have someone spit in
your face. They then begin to blindfold
him and they begin to hit him and say ‘prophesy,’ and they
evidently had a misunderstanding. There
is a rabbinical teaching at that time that said the Messiah would be able to
determine things even by his ability of sense, he would be able to smell and
determine truth without even seeing [based on Isaiah 11:3-4]. They misunderstood a prophecy in the Old Testament,
and evidently maybe that’s what they’re trying to show, ‘You’re not the
Messiah,’ ‘Can you smell who this is?’
Evidently is what they’re doing, and
they just strike him. But so wonderfully
he stands strong.
Peter’s Denial Of Christ
Verses
66-72, “Now as Peter was below in the courtyard one of the servant girls of the
high priest came. And when she saw Peter
warming himself she looked at him and said, ‘You also were with Jesus of
Nazareth.’ But he denied it, saying, ‘I
neither know nor understand what you are saying.’ And he
went out on the porch and a rooster crowed. And the servant girl saw him again and began
to say to them that stood by, ‘This is one of them.’ But he denied it again. And a little later those who stood by said to
Peter again, ‘Surely, you are one of them, for you’re a Galilean, and your
speech shows it.’ Then he began to curse
and swear, ‘I do not know this man of whom you speak!’ A second time the rooster crowed, and Peter
called to mind the word that Jesus had said to him, ‘Before the rooster crows
twice, you’ll deny me three times.’ And
when he thought about it he wept.” Man you can relate to
Peter right there. You know, he actually
has eye contact with Jesus at that moment, and is reminded especially with that
of the words that Jesus said, that Jesus said, ‘Peter, you’re not
understanding what strength is, you’re going to stumble on account of me.’
And it’s exactly what Jesus says is what
Peter does. He’s in the courtyard, he’s
close, he got some courage there. But
then the test really comes, the servant girl says, ‘You know, you were
with Jesus. I recognize you. You lopped off that guy’s ear. I mean, I can tell who you are.’ Peter says, ‘I don’t even know what you’re
talking about.’ Completely
denies it. Then a rooster crows. He should have begun to clue in right there. A servant girl comes to him again and said, ‘This
is one of them. This is one of them.’
He denies it again. And then all of the folks that are there,
sitting, said, ‘You know, you’ve got the accent of a Galilean. You talk like a fisherman. Certainly you're one of em.’ And he just begins to bring down curses, curse
upon himself. You know, ‘Cursed be
me if I am lying.’ He just starts to bring down curses, defending
himself, but completely lying. And then
the rooster crows a second time, and Peter is reminded of what Jesus said, “Before
the rooster crows twice you’re going to deny me three times.” And man is he ashamed, and he just begins to
weep, just broken right there, beginning to clue in on how very weak he is,
that he’s not very strong. And he’s
ashamed. I can relate to that, been
there many times. This whole ‘spirit
is willing, but the flesh is weak.’ But the more I learn, the more that I begin to
clue in that I am very weak. There I
begin to say, ‘I am too weak, I need Jesus to help me.’ And then I realize that, as I turn to Jesus in
prayer, then I begin to experience incredible strength. D.L. Moody’s most
favorite Bible verse was Isaiah chapter 50, verse 7, really beautiful
verse. This is what it reads, “For
the Lord God will help me, therefore I will not be disgraced. Therefore I set my face like flint, and I know
I will not be ashamed.” He had that
verse before him a lot. This is taken
from another man’s journal about Dwight Moody, about this verse Dwight Moody
had before him all the time. He says
that Moody was reminding himself all the time that God would help him, and in
that he would not be disgraced. And in
that he could set his face like flint in confidence, regardless of what
happened. And in that, he would know
that he wouldn’t be ashamed, because God was his strength. Man, I soar like wings of eagles, I don’t find
myself in those situations where I look back and go “What have I done? What have I done? I can’t believe I did that.” I end up ashamed when I do it on my own, in my
own confidence. But I stand strong, face
like flint, in power when I rest in God. And I get there, 1) learning that I’m
weak, 2) I get there understanding that he is strong, 3) as I begin to
pray--and I watch and pray, and as a result I don't fall into temptation.”
A good quote from Emanna:
Being
Examined as the Passover Lamb
John 19:6 “When therefore the chief priests
and the attendants saw Him, they cried out, saying, Crucify! Crucify! Pilate said to them, You take Him and crucify
Him, for I do not find fault in Him.”
Exodus 12:5, “Your lamb shall be without
blemish, a male of the first year... (6) ...and the whole assembly of the
congregation of Israel shall kill it in the evening.”
~~~~~~~~~~~Words
of Ministry ~~~~~~~~~
“The Lord was examined in His dignity by
mankind, being examined as the Passover lamb was examined. The Lord Jesus was crucified on the Passover
as the Passover lamb. According to the
type, before the Passover lamb was killed, it had to be examined to determine
whether or not it had any blemish. The
examination of Christ by mankind was the fulfillment of this type. After Pilate examined Him, he declared, “I
find no fault whatever in him.” There
was no blemish in this Passover lamb; He was fully qualified to be the lamb for
God’s people. After the Lord Jesus was
examined, He, the perfect One, was sentenced in man’s injustice. This unjust sentence exposed the blindness of
religion and the darkness of politics. Many
years ago I read an article describing how the Jews slew the lamb during the
Passover. The article said that the Jews
took two wooden bars and formed a cross. They put the lamb on the cross, tying two of
the lamb’s legs to the foot of the cross and fastening the outstretched legs to
the crossbar. Then they slew the lamb so
that all its blood was shed. Thus, the
killing of the Passover lamb was a portrait of the crucifixion of Christ...Not
long before the crucifixion of Christ, the Roman government adopted crucifixion
as the method of executing criminals. This
was decided under God’s sovereignty that the prophecies regarding Christ’s
crucifixion [as the Passover lamb] might be fulfilled.” ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Words of Ministry taken from Witness Lee, Life-study of John(Anaheim, CA:
Living Stream Ministry, 1985), pp. 509-512
(Repeat 3/11/97)
Please visit us at www.emanna.com
Comments to: comment@emanna.com.
related links:
What are the essentials of prayer? see https://unityinchrist.com/prayer/bibleway.htm
For a complete study of the last six
days of Jesus before and through his crucifixion, see https://unityinchrist.com/lamb/lastsix.htm
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