The following is from Doug Hood's
Nurture Faith: Five Minute Meditations to Strengthen Your Walk with Christ.
“Rather, you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you,
and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria,
and to the end of the earth.”
Acts 1:8 (Common
English Bible)
When the king in Alice in Wonderland was asked where to
begin, he said gravely, “Begin at the beginning… and go on till you come to the
end: then stop.” Begin at the beginning. Naturally, that guidance seems
reasonable. That is, until you have to actually open your mouth, and speak.
With thoughts racing from one place to another, it quickly becomes apparent
that there are many fine places to begin. Jesus tells his disciples, here in
Acts, “you will be my witnesses.” Where do the disciples begin? Where are we to
begin? Sharing our faith in Jesus seems reasonable until we actually confront
that moment – that moment when we are asked, “Who is Jesus?”
That moment came to me one Easter
morning. I was enjoying breakfast in a Doylestown, PA diner, looking over the
message I would preach in just a few hours. Mary, the waitress assigned to the
table where I was seated, approached with coffee and said, “I guess this is
your big day, pastor!” “I guess so,” I remarked. Then Mary asked, “What is
Easter all about anyway?” Initially, I dismissed her question, not thinking she
was serious. But I was mistaken; Mary was very serious. It was then I took the
time to really notice her, to look into her eyes and really see her. I will not
forget those eyes - eyes that betrayed her silence; silence of considerable
pain. “Where do I begin?” I thought. I began with her pain. “Easter means that
you can stop beating yourself up. Whatever guilt you may have now, whatever mistakes
you have made in life, Easter means that you are to stop immediately from
beating yourself up. God has removed it all.”
“But there is more,” I said to
Mary. “Easter is an invitation to pay attention to Jesus.” I shared with Mary
that as she paid attention to Jesus, by reading of him in the Bible, she will
discover that she will want to be more than she is now. “Pay attention long
enough to Jesus and you will experience a compulsion to be something more; you
will begin to live differently.” Mary
needed to hear that Jesus doesn’t leave a life unchanged. Any significant time
spent with Jesus always results in a desire to be made new. “Your whole world
will appear different. You will want to be different.”
“Finally, Mary, begin to follow
Jesus as you learn about him.” I shared with her that what that means is to “do
what he asks in his teaching.” Imagine Jesus as a mentor in life and do
everything that is asked of you. Something inexplicable happens when someone
commits to doing all that Jesus’ asks: they receive an uncommon power to do so.
People who obey all that they understand of Jesus’ teachings receive a power
from outside of themselves; a power that actually makes them something so much
more than what they were. Mary began to cry and asked how to begin. That is
when I knew I had come to the end. And there, in a diner in Doylestown, PA,
Mary gave her life to Jesus.
Joy,
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