It
has been a long time since I have experienced the nervousness
associated with starting a new job. Considering the economic climate,
this is a blessing. Even though I haven’t started with a new ministry in
twenty years, I can quickly bring to mind the combination of
anticipation, nerves and general sense of
“I-don’t-know-where-the-bathrooms-are” that a first day provokes in my
psyche.
Recently, I began to wonder what Jesus’ first days in public ministry must have been like.
Of course, in one sense, He has always been “on the job” since He
existed before time and is the Creator of all we see. However, at one
point in time – on one particular day in history – He began His public
ministry.
I wonder what it felt like.
I could be wrong - it has happened once or twice before – but it seems
to me that Jesus’ first day of discipleship is found in John 1:19 – 28.
In the same chapter in verses 29, 35, and 43 we see the phrase, “the
next day.” So, it appears that we actually have the first of four days
of Jesus’ ministry as “discipler-in-chief.” If this is true, it is probably worth our time to observe how Jesus began His disciple making movement.
What jumps out at me is that Jesus did what he had already been doing for about 30 years – He lived among the people.
John says, “There is one who stands among you.” One version phrases it,
“There is one who is present here.” Another reads, “There is one among
us.”
Jesus, the Creator, Son of God from all time, lived among a sinful,
normal people in a dusty corner of the Roman Empire. How did He do that?
Earlier on in this first chapter, John says that Jesus “lived among us… full of grace and truth.”
(v.14) Jesus always told the truth even when it got Him in trouble –
and it often did. Still, truth-telling was not an option for Jesus. He
also spoke with grace. He always addressed the people with sincere love.
If we are going to make disciples like Jesus did we need to live
incarnationally among the people. This means that we must do the
impossible (at least for us)… actually speak the truth in love while
bumping shoulders with the masses. In Ephesians 4:25 we are told, “So
then, get rid of lies. Speak the truth to each other...” (GW) In
Colossians 4:6 we read , “Let your speech always be gracious…” (ESV)
Always… even when the masses are not nice to us when we tell the truth.
Always… even when we are tempted to shave a bit off the message so that
it seems more acceptable to our neighbor. Always.
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