Today's Scripture Reading (December 31, 2020): John 16
In his classic work, “Les Misérables,” Victor Hugo writes
that “those who do not weep, do not
see.” It sometimes amazes me the lengths that some of us are willing to undertake
to avoid our tears. I know of people who say that they avoid relationships to
avoid the grief that happens when those relationships disappear. You won’t cry at
the deaths of those important to you if you don’t allow anyone to become
important. There are those walking among us who keep their eyes firmly closed
so that they cannot be disappointed by anything currently taking place in our world.
If we deny reality entrance into our lives, there will be no reason to weep.
Unfortunately, there will also be no reason for joy. In fact, the only reason
why we weep is that something, or somebody, which has caused us delight has
been removed from our presence. If they didn’t make a difference in our lives,
there would have been no reason for weeping.
Of course, we also value different
things. An election might be an excellent example of that. A result that makes
some happy will cause others to weep. And that is just the reality of this
world.
Jesus taught his disciples that a moment
was coming when they would suffer deep grief even as the larger world rejoiced.
It wasn’t something as trivial as an election result that would cause the
coming sorrow; it would be his death. While the larger world might have believed
that they had stopped a rebel from destroying the very fabric of society, Jesus’s
followers were going to suffer the loss of the relationship that they had with
their rabbi, the embarrassment of being connected with the crucifixion of someone
the world had declared to be a criminal, their defeat at the hands of their
opposition, and the loss of all hope.
But the loss was only a momentary
setback. In a matter of days, Jesus would overturn the sorrow as he rose from
the dead. What the world had tried to accomplish would be translated by God
into a brand-new key. And the disciples would go from mourning the loss of someone
who had made a difference in their lives to rejoicing that he is still on the
throne.
It has been a tough year. There is
much that we have lost in the past few months. But maybe there is no better time
to be reminded that Jesus is still on the throne. He continues to be the God
who sees us and everything through which we have suffered. And what the future
holds is firmly in his hands.
Tomorrow's Scripture Reading: John 17
Personal Note: Happy Birthday to my son-in-law, Greg. I hope you have a great day!