In June, I visited the Eye Doctor— I needed cataract surgery. As we discussed the experience, and any discomfort or pain I might expect, he suggested that however mild or severe it might be, we all have to go through it to get our vision restored. As he spoke, the thought crossed my mind, “It would be great if I could get someone else to endure all this.”
What a parallel that is to the darkening of our minds and souls that daily life often brings us. A surgeon can’t operate on his own eyes any more than we can operate on our own souls— we need someone else’s help. Help from our own parents or friends will never do. We need someone qualified— we need an expert.
My surgeon has fixed over 30,000 eyes, so he is spectacularly qualified. I didn’t know him well but, on his reputation, I trusted him with my eyesight—both eyes at once! But the expert I’m really talking about is Jesus Christ. Jesus is fully qualified to dispel any darkness: He is God and made us and therefore all our shortfalls are ultimately against Him; and He is Man, and has taken on Himself all the punishment we deserved.
I’ve had my surgery now and I’m at the stage of just putting drops in both eyes six times per day. My bedroom light is brighter; my bathroom light is brighter, our kitchen is brighter, and so are all the trees, the grass, the skies, and the lake. Before the surgery I once saw two Canada Geese strut across a beach in perfect unison, about six inches apart—in fact, it was my confused double vision of only one goose! Last month I saw a child kicking a pair of soccer balls down the field, in perfect symmetry—no it was only one ball!
What a physical relief to see brightly and clearly again. But I come back to my spiritual application. In my more introspective moments, I know I haven’t done right by everyone I’ve met—maybe not even anyone I’ve met. That creates a shadow between me and God; it would be great to be in the light again.
Here is just the help we need:— Jesus Christ tells us: “I have come into the world as a light, so that no one who believes in me should stay in darkness.” Jesus also promised: “If we confess our sins, He [Jesus] is faithful and just and will purify us forever.” Jesus provides our souls with light, clarity, and peace forever.
Saturday, July 8, 2023
Vision Surgery
Sunday, December 4, 2022
Jesus is The Greatest Hope of Israel!
And that Jew replied, “I AM HE.” [John 4:25, 26]
That Samaritan was a five-times-divorced woman, and that Jew was Jesus. When we remember that the Samaritans use only the five books of Moses as their Bible (the Samaritan Pentateuch), it’s amazing that she knew to expect a Messiah.
So to backtrack just a little, what does the word “messiah” really mean? The Oxford Dictionary says it is, “the promised deliverer of the Jewish nation prophesied in the Hebrew Bible“; and usage in the Bible relates to an “anointed, usually a consecrated person (as a king, priest, or saint).” All these words, Hebrew, Greek, and English (Messiah, Christ, and Anointed One) have somewhere in their etymology, the idea of “smeared with oil”.
Usually, by going back to the first mention of a subject in the Bible, we can get some measure of its significance. In this case, we come to Genesis 28:18 for “oil”. Jacob poured oil on a stone pillar as a marker for his unique and wonderful sight of the stairway into heaven.
The next thing we’re looking for is some form of the word “anoint”; we find it in Exodus 28:41, and 29:7. The anointing oil is to be poured on Aaron’s head, to consecrate him and set him apart from every other Israelite.
Others anointed in the Bible include Aaron’s sons (priests); Saul, David, and Solomon (kings); psalmists (Psalm 23:5); the coming true Ruler (Dan. 9:25, 26); and above all, Jesus (John 12:3, Luke 4:18, Acts 10:38, and Mark 16:1).
But what did that woman of Sychar know? Probably not much. From those five books of Moses, and particularly from Genesis, she knew enough:
Jesus is the Only Hope of Israel!
Tuesday, July 19, 2022
Who is The Prophet?
Is Elijah coming back?
Tuesday, April 5, 2022
David--- a man after God's own heart???
Tuesday, January 25, 2022
"Only One is Good"
When I was a student at Lakehead University, a minister from a liberal denomination came to give several lectures on Christianity. As I remember it, he was very interesting, but the only item that stuck was his comment on Matthew 19:16-22 (See also Mark 10:17-22; Luke 18:18-23). He suggested that Jesus was denying He was God. “Why do you call me good? There is none good but one, that is God.”
For someone who believes Jesus is God,
that really grated. I investigated, and found that what Jesus meant the young
man to understand was, “Yes, I am good, because yes, I am God.”
In Matthew’s version of the incident, the young
man asks Jesus what he needs for eternal life. Jesus quotes #5, 6, 7, 8, and 9
of the ten commandments, as well as “love your neighbour as yourself.” He
leaves out the command against coveting (#10) because if the man sold
everything and gave it all away, that would be taken care of. He also leaves
out the commands about worshipping God (#1, 2, 3, and 4), These would all be
covered if he did all the rest and followed Jesus.
Taking this Scripture as a whole and looking at
the way the ten commandments are woven into the story, there is no doubt that
Jesus is subtly assuring us that He is God. It is also a warning about how hard
it can be to let go of some things, and prefer the love of Jesus. He assures
His followers that they will get a hundred times more, plus eternal life, by
following Him.
|
Number |
Commandment |
Matthew 19 |
Mark 10 |
Luke 18 |
|
1 |
- |
- |
- |
|
|
2 |
- |
- |
- |
|
|
3 |
- |
- |
- |
|
|
4 |
- |
- |
- |
|
|
5 |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
|
|
6 |
No murder |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
|
7 |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
|
|
8 |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
|
|
9 |
✔ |
✔ |
✔ |
|
|
10 |
- |
- |
- |
|
|
Extra |
|
“Love neighbour” |
- |
"Preserved"
| CN Tower at midnight |
On the evening of December 31, 1999, Joy and I
drove to the outskirts of Toronto and caught the subway to downtown. From the
station, we walked to the Toronto Star parking lot on Lakeshore Boulevard. After
about 10 pm, in twos and threes, and fives and sixes, crowds started to flood
into the lot. By 11:30, there must have been two thousand people packed in,
shoulder-to-shoulder, with hardly room to breathe.
At the stroke of Y2K midnight, a wave of
fireworks burst from the CN Tower above us, and lit up the sky, as the new year
and new millennium began. What momentous events we looked forward to, even as
more fireworks flashed above the harbour from a nearby barge out on Lake
Ontario. What excitement! What applause! How we cheered!
But then the show was over. No follow-up. What
do 2000 people do now? They make for the exit. What if that exit is barely two
lanes wide? The crush of people became almost unbearable―shoulder-to-shoulder we
walked, and front-to-back with strangers pressing against us on all sides. I
pulled my wife tight up against me and we balanced as best we could in an
uncontrollable river of bodies. One stumble, one fall would mean death.
We got through the exit, the river became a
delta, the current eased, and we caught our breath back near our subway stop. A late-night
ride, a half hour drive, and we were home, safe in bed by two in the morning. God
is good. That’s His character. He was especially good to us that night and we
are deeply grateful. How close were we to disaster? Too close! I read of
identical tragedies where deaths occurred at sports events or in burning hotels
or restaurants. I now know what it means. I now avoid anywhere I might meet huge
uncontrolled crowds.
A similar event also occurred in the Bible, but
with much more serious consequences. Read 2 Kings 7:1-2, 16-20. Back in the
days of Elisha, the Arameans were besieging Samaria and they had the city
completely sealed up; people were starving. Elisha prophesied a huge supply of barley
and fine flour for the next day—the king’s advisor mocked and basically said,
even God couldn’t do it! When the siege was lifted and the news of the huge food
supply spread through the city, the crush of people trying to get out destroyed
him. He was trampled to death in the city gate.
For some reason, I keep coming back to Pascal’s
wager. Why was the advisor so adamant against the prophecy? If we look at
probabilities, he might have said the apparent probability of plentiful food
was 1% and no food was 99%. But, like modern-day atheists, he should still have
covered that low probability. Why leave that 1% gap? Investigate! Be really
sure! God can step in and override all probabilities! This advisor made a gigantic
mistake and lost his life.
