Reflection on Matthew 27: 57-66

Scripture

“So we request that you seal the tomb until the third day. This will prevent his disciples from coming and stealing his body and then telling everyone he was raised from the dead! If that happens, we’ll be worse off than we were at first. “

Observation

Joseph of Arimathea, a follower of Jesus, asks Pilate for Jesus’ body. He takes it to his own new tomb and seal the entrance with a great stone.

The next day, the Sabbath, some of the leading priests and Pharisees go to Pilate. They are worried that the disciples will fake a resurrection, so they asked Pilate to seal the tomb. They fear that reports of Jesus being raised from the dead would undermine their positions.

Pilate orders some guards to seal the tomb and guard it.

Application

The Jewish leaders were terrified at the possibility that Jesus could be raised from the dead. They knew that He had often said that He would die, but on the third day He would rise again.

These leaders did not believe that Jesus would really come back to life, but they did believe that the disciples could steal the body and declare that he was risen.

It is tragic to be so locked into fear and unbelief that you have to take precautions to prevent God from intruding on your fear.

In reality, as these people would find out, you can’t keep God out of the world. If the Lord has determined to do something, no person can prevent it, no matter how powerful they seem.

God the Father was determined to set the human race free from sin. No man could have prevented Jesus’ death on the cross on the cross, and no man could prevent could prevent Jesus’ resurrection on the third day.

So we rejoice that Jesus that Jesus has purchased our eternal salvation.

Prayer

Lord God, Heavenly Father, I praise you for your gift of eternal salvation bought for me at the cross. Amen

Babylon Bee: Feeling Bad About Yourself?

From the Babylon Bee:

Feeling Bad About Yourself? Check Out These 10 People From The Bible Who Did Way Stupider Stuff Than You
SPONSORED·Sep 6, 2023 · BabylonBee.com
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Brought to you by the Hope Together Conference:

 

 

 

Feeling a little down? Think you’ve really screwed the pooch this time? Come with the Babylon Bee as we crack open the Scriptures and check out some Bible heroes who have done way, way stupider stuff than you!

  1. Adam: You may be feeling a little blue today, but did sin and death enter the world through you? See, it’s not so bad.
  2. Samson: His girlfriend betrayed him to be tortured by enemies – TWICE – and the third time, he STILL FELL FOR IT! Come on.
  3. Jonah: This guy legit tried to run away from the Creator of the universe on a boat. Way dumber than you!
  4. Abraham: You may have messed up today, but did you lie about your wife being your sister? TWICE?
  5. Balaam: This prophet of God beat the heck out of his own donkey, who was only trying to save Balaam from getting killed by an angel with a flaming sword. Ouch.
  6. Aaron: First he helps lead the miraculous Exodus, then he leads millions of people into idolatrous demon worship. That’s pretty bad!
  7. David: He failed to install a Covenant Eyes filter on his rooftop, leading to adultery, murder and ultimately his kingdom’s destruction. Puts your mistakes in perspective.
  8. Paul: Before encountering Jesus, he literally went from town-to-town murdering Christians. Probably worse than what you did today.
  9. Cain: This guy thought offering someone vegetables was a good idea. VEGETABLES!
  10. Peter: The rock upon which Christ would build the church once rebuked Jesus Christ over His plan to die for our sins. So, yeah, pretty stupid in hindsight!

Yikes! Feel better now? Sure you do!

 

Reflection on Matthew 22: 45-56


Scripture
Then Jesus shouted out again, and he released his spirit.

Observation
Jesus is on the cross. At noon, darkness covers the land for three hours. Jesus calls out, “My God, why have you abandoned me?”

Jesus shouts again and releases His Spirit. At that moment, the curtain in the temple is torn from top to bottom, there is an earthquake, and many godly people are raised from the dead.

The centurion overseeing the crucifixions declares, “This man is truly the Son of God.”

Application
Jesus should never be seen as a victim of the crucifixion at the hands of human beings. He willingly went to the cross out of love for all humanity.

Jesus did not die on the cross due to the horrendous physical injuries he experienced. No, he “released his spirit.”

While many observers taunted Jesus with the demand to save himself by coming down from the cross, there was a very different goal in view. Jesus could have easily released himself from the cross. He could have summoned angels to come and minister to Him.

It was Jesus’ voluntary submission to death, despite being the Immortal son of God, that bought our salvation .

Jesus died to give us life.

That is the simple exchange of the Cross .

His death is my life.

His suffering is my atonement.

His humiliation is my vindication.

Prayer
Lord, words are not enough to express my love to you, nor to respond to your love to me. Thank you. Amen.

Casey Chalk: Texting With AI Jesus

From firstthings.com

 

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Want to talk to the Son of God? There’s an app for that. Text With Jesus, a Los Angeles–based product that launched in July, replicates an instant messaging platform and features biblical figures impersonated by the artificial intelligence program ChatGPT.

Among the characters available on the app are the Holy Family, the apostles, various prophets, Ruth, Job, and Abraham’s nephew Lot. Mary Magdalene is also available, but only to premium subscribers for $2.99 a month. You can even chat with Satan, who signs his texts with a “smiling face with horns” emoji.

Perhaps such an app provokes fears of blasphemy. Not to worry: Stéphane Peter, the app’s developer and the company’s CEO, ensured that character responses always include a Bible verse. “Our AI always generates responses that are in line with the teachings of the Bible,” explains the website. He also invited unnamed “church leaders” to try the beta version of the app. Though some pastors had reservations at the beginning, the app’s final version received “pretty good feedback.” 

Text With Jesus’s characters typically avoid any stance that might be perceived as offensive, instead maintaining a line of inclusivity and tolerance. If asked about gay marriage, for instance, the app will respond that it is “up to each individual to seek guidance from their own faith tradition and personal convictions,” and that users should “prioritize love and respect for all people regardless of their sexual orientation or gender identity” (followed by a rainbow and red heart emoji). If queried about feminism, app Jesus will explain the importance of “empowering women and breaking societal barriers that limited their opportunities.”

So far, so “healthy.” The app aligns with our clinical culture, which emphasizes personal affirmation and physical and mental wellness. Text With Jesus offers a moral, therapeutic god for a moral, therapeutic age, as sociologist Christian Smith calls it in his 2005 book Soul Searching. It replaces the arcane “second person of the Trinity” with Jesus the therapist and social worker. 

This Jesus is not here to condemn (obviating less “warm and fuzzy” Gospel episodes such as the improperly dressed wedding guest of Matthew 22:1–14, or Jesus’s statements about the “Sign of Jonah” in Luke 11:29–32). He is here to affirm us and our behaviors and opinions. He certainly wouldn’t want you to feel bad about yourself and repent (unless you are repenting of “bigoted,” “patriarchal,” or “fascist” opinions on race, sex, or gender). 

Text With Jesus represents the age-old human vice of pride. Through our creativity and brilliance, we seek to ascend to God’s level, to be like him, and even to dictate terms to the divine. Or rather, the app is a diabolical inversion of this: Instead of being transformed into God’s image, we aim to make him into our own. Is seeking to communicate with and control God through a handheld device really all that different from the ancient metalworkers who fashioned little totems to whom they could offer supplication for their own health and prosperity?

The app’s insistence that its content is “Bible-based” is curious, given that the biblical characters sidestep Scripture’s more controversial and provocative claims. It does then seem to reflect the embarrassing biblical illiteracy even of those claiming to be Christians, and that people, even the pious, tend to prefer a religion that avoids uncomfortable truths in favor of what we want to hear.

Yet perhaps most sadly, that Text With Jesus would even be conceived and consumed reveals how deeply wedded we have become to our smartphones. Prayer is such a remarkable human experience because of its universality, both in terms of who can do it (everyone) and where it can be done (anywhere). I pray in my bedroom, on my commute, waiting in line, and while exercising. I can pray the divine liturgy, a rosary, or simply talk and listen. 

Indeed, one of the most beautiful things about Christian prayer is the quality of the access. “Ask, and it will be given you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks it will be opened. . . . If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!” (Luke 11:9–10, 13) What has happened to us, that anyone would contemplate inserting a gimmicky Silicon Valley tool into something so profoundly human and liberating? (I should note that I do not intend to “throw shade” on apps such as Magnificat or Hallow that help facilitate prayer through Scripture readings, meditations, or the divine liturgy.)

To be a people formed by prayer, we Christians need to protect and cultivate our little spiritual gardens, where we can let Jesus be himself, in all his terrifying glory. Because it is in “practicing in the presence” that we can appreciate the reality of an omnipotent, omniscient God who deigns to care about us and our problems. But in order to walk with him, and talk with him, and share that joy, I wager we’ll need to put our phones on silent.

Casey Chalk is a contributing editor at the New Oxford Review.