Stretch out your hand. (Luke 6:10)
Critics play an important role in the music
world. They help the public to evaluate what is good, and by doing so,
they set standards for music. But critics can also be closed to anything
new or different. For example, one of Bach’s students called his music
“turgid and confused.” A contemporary of Mozart called his music
“overloaded and overstuffed.” One critic said of Beethoven’s Ninth
Symphony: “It was hard to figure out what all the noise was about.”
You could say that some Pharisees of Jesus’ day had become like those
critics. In their zeal to preserve the Law, they had attached their own
limited expectations to it. One of those limitations was that they
taught that curing the sick was forbidden on the Sabbath—unless the sick
person was in danger of death. The man whom Jesus healed in the
synagogue had only a withered hand, so that clearly didn’t qualify.
These Pharisees weren’t willing to admit that God could go beyond their
assumptions of what the Law was all about.
This attitude can affect us as well. We can view our own assumptions
about God as being the only thing that matters, and end up limiting him
as a result. But our heavenly Father wants to take us beyond our
expectations, both of who he is and of who we can become. He is not
interested in healing you just enough so that you can squeak your way
into heaven. He is a generous Father. He wants to fill you with so much
grace that you dance through his gates joyfully, bringing countless
people behind you whose lives you have touched!
Do you think it’s possible that you can know the Lord even more
deeply than you do right now? Do you think it’s possible that you might
be able to pray with someone and see them healed? Don’t be like those
music critics with their limited expectations! God has great plans for
you. So go ahead and stretch out your hand in faith and see how God
fills you with his life, his love, and his power.
“Lord, open my eyes. Help me to see how much you have blessed me
in the past, so that I can be open to receive your grace in the future.”
from wau.org
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