Utterly Incompatible
As I wrote about last week I am re-reading "God is the Gospel." This morning I read about the "diverse excellencies (lion and lamb) that unite in [Jesus]." The foundation for these "diverse excellencies" is a Jonathan Edwards sermon from Revelation 5:5-6.
• we admire him for his glory, but even more because his glory is mingled with humility;
• we admire him for his transcendence, but even more because his transcendence is accompanied by condescension;
• we admire him for his uncompromising justice, but even more because it is tempered with mercy;
• we admire him for his majesty, but even more because it is a majesty in meekness;
• we admire him because of his equality with God, but even more because as God’s equal he nevertheless has a deep reverence for God;
• we admire him because of how worthy he was of all good, but even more because this was accompanied by an amazing patience to suffer evil;
• we admire him because of his sovereign dominion over the world, but even more because this dominion was clothed with a spirit of obedience and submission;
• we love the way he stumped the proud scribes with his wisdom, and we love it even more because he could be simple enough to like children and spend time with them;
• and we admire him because he could still the storm, but even more because he refused to use that power to strike the Samaritans with lightning (Luke 9:54-55) and he refused to use it to get himself down from the cross.
1 comment:
Good stuff.
I like Jesus because he liked to wear sandals, but he also was able to stick that sandal up the Pharisees' rears.
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