We are brothers and sisters (Mark 3:33-35) July 17, 2016

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Read it in a year – Colossians 3-4

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Today’s Devotional

Mark 3:33-35
Jesus looked around.
Jesus (answering them): Who are My mother and brothers?
He called into the silence. No one spoke.
At last His gaze swept across those gathered close, and Jesus smiled.
Jesus: You, here, are My mother and My brothers! Whoever does the will of God is My true family.

What do Jesus’ words mean for us today?

Have you ever thought about why we call each other brothers and sisters in the Christian community? Perhaps Jesus started it with His announcement this day when His siblings tried to drag Him back home from His ministry. From all appearances, it seems His earthly father died sometime during Jesus’ teen years and Jesus became the bread-winner for the family. Now at age 30, He sets out to begin His ministry sharing the good news that the kingdom of heaven is at hand.

In this day and time, 30 was the magic age to be counted as an adult, wise enough to share your opinion and be heard. I’m pretty sure Jesus didn’t wait until now to share His thoughts with His family and friends. I’m sure He shaped His ministry and what He was going to do well before His 30th birthday. But to be heard by the masses, He needed to follow the rules of the temple and He did. He needed to follow most of the civil laws and He did. He needed to obey most of the temple laws and He broke only a few and only when a greater good was at stake.

I think He leaned on His mother and brothers and sisters to listen to His sermons and hone His speaking skills, shape His messages, help Him navigate some of the questions people would have for Him. I think He took all of that time in His formative years and studied, learned all He could of the scriptures and how His real Father wanted Him to share them with the world. And I’m sure He shared those thoughts with his brothers and sisters. The probably thought of Him like Joseph’s brothers did. Ready to throw Him in the loony bin or in the cistern to die at times.

But Jesus was their brother and they came to rescue Him from the stories they heard from their friends about the ridicule He received from the Pharisees. They wanted to make sure the priests didn’t carry out the rumors they heard about arresting Him, stopping His message any way possible, even imprisoning or killing Him if necessary. His brothers and sisters tried to protect Him from the mob forming on the opposite side of the crowds that followed Him.

But when Jesus heard they came to take Him home to protect Him, He looked into the eyes of those gathered around Him and said, “You are My mother and brothers and sisters.”

I think when He began to teach about the kingdom of heaven and helped those around Him understand God adopts us into His family, we become brothers and sisters, God’s children, in a very real sense. God wants us to understand how close a relationship we should have with each other as we join this communion of saints, those whose sins have been washed away by the blood of Jesus, the Lamb of God, the perfect sacrifice for us.

When I hear about another denomination growing out of a church because of some doctrinal issue or something that caused the congregation to split, I grieve. I don’t think God intended for us to grow apart with all our petty differences that make up all our denominations. Today a quick search on Google will tell you there are almost 40,000 different denominations, each thinking their individual practices are “The Way” to salvation.

I think the Apostles would be appalled if they saw the state of the church today. Instead of brothers and sisters, we have become at best distant cousins that don’t recognize each other and don’t acknowledge the other exists because we have so little contact and so little in common. We certainly don’t feel like those other folks are brothers and sisters if they are so far afield in their doctrinal thinking, right?

Jesus wants us to think differently. He wants us to recognize that if we carry His name, we are brothers and sisters. We should love each other, not like cousins, but like brothers and sisters. We should care for all those people who have come to Him in repentance and been adopted into His family the same way we would our flesh and blood brothers and sisters.

Jesus wants all of us to remember the few words Christendom agrees on found in the Apostles’ Creed that has come down to us from the very early days of “The Way” as it was called then. I believe in God, the Father almighty,
creator of heaven and earth.

I believe in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord,
who was conceived by the Holy Spirit,
born of the Virgin Mary,
suffered under Pontius Pilate,
was crucified, died, and was buried;
On the third day he rose again;
he ascended into heaven,
he is seated at the right hand of the Father,
and he will come to judge the living and the dead.

I believe in the Holy Spirit,
the holy catholic* Church,
the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body,
and the life everlasting.

Amen.
When we share those words together, we are brothers and sisters. Members of God’s great family.

The Voice Bible Copyright © 2012 Thomas Nelson, Inc. The Voice™ translation © 2012 Ecclesia Bible Society All rights reserved.
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One thought on “We are brothers and sisters (Mark 3:33-35) July 17, 2016

  1. queen

    Churches these days, seem to let just anyone teach Sunday School, lead singing or play or sing in the band on Sunday. This is how the division starts in a lot of churches I believe.

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