Tuesday, March 3, 2015

“Why didn’t you talk to me? How come you just didn’t ask?”

“Why didn’t you talk to me? How come you just didn’t ask?”

I recall exasperatingly saying these words to my children when they were teenagers. When they were very young, however, they were always talking to me, always asking me questions or asking me for something. Though perhaps I was at times a bit annoyed with them as young children, I loved the attention. I loved that they wanted to talk to me, that they wanted… me.  But as teenagers they began to assert their independence and autonomy, sometimes to my consternation and their misery. Perhaps there are some parallels to our relationship with God.

Hebrews 5:8 mentions about Jesus “Though he was a son, he learned obedience by what he suffered.”  What? No way. Jesus was perfect, He never sinned, how or why did He have to learn obedience? Some have said this verse refers to Passion Week, the Via Doloroso when Jesus prayed in the Garden of Gethsemane “Not my will but yours be done” and then obediently submitted to death on the Cross. But maybe it’s more than that.

“Though he was a son” it says. Jesus became a son at birth. Luke 3 tells of when Jesus was 12 years old and his parents lost him in the big city of Jerusalem and for 3 days were frantically looking for him. “’Son,’” his mother said to him ‘Why have you done this to us? Your father and I have been frantic, searching for you everywhere.’”(Luke 3:48 NLT).  Many a parent has spoken similar words to their teenagers. Oh the anger we feel, the fear, the desperation.

And Jesus replies to his mother, “But why did you need to search… you should have known I would be in my Father’s house. The family then returns home to Nazareth and it says Jesus “was obedient to them.”

So obedience is something Jesus learned not just in Passion Week, but from boyhood, perhaps even infancy. And just what is obedience?

I have mostly thought of obedience as being something I am required to do and I do, but I don’t want to do it. Something contrary to my will but that I must submit to for my own good. Sometimes that’s the case for us but that probably was not the case for Jesus.

“Obedience ” in Biblical Greek is ὑπακοή, a compound word hypo which means “under” and akuoo, which means “to hear.” Literally it means to listen and live under, i.e. to hear and live by what you are hearing.  The Hebrew word is similar. Jewish people recite what is called The Shemma- “Hear O Israel, the Lord your God is One. You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and all your strength.”  שׁמע shemma means “to hear” and “to hear” means “to obey.” They are synonyms.  

So when Jesus “learned obedience” it doesn’t mean he was forced to do something he didn’t want to do. No, quite the opposite. He delighted in learning to hear, to listen to His Father in heaven. To spend time in his Father’s house listening and learning. And suffering is often what we have to experience to get us to “shut up” and listen, isn’t it? When we suffer, and Jesus suffered greatly, not just in his passion on the Cross, but in his incarnation, taking on human flesh with all its limitations. When we suffer, when we hurt, it is then that we stop and begin to listen. And maybe even go back to church.

And what a joy it is to hear our Father in heaven, to listen to his voice, and to experience his delight in us. As a parent, I loved when my children came to me and needed me. As Father in heaven, God loves when we become like children and come to Him, listening, asking, seeking, knocking. He loves to take us in his arms and bless us with the very things we need most life. Things like love, meaning, joy, purpose, significance, and value.

In Isaiah 30:1-2, my reading for today, Isaiah prophecies “Destruction is certain for my rebellious children,” says the Lord. “You make plans that are contrary to my will. You weave a web of plans that are not from my Spirit, thus piling up your sins. For without consulting me you”… (devise your own bad plans).

You see, from the beginning of time God as Father has wanted his children to listen to Him, to listen to his Holy Spirit, who now lives in each of us. He loves us so much and longs for sweet intimacy with each of his children- with you! Can we take time to stop our busyness, stop and talk to him, stop and listen to him? Stop and ask him?

Come on kids. Sit in my lap. Let me read you a story.