Fasting Day 38 of 40 | Maundy Thursday
For the man who was miraculously healed was over forty years old. Acts 4:22
As Peter and John started to spread the good news, it resulted in healing for a man over forty years old. He had been lame from birth and not fully experienced life. That’s the case for everyone apart from knowing Christ.
John R.W. Stott writes, “The astonishing paradox of Christ’s teaching and of Christian experience is this: if we lose ourselves in following Christ, we actually find ourselves. True self-denial is self-discovery. To live for ourselves is insanity and suicide; to live for God and for man is wisdom and life indeed. We do not begin to find ourselves until we have become willing to lose ourselves in the service of Christ and of our fellows.”
John R.W. Stott (1921-2011) in Basic Christianity (Downers Grove: IVP, 2008), p. 176.
We discover this paradox firsthand during Lent. We give, pray, and fast – acts of self-denial – and we find ourselves and our purpose in the process. We don’t figure it out until we live it out that the way of Christ is the way of wisdom, discovery, and joy.
Think of someone you know who does not know Christ. In life after Lent, commit to praying for them daily. Ask God to open their eyes to see and their ears to hear Christ’s teachings. And invite the Holy Spirit to help you model abundant living, giving, serving, and loving to them.
Christ, help me model abundant living in life after Lent. Amen.
Wish someone “Happy Maundy Thursday” today. Remind them that “Maundy” stems from the Latin mandatum (commandment), referring to the command of Jesus to love one another. And tell them you love them.
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