I've had this picture in my office for years and years. I look at it when I need hope. Maybe it will help you too. |
Most everyone has a favorite story. Mine goes back to that time when my wife and I visited the Passion Play in Oberammergau And I can still remember what I surprise I found there. The Passion play opened with Jesus riding into Jerusalem and a whole stage of people shouting the king has come. They yelled hallelujahs until they were hoarse. And then the story told of the last week Jesus spent marching, stumbling the way of the cross. We saw it all as Jesus slowly made his way up that terrible hill. The crucifixion was gruesome as he was nailed to the central cross with two criminals on each side. And his mother and her friends stayed there until the end. And we saw those who loved him take him down from the cross and buried him. The lights on the stage darkened and almost went out. We sat mostly in darkness. But the thing I remembered most was happened next. Weeping women came on the stage and stood by the tomb hoping to get in. But the stone was too heavy. And suddenly an angel came and without saying a word, unrolled a long white aisle cloth from the stone doors down the steps to the where the audience sat. And as the grieving women beat on the great stone doors they began to slowly open. And light came from inside those doors. The light grew stronger and dazzling light slowly filled the stage and the whole theatre. The stone doors opened wide. And Jesus came through the streaming light. As he walked across the stage from everywhere a multitude of children came running forward, laughing and grabbing his legs. He had come back.
We didn’t say much as we left. Most of the crowd were quiet. But I could not get the scene of Jesus coming through the darkness into that blinding light.
Maybe those that waved their palm branches only days before were on to something. They had yelled: “The King is coming.” Little did they know that even after all these years †he King is here. No darkness then or now could keep him out.
Thanks be to God.
--Roger Lovette / rogerlovette.blogspot.com
Thanks be to God, indeed! Thanks, Roger!
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