Friday, June 17

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Jumping Upside Down - Luke 17:33; 18:14

"If you cling to your life, you will lose it, and if you let your life go, you will save it...For those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted." In Luke 17 Jesus told His disciples about His second coming to earth and how those that try to hold on to their life in this world will lose it in the end. In Luke 18 Jesus told the story of a Pharisee who prayed he was thankful that he was not sinful like other men, while a certain tax collector prayed and called on God to have mercy on him as a sinner. Jesus exposes the prayer of the Pharisee as self-exalting. Both of these stories conclude with a fundamental principle of the gospel that Dallas Willard in his book, The Divine Conspiracy, called The Great Inversion. The behavior Jesus taught always seemed to be the inverse of what was normal or typical in this world, like jumping upside down! It was behavior that was future-oriented. So, it turns out that in God's Kingdom little in this life is considered much in the Kingdom of God, those who are always last in this life will have the honor of being first in the age to come, and that leaders should also be like servants. God is not only concerned about our personal relationship with Him, but also about the expression of this relationship in action and behavior that will ultimately manifest itself in eternal life. Thus, Jesus always related to people in terms of what they could become in God’s Kingdom, not what they had been in their past or present life. God wants to prepare you for eternal life so He wants you to begin to act and behave now how you will live in His Kingdom eternally.

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