As
you read in my devotional last week entitled “Jesus,” the only hope for
our world that groans in the bondage of sin is the manifestation of the
children of God, that is Jesus Christ in us the hope of glory. (Romans
8:17, Colossians 1:27) For God’s glory to manifest in us we must walk
the Jesus journey.
The summary of the first thirty years of Jesus’ journey are written in Luke 2:52,
“And
Jesus increased in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and men.”
Jesus is twelve years old and has gone to the temple with his parents,
and Luke records in 2:47
“And
all who heard Him were astonished at His understanding and answers.”
Though Jesus had revelation knowledge that surpassed the greatest
teachers of His day, he spent His first thirty years growing “in wisdom
and stature, and favor with God and men.” We can become so busy with
life that we do not allow time in our journey for God to develop His
character in us. When we watch the Olympics, we will see people who have
spent a lifetime of discipline in developing the character and skills
necessary to stand for a moment on the world stage. Whatever we do in
life, our Jesus journey begins with the disciplines of a Christlike
character in us. We do not live according to the values of this world
but by the values revealed to us in His Word and developed in us by
submission to our heavenly coach, the Holy Spirit.
The
next phase of Jesus’ journey is recorded in Luke 3:22, “and a voice
came from heaven which said, "You are My beloved Son; in You I am well
pleased." Wherever our journey takes us, the voice of affirmation over
our lives must come from heaven. While Jesus grew in favor with man, the
affirmation of who he was and what he did came only from the Father. No
matter what kind of work we do, our only measure of success and sense
of fulfillment can come from God. God’s pleasure with His son did not
come from performance, because Jesus’ ministry had not yet begun. God’s
pleasure was with Jesus the carpenter who had learned to walk as a son
in a love relationship of submission and obedience.
The
Jesus journey continues with the test of identity and character in the
wilderness in Luke chapter four. The repeated challenge of the enemy was
“If you are the son of God,” then prove it. Jesus’ consistent response
was “It is written.” Satan constantly tests our identity and our
character through success and suffering. He constantly flaunts the world
before us, tempting us to measure ourselves by those around us, what we
see and what we feel, instead of the Word of God.
The
conclusion of Jesus’ journey is in Acts 10:38, “how God anointed Jesus
of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and with power, who went about doing
good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil, for God was with
Him.” This can be the testimony of your journey when your identity and
life is hidden in Christ. Through the Holy Spirit, you can do good works
that God has ordained for you and bring healing to those around you.
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