Grace Walk
Walk with Me and work with Me--watch how I do it.
Learn the unforced rhythms of grace.
I won't try to lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you.
Keep company with Me and you'll learn to live freely and lightly.

-Matthew 11:29-30 The Message


Hidden Treasures
One of the most satisfying aspects of writing
is that it can open in us deep wells of hidden treasures
that are beautiful for us as well as for others to see.

-Henri Nouwen in Bread for the Journey

A Modern Day Psaltery
David wrote psalms to express
what was in his heart.
Seeing no need to hide what he felt,
he wrote with sincerity, and with no hidden agenda.
What he felt was never taken against him.
Pray, dear reader, discern my heart between the lines.
Dinah Maria Craik couldn't have said it better:
"Oh the comfort -- the inexpressible comfort
of feeling safe with a person --
having neither to weigh thoughts nor measure words,
but pouring them all right out, just as they are,
chaff and grain together;
certain that a faithful hand will take and sift them,
keep what is worth keeping,
and then, with the breath of kindness
blow the rest away."

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Walkway Reflections 3: The Trial




Many bible scholars who have studied the trial of Jesus consider it an "illegal trial" for a host of reasons. Here are a few:

- Jesus was subjected to a secret preliminary examination at night. The law only permitted daytime hearings.

- The Sanhedrin by law could not originate charges. In this case the accusers were the judges.

- An advocate was required to speak on behalf of the defendant because the accused could not be convicted by his own testimony. Jesus had no one.

- The verdict could not be given the same day as the trial. Jesus' trial was completed in less than nine hours, his execution within twenty-four.


The trial system of the Sanhedrin was one that took pride in how they erred on the side of mercy. However, all the principles of justice they affirmed and implemented were scrapped. They breached all their standards to condemn the one innocent man who ever lived.

(Taken from The Walkway interactive stations of the cross at Bonifacio High Street)





Dear Jesus,

I never knew and understood what kind of trial you were given. It was not only a most unfair one, it was a mock trial in every sense of the word.

And yet it was the trial that sent you to the cross.

And as I reflect on this at this very moment...I do not even have any right to judge the Sanhedrin for what they have done to you.

I am guilty of doing the very same things. Judging others at face value...judging when I do not have all the facts...passing judgment when I am offended or when they do not live up to my expectations...accusing others when I have not heard their side of the story...

And I can do all this judging right inside my heart, without anyone hearing what I am saying to myself.

Right this very moment I repent, as I see how it poisons me, and how it poisons relationships, and how it "kills" others, just the way the Sanhedrin killed You.

Forgive me, Lord. I never want to judge with unrighteous judgment again!

Help me to be humble in the way I look at others, even presidents, rulers of government, the people who sit in authority.

Cleanse my heart now of every defilement to my thoughts and emotions and perceptions that my wrong judgments have brought to me.

Enable me dear Jesus to always look at others with a pure heart, from Your eyes of love.

Walkway Reflections: Introduction
Walkway Reflections 1: The Garden
Walkway Reflections 2: The Betrayal

4 comments:

Mari said...

These walkway reflections are really touching. I think you should post them again, next year around Good Friday. Thanks for sharing them.

Katie said...

Wow.

Jennifer said...

I love this trilogy of posts. Definitely post them next year again around Good Friday. This one got me--guilty as charged.

I saw your other post was new last night and just didn't get around to reading, so imagine my surprise to see you visited my blog while I slept! Perhaps one day, you'll come to America and we'll sit down together and share that cup of tea. Much love, Lidj.

Leah Adams said...

On Thursday evenings, I am leading my Bible study--the one I wrote--in my hometown and we talked about this very things last night. How often we judge before we have all the facts. Really, we are called to simply love like Jesus would have loved. That is often very hard, at least it is for me.

These are beautiful, Lidj. Thank you for sharing.