Love To The Uttermost en
Love To The Uttermost en
Love To The Uttermost en
TO THE UTTERMOST
LOVE
TO THE UTTERMOST
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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01
Editors Preface
Prologue
Palm Sunday
Luke 12:32
Monday
Luke 9:5156
Tuesday
Romans 5:68
Wednesday
John 13:19
Maundy Thursday
John 13:34
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Good Friday
Hebrews 7:25
Saturday
Luke 22:6365
Easter Sunday
John 10:1718
EDITORS PREFACE
Theres nothing intrinsically holy about particular days,
but for most of church history Christians have set aside
eight days between Palm Sunday and Easter Sunday for
solemn focus (Romans 14:56). This string of days provides an annual interval for us to focus intently on the
greatest events in human history, the acts of our Savior
Jesus Christ. Fix your gaze steadily on him, John Piper
writes of Holy Week, as he loves you to the uttermost.
That one worduttermostis loaded with significance.
Jesus willingly died for his friends and endured unimaginable degrees of suffering to do so (John 13:1). To love to
the uttermost is to love freely, without reserve or limit, and
without flaw or failure. Love to the uttermost is unquenchable, unstoppable, and resolute. As we watch his arrest and
trial and death unfold for eight days, we gaze on a Christ
who begrudges no pain or reproach on his pathway to
redeem lost sinners. This is the man who humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death
on a cross (Philippians 2:8). This is love to the uttermost.
Love to the Uttermost
Tony Reinke
Desiring God
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Prologue
portrait of Jesus Christ painted by Isaiah under the inspiration of God and put on display by Matthew 12:1821.
Like every good work of art, this portrait has a purpose,
and the purpose is to cause us to set our hope on Jesus
Christ. And I am praying that this will happen in your
life, because I know that everything else you set your hope
on will let you down in the end. But if you hope in Jesus
Christ, he will be honored in your life, and you will never
regret it.
Palm Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
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Wednesday
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the scribes and be killed, and after three days rise again
(Mark 8:31). Jesus saw the predictions of the Messiah and
his sufferings being fulfilled in himself.
He foresaw that his death would be by crucifixion
(John 3:14; 12:32).
He predicted that the disciples would find an unridden
colt when they entered the town (Luke 19:30).
When the disciples entered Jerusalem that last Thursday, he predicted they would meet a man with the water
pitcher who would have a room for them to meet in
(Luke 22:10).
After three years of waiting, he knew the
exact hour of his departure out of the world
(John 13:1).
Jesus knew that he would be betrayed, and who would
betray him, and when it would happen (John 6:64; 13:1;
Matthew 26:2, 21).
He knew and predicted the fact and the time of Peters
three denials (Matthew 26:34).
Jesus predicted that the disciples would all fall away
and be scattered (Matthew 26:31; John 16:32; Zechariah
13:7).
Jesus prophesied that he would be lifted up from the
earth (John 12:32). That is, he would not be stoned but
crucifiednot by Jews but by Romans. So the decisions
of Pilate and the Jews of how to dispose of him were a
fulfillment of his prediction.
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Maundy Thursday
THURSDAY OF THECOMMANDMENT
A new commandment I give to you, that you love
one another: just as I have loved you, you also are to
love one another. (John 13:34)
Today is Maundy Thursday. The name comes from the
Latin mandatum, the first word in the Latin rendering of
John 13:34, A new commandment (mandatum novum) I
give to you, that you love one another: just as I have loved
you, you also are to love one another. This commandment was given by Jesus on the Thursday before his crucifixion. So Maundy Thursday is the Thursday of the
Commandment.
This is the commandment: love one another: just as
I have loved you. But what about Galatians 5:14? For
the whole law is fulfilled in one word: You shall love
your neighbor as yourself. If the whole law is fulfilled in
Love your neighbor as yourself, what more can Love one
another as Christ loved you add to the fulfillment of the
whole law?
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Good Friday
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have fellowship with him, that we not settle for a Christian life at a distance from God, that God not be a distant
thought, but a near and present reality, that we experience
what the old Puritans called communion with God.
This drawing near is not a physical act. Its not building
a tower of Babel, by your achievements, to get to heaven. Its
not necessarily going into a church building, or walking to
an altar at the front. It is an invisible act of the heart. You
can do it while standing absolutely still, or while lying in a
hospital bed, or while sitting in a pew listening to a sermon.
Drawing near is not moving from one place to another. It is a directing of the heart into the presence of God
who is as distant as the holy of holies in heaven, and yet as
near as the door of faith. He is commanding us to come, to
approach him, to draw near to him.
The Center of the Gospel
In fact, this is the very heart of the entire New Testament
gospel, isnt it? That Christ came into the world to make a
way for us to come to God without being consumed in our
sin by his holiness.
For Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous
for the unrighteous, that he might bring us to God (1
Peter 3:18).
For through him [Christ] we both have access in one
Spirit to the Father (Ephesians 2:18).
We also rejoice in God through our Lord Jesus Christ,
through whom we have now received reconciliation
(Romans 5:11).
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Saturday
A HOLY WEEKVOLCANO
Now the men who were holding Jesus in custody were
mocking him as they beat him. They also blindfolded
him and kept asking him, Prophesy! Who is it that
struck you? And they said many other things against
him, blaspheming him. (Luke 22:6365)
As I read these terrible words, I found myself saying to
Jesus, Im sorry. Im sorry, Jesus. Forgive me! I felt myself
to be an actor here, not just a spectator. I was so much a
part of that ugly gang that I knew I was as guilty as they
were. I felt that if the rage of God should spill over onto
those soldiers and sweep me away, too, justice would have
been done. I wasnt there, but their sin was my sin. It would
not have been unjust for me to fall under their sentence.
Has it ever bothered you that sometimes in the Old
Testament when one man sins, many get swept away in the
punishment God brings? For example, when David sinned
by taking a census of the people (2 Samuel 24:10), there
died of the people from Dan to Beersheba 70,000 men
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neighbor two tents down? I doubt that answers are available to us now. We are left to trust that these decisions
come from a Wisdom so great that it can discern all possible effects in all possible times and places and people. How
widely the lava of one persons rebellion and judgment will
flow lies in Gods hands alone.
And I believe from Romans 8:28 that, even though the
lava of recompense overtakes me at a distance from the
volcano, there is mercy in it. I do not deserve to escape, for
I know my own heart. But I trust Christ, and so I know
the judgment will be turned to joy. Though he slay me, yet
will I trust him. For precious in the sight of the Lord is the
death of his saints.
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Easter Sunday
SUCH AMAZING
RESURRECTION LOVE
For this reason the Father loves me, because I lay
down my life that I may take it up again. No one
takes it from me, but I lay it down of my own accord.
I have authority to lay it down, and I have authority
to take it up again. This charge I have received from
my Father. (John 10:1718)
Why does Jesus say this? Why does he stress his willingness to die? Because if it werent trueif his death were
forced on him, if it werent free, if his heart werent really
in itthen a big question mark would be put over his love
for us.
The depth of his love is in its freedom. If he didnt die
for us willinglyif he didnt choose the suffering and
embrace itthen how deep is his love, really? So he stresses it. He makes it explicit. It comes out of me, not out of circumstances, not out of pressure, but out of what I really long
to do.
Love to the Uttermost
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Desiring God
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