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Archive for maundy thursday

A Maundy Thursday Meditation: Praying with Jesus in the Garden

By Matt · Comments (0)
Saturday, April 11th, 2009

One of the last pieces of our youth Maundy Thursday worship service. Prayer seems like an appropriate thing to do on this Holy Saturday.

After washing the disciples feet, after eating the Last Supper, Jesus finds himself in the Garden of Gethsemane, doing what he often does: praying. He prays for us, his disciples, knowing that the road we will have to travel will, like his road, be a difficult one. That Jesus prays for our protection implies that we will face danger. He knows that we will be called to follow him in death.

As we are called to walk the road which Jesus walked, we are also called to be people who often find ourselves in prayer. Prayer, like the washing of feet and the receiving of communion, is also an act that forces us to die to ourselves. When we pray, we acknowledge that we are not in control. When we pray, we cannot lie, we cannot deceive, we cannot position ourselves for power or status, but we are laid bare as we come to our Maker. In a world where people manipulate one another for selfish interests, prayer is perhaps the only place where we are unable to manipulate someone else. We are utterly powerless in prayer to make ourselves out to be anything other than what we already are. In prayer the masks we wear come off and the real person underneath begins to emerge. In biblical terms, prayer is the death of the old self and the rising of the new creation.

Comments (0)
Categories : Christianity, Youth Ministry
Tags : death, gethsemane, maundy thursday, prayer

A Maundy Thursday Meditation: The Last Supper

By Matt · Comments (0)
Friday, April 10th, 2009

This is another part of our worship service from last night regarding the Last Supper. It seems fitting on this Good Friday.

On this night we remember the meal that Jesus gave us, the meal that we celebrate every week. A piece of bread, a sip of wine. This is the body and blood of Christ. The apostle Paul tells us that in this meal we “proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes.” This meal is a proclamation of death.

But it, like the foot washing, is also an act of dying to ourselves. Jesus tells us that the road he traveled is the road we must travel. The cross he bore is also our cross. The death he died is also our death. “If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross and follow me,” Jesus says. The weekly act of receiving communion is a part of taking up that cross and dying to ourselves. Weekly we are reminded that we are in need of the body and blood of Christ in order to forgive our sinful selves. We come to the altar, and kneel, lowering ourselves to our knees. This position is one of penitence and humility. Such a position forces us to die to ourselves. We put out our hands while we are on our knees, almost as a beggar, knowing that we are undeserving of the grace we are about to receive, and yet knowing that this grace is our only hope. In this act of receiving the body and blood of Christ our pride is stripped away as we come to the altar and ask for forgiveness.

This meal is not to be only a weekly occurrence of humbling ourselves. No, this meal reminds us that we should always be on our knees, always acting in humility, always aware that we are creatures in need of God’s grace. This meal does not end our week, but begins it. We begin the week on our knees, in submission to our Lord.

This meal is a reminder of the cross that Jesus bore, but it should also remind us that we are called to always die to ourselves, to always be in a position to be receptive to God’s grace, to “Take up our cross,” as Jesus said.

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Categories : Christianity, Youth Ministry
Tags : death, last supper, maundy thursday

A Maundy Thursday Meditation: Washing One Another's Feet

By Matt · Comments (0)
Thursday, April 9th, 2009

I wrote the following for a portion of our youth’s Maundy Thursday worship service. We based the service off of Bonhoeffers famous quote, “When Christ calls a man, he bids him come and die.” We tried as best we could to make the worship service feel like a funeral and tried to tie in the theme of death to the acts usually highlighted on Maundy Thursday.

The first of the acts of Maundy Thursday has an obvious connection to dying to oneself. Most of us have heard the significance of what Jesus did on that night as he washed the disciples’ feet. Peter knew–he tried to refuse to let Jesus lower himself to the status of the lowliest of servants. Only if Jesus had already died to himself, and rejected the seduction of power and status in his culture, only then would he be able to take a towel, wrap it around his waist, and wash the feet of his disciples, his followers, his friends. The act of washing another’s feet required a dying to oneself in order to be able to complete the task.

But an interesting shift has occurred since Jesus’ day. In the biblical story it is Jesus who must empty himself in order to wash the disciples’ feet. The disciples would have been comfortable letting another person touch and wash their feet. It was a common custom, not out of the ordinary.

Today this is no longer the case. The modern day practice of foot washing in our culture requires discomfort by both parties. Not only must the person washing another’s feet lower oneself to a place of servant hood, but the person whose feet are being washed must bear his or her feet to another. This is not something we tend to do. We like our shoes, our flip flops, and our distance. Oftentimes the only person who sees, nevertheless touches, our feet is a parent or a spouse. To take off one’s shoes and to allow another to touch one’s feet in today’s culture requires a stripping away of pride; it requires a dying to oneself.

Comments (0)
Categories : Christianity, Youth Ministry
Tags : bonhoeffer, death, foot washing, maundy thursday

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