Is that statement true?
Thanks Pastor Todd Wilken for that brilliant challenge to the so-called post-modern relativists!
Is that statement true?
Thanks Pastor Todd Wilken for that brilliant challenge to the so-called post-modern relativists!
Martin Luther commends the use of Psalm 145:15-16 to begin asking a blessing before meals:
“The eyes of all look to you,
and you give them their food in due season.
You open your hand;
you satisfy the desire of every living thing.”
It is a wonderful prayer most of all because it reminds you that, as Jesus said in the Sermon on the Mount, life is “more than food, and the body more than clothing” (Mt. 6:25). For the psalm says God does more than merely satisfy physical hunger, but “you satisfy the desire of every living thing.” This is why the Lord’s feeding of the 5,000 in the wilderness was so memorable—not just because of the miracle itself, but because of what it said about Jesus, who He is and what He came to do which is more than to provide food for the tummy, but to satisfy the deepest desire of every living thing; the desire for life not threatened by death, the taking away of the fear of death, the desire for reconciliation with God.
The first desire spoken about in today’s Gospel, however, is not ours but God’s. God desires that all should come to the knowledge of the truth and be saved (1 Tim. 2:4). God desires not “the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn from his way and live” (Ezekiel 33:11). So, as of first importance, our text reports that when Jesus heard of the murder of John the Baptist, this was a sign and reminder of His own destiny and goal, the giving of His life into death on a cross so that all might be reconciled to God, freed from sin’s slavery, raised to new, eternal life. As much as His human nature recoiled at the horrible thought, this was His ultimate goal and desire—to offer Himself as the one-and-only pure and perfect sacrifice for the sin of the world. So now He withdraws from His more public posture of preaching, teaching and healing. He heads “to a desolate place by Himself.” (more…)