Challenge, Faith, Miracles

Expect the Unexpected

0 Comments 09 October 2007

Passover for Jews is like Christmas Dinner for Christians…a not to be missed meal.

Passover for Jews is like Christmas Dinner…a not to be missed meal.

What the Bible Says

Jesus sent Peter and John ahead and said, “Go and prepare the Passover meal, so we can eat it together.” “Where do you want us to prepare it?” they asked him. He replied, “As soon as you enter Jerusalem, a man carrying a pitcher of water will meet you. Follow him. At the house he enters, say to the owner, ‘The Teacher asks: Where is the guest room where I can eat the Passover meal with my disciples?’ He will take you upstairs to a large room that is already set up. That is where you should prepare our meal.” They went off to the city and found everything just as Jesus had said, and they prepared the Passover meal there. Luke 22:8-13

What My Mind Thinks

What is the most important meal in human history? It was not a state dinner in the White House, or escargot on a Paris avenue, or even tea at Buckingham Palace. The most memorable meal of all time was the last meal of Jesus with his disciples in the Upper Room. That story would be told and retold in cathedrals and church halls around the world, week after week over the 100,000 Sundays since it was first experienced.

Think of it: the experience of billions of future Christians in the 100,000 Sunday communion services since that day depended on 12 men cooking dinner. The disciples cooking is a scary thought. Peter could catch fish and burn them too, that’s why in the beginning he had Jesus heal his mother-in-law so she could cook. Matthew could count money but slice his finger chopping veggies. While John and James quarreled about about how much thyme and cumin to throw in the soup, the pot boiled over.

But Jesus left dinner up to 12 men.

Notice how Jesus started: he gave the instructions without any provision. Jesus told them to prepare the Passover meal but gave the disciples no place to host it. Jerusalem during Passover week was as busy as Macy’s on Christmas Eve. The city was booked out. Finding a restaurant with a banquet room at Passover would be like finding a hotel room during the Superbowl. But Jesus gave the disciples no directions, just the instruction to go and make ready the meal.

Nothing has changed today in the way that Jesus works. He often gives us staggering responsibilities without filling in the details. This isn’t a kindergarten class trip where the teacher holds the tells the kiddies every little thing in triplicate. No, Jesus gives us responsibility and then watches to see what we will do next.

The disciples responded well. They had matured enough not to say, “Come on Jesus, where do you expect us to find a spare room at a time like this?” Instead they asked Jesus for more details. It’s comforting that Jesus was okay with their questions about building and budget. He’s comfortable with our questions about his commands. Jesus wants us to ask him about the details.

What happened next is…well…just out of the box. You need to understand a little about the do’s and don’ts of daily life in Jerusalem in those days. Women carried objects on their heads, but men did not. A man with a water jar on his head in Jerusalem was as likely as seeing a football player with a purse in your hometown. So a strapping Jewish man parading down Main Street Jerusalem with a water jar on his head would have stuck out.

When Jesus calls us to do the difficult we should have our eyes opened to see the unexpected. On our way to obey Christ we will find the man with the water jar on his head who can lead us to where everything has been prepared. What a contrast the disciples experienced as they left the jostling streets where there wasn’t a place to sit let alone stay for dinner and stepped into a banquet hall with linen pressed, pantry filled, pots and pans and dishes waiting. Jesus had been at work ahead of time. They had only to follow the man with the water jar to find out.

How My Heart Responds

Overwhelming responsibilities should cause us to look for the unexpected. I’m opening my eyes today.

How My Spirit Prays

Father, today open my eyes to see as my feet move forward the things you have prepared for me before I have even arrived. Help me to see the man with the water jar on his head. Amen.

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I'm Phil McCallum, a husband, father and most of all one of the people Jesus loves. I'm privileged to serve Evergreen Community Church in Bothell, Washington as Senior Pastor where people love enough to believe "it's all about relationships." In 1982 I made a vow to read God's word daily and apply it to life. Each day I write out my reflections. Some days I post those on my blog. It's a little personal but it's my hope it will stir you to go deeper still. Learn how I do my devotions. These are my thoughts and not necessarily those of the ministry I serve. By the way check out the computer study Bible Glo. I highly recommend it.

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