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ALONE AGAIN BUT NOT ALONE
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Mark 6:45-46
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Immediately Jesus made his disciples get into the boat and go on ahead
of him to Bethsaida, while he dismissed the crowd. After leaving them, he
went up on a mountainside to pray. (NIVUK)
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The 5000 families had been fed, the disciples were refreshed, but
Jesus had another appointment. He needed time with His Father, and that
needed to be alone. Jesus had not come to wow the crowd but to please
His Father... and so the pressing priority was to pray. There was no
protracted celebration of the miraculous feast; instead, the disciples were
dispatched across the lake in a boat - immediately! They also had an
appointment - with alone-ness – and after that, with Jesus.
We know only a little about the prayer life of Jesus from those
prayers that were overheard and recorded; but we do know that He gave the top
priority to being with His Father (Luke 6:12) .
Without relating with the Father, the Son was incomplete (John 10:38).
When He taught about prayer, Jesus advised His disciples to get alone with
Father God - nobody else in the room, and the door closed (Matthew
6:6). But that night, the mountainside became the private
rendezvous between the Father and Son of God - before the next faith-training
session for the disciples.
That busy day had started when the disciples came back, two by two,
from their different mission assignments. They ministered with Jesus'
authority but not with Him physically present (Mark
6:7,12,13). It was a preparation for their work in leading
the Early Church. As night fell, they were once again sent out - away
from their Master. This time they were together in a boat, but the
evening wind was already too strong for sailing, so they had to row quite a
few miles against the elements to get back to Gennesaret (Mark 6:48) .
The crowds had gone away, the disciples had the quiet they craved … but
without Jesus they were incomplete. Once again Jesus was equipping His
trainee apostles. In the future they would often be alone against the
physical or spiritual elements. Their past experience and skill would
not be enough to fulfil God's will: but knowing they had Christ’s authority,
they also knew He would guide and guard, provide and protect them.
There are two areas of application in this passage. The first is
about prayer: if Jesus needed His secret prayer time, why do we sometimes
think that we don't? Of all the priceless privileges of a child, free
access to a loving Father must surely be top of the list. Without that
intimacy we cannot live as loved ones, engage with our Father's heart, or
have the confidence that everything about us is known. The second is
about being alone, physically separated from Jesus but related to Him through
faith and having His authority to act. It is like that today.
Fellowship is important, but so is the temporary isolation from fellowship to
make us realise how much we need to be in relationship with Him.
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Father God, how wonderful that You should want me to spend time with
You. Forgive me for treating this privilege so lightly and for thinking that
I can serve You at work and home - without discussing it all with You. I want
to follow the example of Your Son who made His relationship with You a
special priority. Teach me how to work with You today. In Jesus' Name. Amen.
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Thursday, March 7, 2019
ALONE AGAIN YET NOT ALONE
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