Why should people care about Jesus’s life much less about His death?
I love the song “Flawless” by MercyMe. One line in particular sparks my imagination to see Jesus as the “Hero” who enters the stage of humanity’s history while all of us sit on the edge of our collective seats wondering if it’s too late.
Oh, but we know it’s not too late because there’s this miraculous, phenomenal gift called grace! By that grace, we know and love this Hero Who changed everything for everyone forever. Indeed, Jesus took the stage, walked the path to Golgotha, stretched His hands out for iron spikes to pierce, and suffered horrific pain until He finally chose to give up his spirit. What He did on the cross and from the empty grave changed my life and yours. We care about Jesus because He wrapped us in His righteousness and secured our place in the family of God and our heavenly, eternal home.
Megan’s art says it all. People need to know that God sees them, that He cares about them, that they’re so important the Father sent Jesus to save their souls. How many people out there in the sea of faces feel like they don’t belong? How many feel insignificant? How many fear that God is either incredibly angry with them or couldn’t care less about what they perceive to be their measly existence?
Those are the reasons we care. But how do we communicate to them why they should care?
Let’s be honest. Heaven is real, and so is hell. If they don’t believe God on this whole salvation matter, they’ll die without grace and that’s the most tragic scenario there is. If we know God, we can’t help but sense and accept the truth that He passionately loves every single human who has ever lived or will ever live.
Love is everything. Love always wins. As we share the Great Commission, the “how” isn’t the problem. God will supply. It’s the “why” that counts. Without love, we sound like noisy cymbals clanking and clanging in the stark silence of a lonely world.
Before we do anything else, we must ask God for the grace to love as He loves. People know the difference. They don’t like phonies. We must learn the “why” on our knees and pray for His vision of His beloved humanity the way Megan did when she drew this art.
Copyright © Marianne McDonough, 2024