Whatever
our Lord’s physical strength may have been, the
power and discipline of his mind was even
more overwhelming, perhaps to a level that our own
minds cannot really comprehend but can only glimpse.
Think for a moment of some of the examples we know.
The unwavering, straight-ahead rejection of Satan’s
strongest suggestions:
Try
to imagine the discipline needed to turn from bread
after forty days of fasting.
The lifetime avoidance of the misuse of any power:
Try
to imagine the discipline required to go from the
Last Supper to Calvary with no sleep and no food,
under constant petty abuse as well as physical torment,
yet to never tap the power that could have instantly
stopped the abuse. (“Who, when
he was reviled, reviled not…” 1 Peter 2:23.)
In
essence, all of Christ’s recorded temptations were
attempts to cause him to misuse his power. Thus
the marvel of his character lies not only in what
he did, but in what he refrained from
doing. (Try to imagine having a billion dollars
and never spending one cent on yourself.)
The emotional power by which he rejected discouragement
despite incredible odds:
Try
to imagine a small province (half the size of New
Hampshire), ruled by a wild-eyed half-Israelite
who is supervised by the world’s most powerful empire.
Emerging out of a carpenter’s shop in the province’s
most despised corner comes one proclaiming himself
as the Redeemer of humanity and the founder of an
everlasting kingdom.
Try
to imagine the inner strength necessary under those
circumstance to stay always positive,
always optimistic despite ever-growing persecution.
The Lord suffered rejection by his own town, by
his friends. He endured inadequate and shallow understanding
even on the part of those closest to him. He knew
that his own life and the lives of many of his followers
would end violently (Mark 8:31; Matthew 10:17-22).
We would expect from a person in those circumstance
gloom, discouragement, or at least occasional moodiness
or cynicism. Try to imagine such a one who showed
none of these, ever.
The mental discipline by which he prepared in advance
for every opportunity and every crisis:
If
it is true that one hallmark of greatness is inner
preparation and planning prior to outward acts,
try to imagine the supreme example of the Lord in
the thirty-year preparation preceding his three-year
ministry, in the quiet mountainside moments or seaside
serenity that preceded some of his greatest miracles
and greatest speeches, in the Gethsemane that preceded
his Calvary.
The
inner strength that allowed him to live the most
misunderstood and lonely of lives: If it is true
that “to be great is to be misunderstood” and if
“the altitude of a mountain is the measure or its
solitude,” then try to imagine the loneliness of
the Lord and the discipline required to “descend
beneath them all” (Ephesians 4:9-10).
The incredible patience he showed toward those with
him:
Try
to imagine doing what he did in spite of the inadequacy
of the human instruments he worked with – men who
wanted vengeance (Luke 9:54), who were steeped in
Jewish tradition (Mark 7:13), who bickered over
their relative status in the kingdom (Matthew 20:20-21;
Mark 10:35-41), who misunderstood even at the Last
Supper (Luke 22:24).
In
essence, our Lord’s mind was simply stronger than
all that surrounded him. He always acted; he never
reacted. No doubt he usually had the guidance and
help of the other two members of the Godhead, yet
we know there were times when he was left with only
his own inner strength to conquer the world.
This
he did, and because he did, we are!
See
you here at this column next week, when we will
think together about the Master’s courage and fearlessness.