The inevitable witness of asking for help

Please give me a drink. – John 4:7

th-1We worship a God who became a vulnerable human being. Superman took kryptonite. Samson lost his hair. Jack Frost relinquished his wintry powers to become the town tailor. Jesus got thirsty. It’s a story that is played out not only in history, but in fantasy, legend and mythology – someone with supernatural powers gives up those powers to become human, and it is always done for one reason: love. That was God’s reason. “But God showed His great love for us by sending Christ to die for us while we were still sinners.” (Romans 5:8)

And yet Jesus did more than just come to die. He also came to live as a human being. And that’s how it came to be that the God who made the heavens and the earth, including the clouds that bring water to a thirsty land, wound up at the well of Jacob asking a Samaritan woman for a drink. She had something He needed. He gave her worth by asking her for it. Due to tradition and culture, He should have had nothing to do with this woman. As it turned out, He ended up revealing to her His identity as the Messiah — something He was much more guarded about with everyone else

Love always makes you vulnerable. There’s no way you can love without being exposed in some way or giving something up. Love and need go together. God’s love compelled Him to do what He did because that very love created in Him a need for us. By creating us He also created in Himself a place for us, and that need was reflected many times through the life of Christ.

Jesus Christ didn’t die for us because it made for good theology; He died for us because He loved us, lost us to sin, and gave Himself up to buy us back. By doing this He had to become vulnerable to the very system He created, that we might see how true love behaves. There is a death in love, and that death is the death of self. Jesus died to love us; we die as well in order to love and serve others. And part of that is in being vulnerable.

Sometimes the best thing we can do for someone is ask for help. Try Christians asking non-Christians for help. It’s a great way to start a relationship, as long as we can give up this idea that Christians have all the truth and all the answers. God has shared His truth with everyone. We do not always have to win the upper hand. By being vulnerable to those who need to know Jesus we will help them discover their own need for a savior.

Jesus asked the woman for a drink and three years later, he was asking for the same thing from a soldier as He hung on the cross – symbolic of the vulnerability He placed Himself into for the whole human race. Being vulnerable to those you love is a big part of passing that love on to someone else.

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1 Response to The inevitable witness of asking for help

  1. Mark S.'s avatar Mark S. says:

    i’ll add a very big Amen to this: “The inevitable witness of asking for help” and add that for me that has become one of the biggest lessons i’ve learned from the time i spent in a coma. From a bad car acceident i once was in and from the stroke i had – both are brain damage… Yet asking for peoples help and advice in trying to work my way off of disability income has given me a ‘leg up’ on others. Especailly to Sports stars, which I am trying to sell a vitamin supplement pack to add to their performance. So now often I find myself Praising God for His goodness & grace in allowing me to have these diabilities (sp?) Becauz man, oh man did I used to have a hard time getting up and being @ work soooo early in the morning! I used to often tell my boss the enginerring work i did @ 6:30 AM I could have jus have easily done @ 11:00 AM LOL and which he never seemily understood – and back when I owned an Auto Body Collision repair shop getting up early jus didn’t seem soooo bad…

    Oh well, I liked today’s messaage Pastor John – God’s speed & many blessings to u and your gorgeous wife Marti and all of your loved ones…

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