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When God Cried - Encouragement for Today - January 18, 2019

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Peace and perspective from God's timeless truths. Encouragement for Today --------------------------

Peace and perspective from God's timeless truths. [View this email in your browser]( Encouragement for Today --------------------------------------------------------------- [Liz Curtis Higgs] January 18, 2019 When God Cried [LIZ CURTIS HIGGS]( “Jesus wept.” [John 11:35]( (NIV) I was sitting on a hotel bed when the text arrived. Though I’d steeled myself for bad news, I still wasn’t prepared. My hands shook as I read the words, “Lizzie, dear, your brother left this world at 6:27 p.m. Mountain Time …” There was more, but I couldn’t bear to read it. A great sob poured out as I threw the phone across the bed. Not in anger but in despair. It can’t be true. It can’t be. Every emotion flooded through me as I tried to stem my tears, pressing a washcloth to my face. The thought of never seeing my brother again was more than I could bear. I wept until I could weep no more, and then I wept again. Perhaps that’s how Jesus responded 2,000 years ago in Bethany. Not just one tear running down His cheek, but a steady stream flowing from the depths of His heart, as He watched Martha and Mary mourning the loss of their brother Lazarus. When a loved one dies, “if onlys” often haunt our thoughts for weeks, months, even years after the funeral. “If only I’d called that morning …” “If only I’d insisted on a second opinion …” “If only I’d stopped by on my way to work …” Having now buried both my parents, both my in-laws, all three of my dear brothers, and far too many friends, I would offer this gentle advice about giving in to “if onlys”: Don’t go there, beloved. God knows the hour of each person’s passing. Whatever we did or didn’t do for someone we loved, the timing of his or her departure was God’s alone. Mary of Bethany surely knew this truth, yet she fell at Jesus’ feet that day, unable to hold back her tears. Jesus could hardly ignore her profound grief or the crying and sobbing of her friends. “When Jesus saw her weeping, and the Jews who had come along with her also weeping, he was deeply moved in spirit and troubled” ([John 11:33]( NIV). There’s more going on here than meets the eye. Jesus was visibly distressed — not from angst as much as anger. Jesus was mad? Yes, He was. The Bible tells us He became “enraged in the Spirit” ([John 11:33]( JUB), and “a deep anger welled up within him” ([John 11:33]( NLT). Almost like a horse showing its displeasure. Was He frustrated with Mary’s tears? Disgusted at her lack of faith? Not our compassionate Savior. He was angry with death itself and the grave’s power to rob His people of hope, of joy, of peace. When He asked Mary and the others, “Where have you laid him?” ([John 11:34]( NIV), Jesus followed them to Lazarus’s tomb, prepared to put an end to their suffering. What happened next was tender, sacred and unexpected. Captured in a verse with only two words, famous for its brevity but far more for its depth of emotion, "Jesus wept” ([John 11:35](. [Continue reading...]( [Learn more about RevenueStripe...]( [Read about Salem Web Network]( | [Subscription Preferences]( | [Unsubscribe]( --------------------------------------------------------------- © 2018 Salem Web Network. All rights reserved. 111 Virginia Street, Suite 500, Richmond, VA 23219. This email is never sent unsolicited. You are receiving this email because your email address, {EMAIL}, is signed up to receive newsletters, updates, and special offers from Encouragement for Today. [Link](

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