Jesus Faced His Wilderness To Lead Us Through Ours
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(OPINION) What did Jesus actually do in the wilderness for 40 days? Did he wrestle with the angel of the Lord like Jacob before him? Or did he pray incessantly: “Lord help me” … “Lord let me” … “Lord deliver me from this task?”
I ask because I am not a wilderness sort of guy, and I know that a wilderness is no place to go alone to sit among dry bones and walk into biting winds.
Of course, Jesus wasn’t alone. His father was with him. The father sent him there for our sake, but it couldn’t have been easy. Forty days is a long time. Ask any kid who gave up candy for Lent.
If Jesus had taken along a pen knife to sharpen a feather pen dipped in ink to transcribe God’s word in Hebrew, Greek, Latin or Aramaic, he could have whittled away 960 hours a few at a time to make his days go faster, or knowing his end, he may have willed the days to drag on endlessly, watching the chariot of the sun creep across the sky drawn not by horses, but by snails. Perhaps. However, that’s only what I would have done, being human and weak of will.
Still, like Abraham before him, he may have argued, since a good argument can go on ever so long, the resulting action delayed, put off to the bitter end.
He must have walked a long way, step after step, descending into the valley only to climb again to the heights to see the country from whence he’d come and the lights of the city where he’d yet to go.
I wonder, did he sing old songs, ancient chants or hymns yet unwritten, lying dormant in the recesses of the human heart: “Amazing Grace,” maybe, or “The Old Rugged Cross.”
Once his decision was made, did he sigh with relief? Did a beam of light shine both night and day to show him the way? Or did he suddenly but undoubtedly know, so that on the 41st day he stood on the banks of the River Jordan and heard his cousin, John the Baptist, cry out, “Prepare ye the way of the Lord? The kingdom of God is at hand?”
As we prepare this Lenten season, let us walk through whatever wilderness we travel, knowing that Jesus walks with us, sure that he knows the wilderness far better than we, and knowing that, stays by our side.
Mike Aleman self-published "The Chalk Dust Poet" in 2020 but has had poems appear in a small number of literary journals including The Penwood Review, The Atlanta Review, Slow Trains and Elysian Fields Quarterly. His novel "Powder River 1957" is available through Amazon. Raised Lutheran, Mike has been a Christian all his life. He has been a member of Hamblen Park Presbyterian Church for about 20 years.