Robert Griffith | 5 March 2024
Robert Griffith
5 March 2024

 

Isaiah 49:4   But I said, “I have laboured in vain; I have spent my strength for nothing at all. Yet what is due me is in the Lord’s hand, and my reward is with my God.”

If you have ever experienced this, you are part of a much larger group of people than you might believe. You may be surprised to discover that you’re listening in on a discourse by Christ. It was prophetically revealed before Jesus even began His earthly ministry. When Jesus Christ came to earth, we know little of his childhood and even less of his teen and early adult years before 30 when He began His earthly ministry.

Apart from His birth and an encounter at the Temple when He was 12 years old, the Gospels concentrate on the three years of His ministry from His baptism to His death, resurrection and ascension.  Imagine, then, for a moment what it must have been like for the Son of God growing up in a poor village as a carpenter’s son.  So unnoticed and disregarded was this village that even Nathanael, when introduced to the Saviour, asked, “Can anything good come from Nazareth?”  (John 1:46)

Consider what it must have been like for Jesus, working away in Joseph’s carpenter’s shop making furniture when He spoke the world into being!  Imagine those hands that would one day heal the blind, cleanse the leper, and raise the dead; toiling every day with common, ordinary, everyday, menial chores.

Ever wondered where Jesus sat when He went to the Synagogue?  Most likely in the same place you would, in the crowd listening to the Word being taught that He wrote.  It wasn’t until He was 30 years old that He rose in a typical Sabbath gathering at His hometown Synagogue in Nazareth and read from the scroll of Isaiah, the prophet. After He sat down, He said, “Today this scripture is fulfilled in your hearing.”  (Luke 4:21)

Wouldn’t you have loved to have been there that day?  In the years prior to His earthly ministry, as well as in those three years of Jesus’ public ministry, there were times when His work seemed to be in vain.  The religious leaders opposed Him, the disciples didn’t always understand Him and those He healed didn’t always thank Him. Being both man and God, Jesus lived and laboured by faith.

Hebrews 2:17  “For this reason he had to be made like them, fully human in every way, in order that he might become a merciful and faithful high priest in service to God, and that he might make atonement for the sins of the people.”

Hebrews 5:8  “Son though he was, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”

Though I don’t understand it, I take comfort in knowing that if the Son of God lived in anonymity and wrestled with work that seemed pointless and yet He remained faithful and entrusted all that He did into His Father’s hands for eternal gain, I can certainly commit all that I do, even the menial everyday tasks that may never gain earthly recognition, into His hands and trust God to use everything I commit to, for His glory and the growth of His Kingdom.

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