April 15, 2019

Subscribe By Email

Subscribe to RSS Feed

JESUS CHANGES EVERYTHING


EASTER WEEK 2
Devotions written by Missy Iley

Monday
2 Corinthians 5:21; Mark 11:12-19

The doctrine of penal substitution (punishment for sin) involves a prescribed process which enables the complete restoration of mankind’s relationship with God by making a sacrifice for the forgiveness of sins. God initiated this principle after the fall of man in Genesis 3:21 when God killed an animal to cover Adam’s and Eve’s nakedness. God then further specified the process when Moses delivered the Law to the Israelites in the Old Testament. Under the old Covenant, the substitutions had to be done on a repetitive basis. Under the new Covenant, Jesus Christ became the ultimate substitution for our sins.

Over the next seven days, as we remember the most significant week in all of human history, our focus will be on the doctrine of penal substitution through the lens of Mark’s day-by-day account of the Passion Week.

On Monday, “the next day” after Palm Sunday, Mark serves up an unusual fig tree sandwich: 

  • The Fig Tree: 11:12-14
  • Jesus Drives Money Changers from the Temple: 11:15-19
  • The Fig Tree: 11:20-21 (on Wednesday morning)

By sandwiching Jesus’ condemnation of the fig tree around the cleansing of the temple, Jesus is addressing the spiritually-bankrupt condition of the nation of Israel and their fruitless state which could only be remedied through radical change.

According to Major League Baseball rules: “Teams are permitted to substitute players any time the ball is dead. The manager must immediately notify the umpire before the substitution is made.” Jesus’ cleansing of the temple served as his notification to the world that a “substitution” was coming. This substitution meant that God’s presence would be permanently moved from the heart of the temple (the Holy of Holies) to the heart of anyone who confesses Jesus is Lord and believes God raised him from the dead (Romans 10:9). Paul confirms this “change of address” in 1 Corinthians 3:16: “Do you not know that you are a temple of God and that the Spirit of God dwells in you? If any man destroys the temple of God, God will destroy him, for the temple of God is holy, and that is what you are” (NASB).

June 19, 2021

Saturday – Grace Day
Keep Reading

June 18, 2021

Friday – Psalm 46:10Do you ever feel like the noise around you is deafening? People and things compete ...
Keep Reading

June 17, 2021

Thursday – Luke 18:13Among many other kinds of prayer described in his book by the same name, Foster ...
Keep Reading

June 16, 2021

Wednesday – 1 Thessalonians 5:17 “[T]he time of business does not with me differ from the time of ...
Keep Reading

June 15, 2021

Tuesday – Luke 22:42 “We shall come one day to a heaven where we shall gratefully know that ...
Keep Reading

June 14, 2021

Monday – Mark 11:23Jesus says, “Whatever you ask for in prayer, believe that you have received it, and ...
Keep Reading

June 13, 2021

Sunday – Matthew 7:7-8Memorize and meditate on this Scripture as you prepare to worship.
Keep Reading

June 12, 2021

Saturday – Grace Day
Keep Reading

June 11, 2021

Friday – Mark 9:14-29Peter, James, and John had just seen Jesus transfigure before their eyes. As they rejoined ...
Keep Reading

June 10, 2021

Thursday – Matthew 7:7-8In 7:7-8 Jesus commands us to “Ask and it will be given to you; seek ...
Keep Reading

June 9, 2021

Wednesday – Luke 18:1Jesus taught a parable to teach his disciples to pray persistently. Jesus said there was ...
Keep Reading

June 8, 2021

Tuesday – Luke 18:9-14Jesus taught that we are to pray humbly, and also to confess sin humbly as ...
Keep Reading

join Us

Attend

Listen to

Messages

A place to

Support

Contact Us

Have questions? Want more information? Reach out to FBC Lewisville and one of our team will get back with you shortly. We are here to answer any questions you may have about Christ, Salvation, the Bible, this Church, Events, or other things we can help with.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.