'I just met Jesus' brother!' from you new Southern California friend
9/24/2009 11:41:32 PM
Good Morning. Can you imagine trading in the market, and striking up a conversation over eggplant, with this guy who tells you he's the brother of Jesus?


Good Morning.


Can you imagine trading in the market, and striking up a conversation over eggplant,

with this guy who tells you he's the brother of Jesus?

"So, I heard Jesus healed a blind man the other day--what's it like being his brother?"

What would the brother have likely answered?

"He's nothing special--just like one of us--in fact, I really don't believe the claims that are

being made about him. I grew up with him--he puts his sandals on just like you and me. . ."


It is true. . . Jesus' brothers did not believe in Him. John 7.5

Yet, open your Bible to the book of James, and read how James, the brother of Jesus identified

himself. (James 1.1) He referred to himself as 'a servant of God, and of the Lord Jesus Christ'--

what changed, for him to go from not believing in the divinity of Jesus, to calling himself

'the servant of Jesus Christ?'


Well. . . only. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . everything.

Jesus' family and followers saw Him crucified and buried, then saw Him walking around after He

rose from the dead, just as He had said He would. . . Acts 1.3: "After His suffering, He showed

Himself to these men and gave them many convincing proofs that He was alive. He appeared to

them over a period of 40 days and spoke about the kingdom of God." Paul tells us that among

those that Jesus appeared to after His resurrection was James, (1 Corinthians 15.7).


The early Church was built on the irrefutable, historical event of the Resurrection.

'The resurrection "was the belief that turned heartbroken followers of a crucified

rabbi into the courageous witnesses and martyrs of the early church."

More Than A Carpenter, Josh McDowell

People do not willingly die for a lie - i.e., of Jesus' 11 apostles, 11 were martyred


[If you want a short volume to begin to shore up the various claims of the Gospel, start with

the aforementioned book--it is powerful and well-written; McDowell is a former atheist who

was in college during the Jesus Movement. He set out to disprove the Bible, and shut Christians up;

instead, all of his investigative research pointed him to the truth of Christianity. I first heard

him in 1979 at the University of Minneosta--my mouth gaped and my mind couldn't take in his information

quickly enough.]


Back to being the sibling of Jesus. . . I've thought a lot about what that would have been like. . .

What do you think his brothers knew. . . and when?

Surely Joseph and Mary would have told their children about the angels' messages to them of the miraculous birth--

about the shepherds and eventually the Wise men coming. . .

about when they found Him in the temple, teaching, at age 12. . .

Was He patient when Joseph was teaching Him carpentry skills,

or did He let him know He really wasn't going to have much use for those skills?

~I wonder if He hollered when He hit his thumb with the hammer. . .

~Did He have a far-away look on His face when He prayed to His Father?

~Did they ever catch Him looking at a shaft of wheat, or the beauty in an olive tree, when He was

thinking, 'yes, I did 'good' when I created these'?

~Did they have any inkling when they saw their cousin, John, that he would be

a wild man for Jesus?


Do a little wondering of your own. . . think about growing up with Jesus. 'Kind of a mind-blower.

Hey, do any of you have an idea what the average meal would have been like in Jesus' home?

I'm sure Mary no doubt outdid herself for the Sabbath meal, but what about everyday fare?


James decided a living Savior, (all right--who happened to have been his brother!), was worth staking

your life on. . . I've always like James.


Be blessed today,

Christine