Leonardo painted a picture of Jesus for the King of France between 1506 and 1513 and this is it. So what makes it so valuable. The subject or the guy with the brushes in his hand? Ahhhhh, now there is a sermon. Of course we will probably not know who paid the fortune for it or whether they wrote out a check or put it on their debit card or maybe put it on a credit card for the free airline miles. You have to wonder?!
The point is this. How much are you willing to pay for Jesus? And here it gets really interesting. You cannot afford Him. I already knew I could not afford the painting but the real thing is even more past my financial reach. And yet what we cannot afford, He willingly gives. He gives Himself into our flesh in the incarnation. Though He is the Lawgiver, He puts Himself under the Law for us. He walks among us suffering the same frustrations, trials, temptations, and troubles of this mortal life (yet without sin). He takes upon His flesh all the pain of our suffering and all the weight of our sins and in a final breath dies our death that we might be forgiven and free. He rises on the third day to give to us His own life that we might dwell with Him and wear the likeness of His own glorious flesh forevermore. This He gives to us freely, without cost to us for all the cost He has already borne.
Wow. We are the kind of people who think an old canvas that somebody had already painted over, of a Mona Lisa looking Jesus, by a famous painter with a limited body of work, is worth the kind of money only a few billionaires and governments can muster. And there is Jesus in our midst offering His priceless voice to us in His Word, His water to wash the dirt off the inside as well as the outside of our sin stained lives, His body and blood no one can afford to be eaten and drunk in His holy Supper, and His hope to swell our hearts when death threatens to steal it all away. Wow, indeed!
The point? Go to church!!!
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