The ministry of Jesus is grounded in
personal practices. Jesus' life is marked by prayer, solitude, worship,
reflection, the study of Scripture, conversation, community, serving,
engagement with suffering, and generosity.
These personal practices sustained a ministry that opened people to
God's grace, transformed human hearts, and changed the circumstances of people
in need.
Jesus modeled going away to quiet
places, spending time in the Temple, and listening for God. Jesus spoke to the woman at the well; the tax
collector in the tree; the rich young ruler on the road; the paralyzed man
beside the pool; to the lepers and the blind and the widowed and the wealthy;
to Mary and Martha and Peter and John.
He held a child in His arms, noticed the woman who touched His robe,
healed a soldier's servant, ate with sinners, told stories to Pharisees, and
blessed the thief beside Him on the cross.
He intervened to challenge unjust systems that abused vulnerable people,
overturning the money changers' tables and dispersing those ready to kill a
woman accused of adultery. He connected people to God, opened their hearts and
minds to God's kingdom, invited them to follow in His steps, and set them on a
path toward God. Jesus knitted them into
community, interlaced their lives with one another by the Holy Spirit, and wove
them into the body of Christ, the church.
By example and story, by lessons and
parables, and by inviting them into ministry and sending them out in His name,
He taught them to practice and live the ways of God. Jesus made maturing in faith and growth
toward God unexpectedly and irresistibly appealing.
-- Robert
Schnase in “Five Practices of Fruitful Living”
#5822