God Leads His Dear Children Along
Keep Up

Man of Sorrows

Donatello _Imago_Pietatis _1449-50 _Sant'Antonio _Padua
Donatello, Imago Pietatis, 1449–50, bronze relief from the high altar of the Basilica of Saint Anthony in Padua

Weeping Savior
"Jesus wept." John 11:36

No two words are as precious as these. The Lord of glory so identified with our suffering that He came to weep with us - and those tears led directly through Jerusalem and His triumphant entry on Palm Sunday to the Mount of Olives where He prayed through the agony of humanity, to the cross where He bore our sins.

There was a church hearing two prospective pastors or two consecutive Sundays. Neither had a great deal of time to prepare sermons, as they were farmers.
So, without realizing it, both discovered the same old sermon by a pulpit master on the subject of hell. On the first Sunday, the farmer-pastor presented his message with great skill. He was sure that the church would call him as pastor and he would be able to leave his plowing and preach the gospel full-time.

However, to assess the “competition,” he showed up and sat semi-disguised in the balcony. To his utter shock, the second preacher had “borrowed” the same sermon on hell and preached it adequately if not with all the smooth inflections of the first.

The church met and called the second preacher who inquired as to why. “I happen to know that he preached the same sermon as I did and not as well.”

“That is true,” replied the pulpit committee chairman, “I have that book of sermons on my bookshelf, but the second man preached it with a tear in his eye.”

There are tears in God's eyes as we choose harshness over mercy, death over life, judgment over forgiveness, and despair over hope.
It was a man named, Bliss, Phillip Bliss, who wrote the hymn about sorrows.

Our Savior weeps with us and for us. He knows our sorrows and cares. And His heart is broken over every lost soul. “Hallelujah! What a Savior!”

"'Man of Sorrows,' what a name
For the Son of God who came
Ruined sinners to reclaim!
Hallelujah! what a Savior!"
-------------------------------
I know you sometimes skip the song.
Do NOT skip this one.
You are welcome.


The Man of Sorrows | Harvard Art Museums

Aelbert Bouts, Netherlandish (c. 1451/54 - 1549)


Comments