Covering For Shame

Covering For Shame

Daily Devotion for Lent | Tuesday, March 20, 2018

Read John 19:23-24.

And when they had crucified Him, they divided His garments among them by casting lots. (Matthew 27:35)

Most of us know shame. Shame for something we’ve done long ago, something almost forgotten until a chance word reminds us, and we cringe. Shame for something that was done to us, that we know was not our fault, but we can’t shake the memory. Shame for something we can’t help and we can’t change, that maybe shouldn’t even be shameful at all, but it still causes that kind of pain.

When the soldiers crucified Jesus, they took His clothes away. Almost every painting and crucifix in the world shows Jesus wearing a loincloth, but that’s more a reflection of what we hope happened rather than what really did happen.The Romans normally crucified people naked. Shame was part of the punishment.

And this, too, Jesus bore for us. He came to be with us, within our pain and shame, to take it from us and onto Himself. He took our shame to give us His honor—His comfort—His glory. He died naked, in order to clothe us in His forgiving love.

There is no shame so deep that Jesus has not taken it upon Himself. And in exchange He gives us—Himself. Our Savior, our Lord, our healer. “For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ” (Galatians 3:27). When God looks at us, He sees His beloved children— safe in Christ Jesus.

THE PRAYER: Thank You for covering my shame, Lord Jesus. Set my heart upon You to love You through everything I do. Amen.

Brought to you in partnership with Lutheran Hour Ministrieslhm.org/lent

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About These Devos

SILENT WITNESSES Lenten Devotions 2018

For Christians, the season of Lent is marked by deep reflection on the appearance of the Savior and, naturally, what His life, suffering, death, and resurrection mean for our lives now. God’s human involvement in our world is a perfect example of His intimate love for us. He spared nothing to make Himself known to us—a fact that proclaims in no uncertain terms how “God so loved the world.” In Silent Witnesses, readers will note both the majestic—and mundane—aspects of the Gospel accounts: stories telling how God in His infinite power came down and “has spoken to us by His Son.”

Lutheran Hour Ministries (LHM) is a Christian outreach ministry supporting churches worldwide in its mission of Bringing Christ to the Nations—and the Nations to the Church.