Reflection: Human flourishing involves getting real with God in prayer
Every year at Easter we read of the events surrounding Jesus’ death and resurrection, including these verses; however, I think we need to consider this scene more often.
Here we find the incredible image of Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane, after the Last Supper and just before he is about to be arrested. He has brought Peter, James and John with him because he is ‘deeply distressed and troubled’ (v.33).
I think often we want to remove from Jesus his humanity. He is always portrayed as cool, calm, and collected. We want a saviour who is in control of every situation. However, that is not the human experience in a broken world, and Jesus has shared our experience yet remained without sin (Hebrews 4:15). So, it is appropriate to be distressed and to beg God to save us from the time of trial, just as Jesus did.
After a period of being vulnerable with God about the anxiety he feels for what is to come, Jesus submits to God’s will in a phrase that is hard for us, as it was for Jesus at this time: “Yet not what I will, but what you will.”
The disciples are also being very human – they keep falling asleep! Jesus’ distinction here between spirit and flesh is not about spirit and body, but between our spirit being aligned with God, and the desires of the flesh that might distract us from following God’s will.
May we be strengthened to choose God’s will, as we encounter him in prayer; and may this lead to a flourishing relationship with him and others.
Have there been times when you have deliberately chosen God’s will, and fought your own inclinations? What do you notice about Jesus in the garden?
Prayer: Dear God, when I think about Jesus in prayer, and what he was saying yes to, it fills me with wonder. He agreed to follow your will for my sake, for my flourishing. Help me to walk more closely in Jesus’ way, to become the flourishing human you designed me to be. Amen.