Encounters with Jesus: Faith, Sacrifice, and Humility

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"Suffering as St. Paul says produces endurance, endurance produces character, character produces hope, and hope in the Lord Jesus Christ does not put anyone to shame. That's a journey we're on, a journey of endurance, a journey of suffering, picking up our own cross to show others that Christ is the center of our life no matter what happens in our life." [11:27]( | | )

"Judas was taking out of the collections already and he had evil intent. That nard I should say, he considered that nothing but self-promotion by saying the words he did. Sometimes we may look for self-promotion or self-benefit out of Christ. Christ is sometimes considered as gospel Freedom or as fortuitous gospel, you've heard it I guess put a lot of ways." [07:13]( | | )

"Self-sacrifice of course is where Jesus wants us to encounter him. He wants us to carry our own cross just as he carried his cross. The poster children for this are Lazarus, Mary, and Martha. Mary takes that one year of wages and pours it on his feet and the whole home is surrounded with the fragrance of this perfume because of the beauty and the fragrance of Jesus being in their presence." [08:58](Download clip | | )

"Christ came in in the not so triumphal entry we might say on a donkey, and not just on a donkey, on the foal of a donkey, a little donkey, in humility. He came in to serve his people as their King. As he rode in, throngs were around him, they were muttering hosanna. Did they know what they were after?" [10:13](Download clip | Download cropped clip | Download captioned clip)

"Caiaphas gives that great utterance which I think is just so ironic isn't it, that isn't it better for one person to die to save a nation than for the whole nation to perish. And then the Gospel of John says he uttered this of course in a bit of spite against Jesus but being the high priest, God uses it as a prophecy for the Messiah." [04:07]( | | )

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