This book is a great devotional read for the days leading up to Easter Sunday. You will like it much more if you are especially fond of poetry. I love the way Sander's writes, he has a specialty in vocabulary and choice words. He is able to bring mind-bending Theological concepts and explain it simply in a devotional language, simple yet precise.
One of the things I took away from this book is getting to know Jesus the MAN. I know Jesus the Christ, I know Jesus the Divine, I know Jesus the Teacher, Jesus the Healer, Jesus the Majestic but this book helped me hone in on the life of Jesus as a Carpenter. As Sanders writes:
"What is the significance of the fact that, out of all possible occupations, God chose for his Son in his incarnation the lot of a working man? Why did the only one who could have chose His earthly vocation without any restriction choose to become a carpenter? It is not difficult to conceive the wonder and consternation of the angelic host to see the great Jehova, Creator of the rolling spheres, humble Himself to toil with saw and hammer at a carpenter's bench for eighteen years; to see Him who made the heavens and "meted them out with a span" stoop to shape with His own hands a yoke for oxen."
Sanders continues to explain that it was most obviously to identify himself with the common man, the working man. Here we see the Teacher joyously partaking in the life of a worker, a skilled laborer, his hands dirty, his body dusty, his head sweaty. This image impacted me personally as I went through a phase of an occupational change; from dressing neat and clean in an office environment to putting on safety gear and carrying tools for construction. I felt my hands turn harder and harder, my body change it's form. At times, working from sun-up to sun-down along with my fellow workers. I often wondered why God willed it that I go through this change, not that I am ashamed of it.
Our Lord Jesus exemplified the nobility of Labor. "Jesus is the working man's friend".
Our Lord in His divine wisdom and complete trust in God recognized these years of physical work to be his preparation, his training, for a coming day where He would stagger under the weight of His own cross. This is a great lesson for the children of God for in whatever occupation you fill your time with, there is a lesson that our Lord is teaching us, sometimes, we just don't see it at the moment.
In the same chapter about Jesus as a carpenter, we read a beautiful poem. Each chapter contains several poems and lines of poetry. This one was my favorite:
"In the shop of Nazareth
Pungent cedar haunts the breath.
'Tis a low eastern room,
Windowless, touched with gloom.
Workman's bench and simple tools
Line the walls — chests and stools,Yoke of ox, and shaft of plough, Finished by the Carpenter, Lie about the pavement now."
In the room the Craftsman stands, Stands and reaches out His hands."
Let the shadows veil His face If you must, and dimly trace
His workman's tunic, girt with bands At His waist. But His hands — Let the light play on them;
Marks of toil lay on them
Faint with passion and with care,
Every old scar showing there
Where a tool slipped and hurt;
Show each callous; be alert for each deep line of toil.
Show the soil of the pitch; and the strength grips of helve give at length."
When night comes, and I turn from my shop where I earn Daily bread, let me see
Those hard hands; know that He Shared my lot, every bit;
Was a man, every whit." Could I fear such a hand
Stretched toward me ? Misunderstand Or mistrust? Doubt that He Meets me full in sympathy?Carpenter! hard like Thine
Is this hand — this of mine: I reach out, gripping Thee,
Son of man, close to me,
Close and fast, fearlessly."
-Arthur P. Vaughan