Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Thursday, December 6, 2012
Who can stand?
“10 Now he was teaching in
one of the synagogues on the Sabbath. 11 And behold, a woman was
there who had a spirit that had disabled her for eighteen years, and she was
bent over and not able to straighten herself up completely. 12 And when he saw her,
Jesus summoned her and said to her, “Woman, you are freed from your
disability!” 13 And he placed his hands on her, and immediately
she straightened up and glorified God. 14 But the ruler of the
synagogue, indignant because Jesus had healed on the Sabbath, answered and said
to the crowd, “There are six days on which it is necessary to work. Therefore
come and be healed on them, and not on the day of the Sabbath!” 15 But the Lord answered
and said to him, “Hypocrites! Does not each one of you untie his ox or his
donkey from the feeding trough on the Sabbath and lead it away to water it? 16 And this woman, who is
a daughter of Abraham, whom Satan bound eighteen long years—is it not necessary
that she be released from this bond on the day of the Sabbath?” 17 And when he said these things,
all those who opposed him were humiliated, and the whole crowd was rejoicing at
all the splendid things that were being done by him.” (Luke 13)
I
cannot express to you how immensely reassuring these verses are to me. By now I hope you know to look for the
gospel in every chapter, verse, word, jot and tittle of the Word. It’s there and in this particular story
the good news just drips off the page like honey based medicine.
One
of the reason’s it’s so sweet to me is a footnote in my Bible that says the
phrase, “that had disabled her,” is literally, “weakness.” She had a spirit of weakness for
eighteen years and could not stand up straight. Isn’t that just the most beautiful thing you’ve ever seen? It is to me and here’s why.
The
chasm. The gulf. The vast, empty, impossible void
between what I should be as a beloved son of God Most High and what I am. Paul’s rant in Romans seven describes
it. He knows what he should do, he
is willing but unable to do it! “24 Wretched man that I am!
Who will rescue me from this body of death?” We
are supposed to stand firm in our faith, to put on the full armor of God so we
might resist the evil day and having done all, to stand. But who can stand? “12 because our struggle is
not against blood and flesh, but against the rulers, against the authorities,
against the world rulers of this darkness, against the spiritual forces of
wickedness in the heavenly places.” (Eph 6) We’re
going up against Angels of Hell, no wonder we fall! “8 But at that time when you did not know God, you
were enslaved to the things which by nature are not gods.” (Gal 4) We are Satan’s slaves, in bondage! The Bride of Christ is chained with a
spirit of weakness!
Ah,
but “is it not necessary that she be released from this bond on the day of
the Sabbath?” Not, “Is it good?” Not, “Is it right?” But, “Is it not necessary?” The Sabbath was a mini-festival. A day set aside by God to rest. To rest in God and His work, His
provision. Every seven days there
was a Sabbath Day. And every seven
years there was a Sabbath Year.
And every seven Sabbath Years was the Year of Jubilee, the Super
Sabbath! The day all slaves were
set free! The day all land
returned to its owners. The year
everyone went HOME. These were not
suggestions. They were not just
laws. They were gifts! Wedding gifts from God to His Bride. Time set aside just for them!
And
who is Jesus? “5 And he said to them,
“The Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath.”” (Luke 6) The
Lord of the Sabbath! Jesus is our
Sabbath! Here is our Master at
last! Here is our Bridegroom! He is our rest from the toils and
slavery of our former master we sold ourselves to, from the curse on the land,
from the duty of the law and performance, from the old man I am! Jesus sees us; he places his hands on
us and frees us! Suddenly… We.
Can. Stand! Not in our strength,
His! The gulf closes. The void is filled with Jesus’ body,
Jesus’ righteousness. On the
Sabbath there was no work, not even to prepare bread. God prepared enough the day before. Now, we lift not a finger to accomplish
our salvation, our justification and our redemption. Jesus is the Bread and the Living Water provided for
us. Feast upon Him. Jesus is the Bridegroom who delights in
His bride, cleanses and dresses her and longs to take her to Himself! Run to Him! Or if you feel you cannot run, if you are still bound to
your yoke of slavery, to the old master, to the sin that will not let you go,
to your guilt…
Then
crawl to where He is, fall at his feet and wait, cry out, He will see you, He
will touch you, He will lift you up…
And
you will stand!
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Disaster movie
“6 And he told this
parable: “A certain man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard, and he came
looking for fruit on it and did not find any. 7 So he said to the
gardener, ‘Behold, for three years I have come looking for fruit on this fig
tree and did not find any. Cut it down! Why should it even exhaust the soil?’ 8 But he answered and
said to him, ‘Sir, leave it alone this year also, until I dig around it and put
manure on it. 9 And if indeed it produces fruit in the coming year,
so much the better, but if not, you can cut it down.’” (Luke 13)
Disaster
movies pretty much follow a formula.
Establish an array of main characters by following their lives for a few
minutes each. One of which will be
our protagonist. Protagonist will
be the only one who believes disaster is imminent. First half hour or so of movie will be protagonist trying to
convince authorities, general populace and love interest that disaster is
imminent while disaster gives everyone ominous hints and foreshadowings. The turning point of the movie, the
hinge, the pivot is the disaster manifesting. Now that everyone believes what they see with their own
eyes, the second half of the movie is them scrambling to survive the disaster’s
effects with varying degrees of success or horrific failure. Despite the fact that they are rarely
done well, they are perennially popular movies to make and I think I know why…
We
are in a disaster movie.
Luke
twelve and thirteen are a synopsis of this. Jesus, our Protagonist, is trying to warn everyone of what’s
coming. He’s pointing to all the
hints, the signs of imminent catastrophe that we’ve had along the way and are
yet to come and by and large everyone is scratching their heads, tilting them
to one side and concluding he’s a kook.
And it’s so easy to sit back, scratch our well fed bellies and conclude
that Jesus rose, the movie’s over and they’re all idiots. Here’s the problem with that…
We’re
still only in the first act.
Jesus
has not come back yet. The
imminent catastrophe hasn’t hit.
And that means we’re still in the first part of the movie. Jesus’ parable is about how we’re
getting a second chance. He has
come himself, the True Noah and done all that is necessary to save us, to build
the Ark of Salvation so to speak, his own body, and now is the time to get on
board. The great Day of the Lord
is coming and no one knows how long He will delay.
“13 Now at the same time
some had come to tell him about the Galileans whose blood Pilate had mixed with
their sacrifices. 2 And he answered and said to them, “Do you think
that these Galileans were sinners worse than all the Galileans, because they
suffered these things? 3 No, I tell you, but unless you repent you will
all perish as well! 4 Or those eighteen on whom the tower in Siloam
fell and killed them—do you think that they were sinners worse than all the
people who live in Jerusalem? 5 No, I tell you, but unless you repent,
you will all perish as well!” (Luke 13)
The
great philosopher Moffatt pointed out to me the other day that in our minds
people fall into two Carlinian categories: Idiots and Fanatics. Anyone less spiritual than we are is an
idiot. Anyone more spiritual than
us is a fanatic.
But
Jesus makes no such distinction.
To him there are only sinners: sinners on the boat and sinners too proud
to board. The rains won’t fall
until all have had a chance to board but they will fall, make no mistake. God is pained by our behavior, God is
hurt and grieved by us. We have no
concept of how much! It is
suffering for Him to withhold justice, it is suffering for him to see the weak
starve, to see the young abused, the elderly ignored or shunted aside. It is suffering to Him to see his
children kill each other, it is true agony when they don’t forgive one another,
it is adultery when we deny Him as our husband, our lover, our God. And the worst of all is when we, the
church, the ones already on the boat are the perpetrators! We who should know better still
sin! He forgives us for Jesus’
sake alone! So we have no room to
condemn anyone! For our sin is the
worst of all! “45 But if that slave
should say to himself, ‘My master is taking a long time to return,’ and he
begins to beat the male slaves and the female slaves and to eat and drink and
get drunk, 46 the master of that slave will come on a day that he does
not expect and at an hour that he does not know, and will cut him in two and
assign his place with the unbelievers. 47 And that slave who knew
the will of his master and did not prepare or do according to his will will be
given a severe beating. 48 But the one who did not know and did things
deserving blows will be given a light beating. And from everyone to whom much
has been given, much will be demanded, and from him to whom they entrusted
much, they will ask him for even more.”
(Luke 12) We hurt God every day and
only His goodness and long suffering and strength allows Him to postpone the
terrible Day when He steps in and cleanses the world of our wickedness. He is patient, He is longsuffering,
Sodom and Gomorrah He would have spared for just ten righteous citizen’s
sake. If there is fruit, He will
delay.
But
Jesus is saying, “40 You also must be ready, because the Son of Man
is coming at an hour that you do not think he will come.” (Luke 12) This is no game. There are no idiots and fanatics, there is none good; there
is none righteous, no not one.
There are only those who deny, denounce and decry the Day coming and
those who know their accuser is going to drag them before the Judge and they
are doomed…
But
Jesus.
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Whose slave are you?
“42 And the Lord said, “Who
then is the faithful wise manager whom the master will put in charge over his
servants to give them their food allowance at the right time?” (Luke 12)
From
head to heart then, the road we must walk, the path we must pave. From knowledge to action. From philosophy to propellant. It does us no good to know what we are
to be, what we are to do if we do not do it. “47 And that slave who knew the will of his master
and did not prepare or do according to his will will be given a severe beating.” Jesus began this text with warnings against
hypocrisy. Here he returns to
it. Over and over, Jesus keeps
saying the same things in differing ways.
Live genuine. Live as a
slave of God. If you do, people
will hate you. Live genuine. Live as a slave of God. If you do… Why?
Because
we’re shtoopit, cuz why! Because
we don’t believe him. Because we
see the world and the way it works and we think, no matter what we say we
believe, we truly act as if this is all there is! We spend the first half of our lives as if we will never
die. We spend the last half of our
lives afraid of dying. We hoard
and collect the perishable as if that were the only goal to life. We worry incessantly about things far
beyond our control and spend exorbitant amounts of resources and energy trying
to gain control of them anyway.
It’s madness! Noisy,
wasteful, arrogant, self-centered insanity and this season, Christmas, is the
greatest illustration: blinking lights; incessant background noise; business, business;
drive, push, imperatives to spend all we haven’t on the worthless and
unnecessary and for what? For fear
we will be thought unloving, unkind, unpatriotic? Which is another way of showing we fear if we don’t perform
as intended we won’t be loved.
…
As
constant and persistent as a bubbling brook set back in the forest far from the
furious rage of the strip mall strewn highway, Jesus whispers, “For this reason
I tell you, do not be anxious for your life, what you will eat, or for your
body, what you will wear. 23 For life is more than food, and the body
more than clothing. 24 Consider the ravens, that they neither sow nor
reap; to them there is neither storeroom nor barn, and God feeds them. How much
more are you worth than the birds? 25 And which of you by
being anxious is able to add an hour to his life span? 26 If then you are not
even able to do a very little thing, why are you anxious about the rest? 27 Consider the lilies,
how they grow: they do not toil or spin, but I say to you, not even Solomon in
all his glory was dressed like one of these. 28 But if God clothes the
grass in the field in this way, although it is here today and tomorrow is
thrown into the oven, how much more will he do so for you, you of little faith?
29 And
you, do not consider what you will eat and what you will drink, and do not be
anxious. 30 For all the nations of the world seek after these things,
and your Father knows that you need these things. 31 But seek his kingdom
and these things will be added to you.
32 “Do not be afraid,
little flock, because your Father is well pleased to give you the kingdom. 33 Sell your possessions
and give charitable gifts. Make for yourselves money bags that do not wear out,
an inexhaustible treasure in heaven where thief does not approach or moth
destroy. 34 For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.”
Who
then is the wise servant? The one
who acknowledges he or she is a servant in the first place. One who knows that all he or she has
belongs to someone else, to someone greater. But Jesus tells us one who, unlike earthly masters, loves
us. A master who wishes to come
and give us all things. A master
who wants to come and serve us! “37 Blessed are those
slaves whom the master will find on the alert when he returns! Truly I say to
you that he will dress himself for service and have them recline at the table
and will come by and serve them.”
I
know you see the world as it is. I
get it. No one’s more cynical than
me. Here you must earn your keep. Here you must perform or be cast
out. Here you must protect what
little you have or someone or something else will take it. Here we are constantly put in boxes and
categories. Here no one knows
you. No one takes the time to know
you because they are too busy trying to get you to notice them. The master of this world puts you on a
treadmill. The master of this
world doesn’t love you. Owes you
nothing. You are food to him. The miracle is: Jesus sees it too! He’s not saying the world isn’t this
way. He’s saying, we don’t belong
to the world! We belong to
Him! And in His house, things work
a little differently! You’ve been
purchased from the master of this world by the Master to come! The King over All. Stop serving the old master!
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Unforgivable
“8 “And I tell you,
everyone who acknowledges me before people, the Son of Man also will
acknowledge him before the angels of God, 9 but the one who denies
me before people will be denied before the angels of God. 10 And everyone who speaks
a word against the Son of Man, it will be forgiven him, but to the one who
blasphemes against the Holy Spirit, it will not be forgiven. 11 But when they bring you
before the synagogues and the rulers and the authorities, do not be anxious how
or what you should speak in your own defense or what you should say, 12 for the Holy Spirit
will teach you in that same hour what it is necessary to say.” (Luke 12)
Unforgivable
Sin.
If
the word “sin” offends you, the word “unforgivable” next to it must be
obscene. How could a God of love
not forgive? How could an
all-powerful God have a sin He was restrained from forgiving? Does His forgiveness roll off of it? Is it the Teflon sin? Forgiveness won’t stick. If you commit this sin as a child, are
you done? Should you just check
right into hell, do not pass Go, do not collect your two hundred dollars? How does one know when they’ve
committed it? How can we who do
believe in sin and have a healthy fear of it avoid it?
What
is it?
That
part, I think, is actually easier than we’ve made it over the years. I’m not a smart man so I hope and pray
what I’m about to say is actually from the Spirit. If you have been baptized with Jesus into his death and
raised, through him, into new life, then you are born again of the Spirit and have
the Holy Spirit in you. You have
the Word. Between the two, you
should be able to determine the truth of what I say.
Before
we can know what blasphemy against the Holy Spirit is, I guess we need to know
what blasphemy is. The dictionary
just throws out words like “profane” and “sacrilegious.” Not particularly helpful unless one has
a healthy sense of what “holiness” means.
Which I think is a real problem for humans, particularly for
Post-Nietzschien Westerners. We
come to the part of our minds and souls which should detect holiness, the
reverence and awe sensing glands and …bupkiss. Nothing. Those
organs are shriveled and atrophied like little, wrinkly stones. I think this in some way explains the
draw of High Church Liturgies.
People sometimes want to recapture that holy fear and defibrillate those
glands back to life. The sense we
get when we encounter something far too big for us: Sequoias, the Grand Canyon,
Mt. Rainier, Tax law.
For
the sake of illustration, let’s say God was the Grand Canyon. What then would blasphemy be? Calling it the “Pretty Good
Canyon”? Turning your back to it
and taking pictures of the people looking at it instead? Mooning it? I suppose, in a way, those would all be true. None of those however sound unforgivable
though, do they?
Numbers
fifteen describes it this way, “29 For the native among
the Israelites and the alien that dwells in their midst, there will be one law
for anyone who commits an unintentional wrong. 30 But the one who acts
presumptuously from among the native or alien blasphemes against Yahweh, and
that person must be cut off from the midst of the people. 31 Because he despised the
word of Yahweh and broke his command, that person will be surely cut off and
bear the guilt.’” “Cut off,” here is a euphemistic
way of saying, “hit on the head with rocks till squishy.” Sounds pretty unforgivable, eh? “Acts presumptuously,” that’s a little more
helpful! And it gets more so when
we read the little footnote that says the phrase could be literally translated,
“acts with a high hand”!
High
handed. Pride.
We
cannot, this verse tells us, commit blasphemy unintentionally. So all those of you who thought you
might have done it as a child, you can stop holding your breath now. Blasphemy requires the Knowledge of God
and His Law! In fact, God’s law is
always harder on the man who sins intentionally. A man who murders by accident can flee to a city of refuge and
reside there, protected by the Levites until the death of the High Priest. (Nu
35) Sound familiar? But the man who murders with a will, he
shall not find refuge. He shall be
killed by the avenger of blood.
With his own life, must he pay for the life he took. And therein is the lesson.
Don’t
you see? We are made in God’s
image. We are God’s
witnesses. Who was the
witness? The ultimate face of the
Father to us? Jesus! “8 Philip said to him,
“Lord, show us the Father, and it is enough for us.” 9 Jesus said to him, “Am
I with you so long a time and you have not known me, Philip? The one who has
seen me has seen the Father! How can you say, ‘Show us the Father?’ 10 Do you not believe that
I am in the Father and the Father is in me? The words that I say to you I do
not speak from myself, but the Father residing in me does his works.” (John
14) We witness by being like
the Witness. We are to be like
Jesus, our model, our high priest.
We bear the Father in us in the form of the Holy Spirit! How do we bear that image? By speaking the words He gives us to
speak and doing the works He gives us to do!
Now
it makes sense the unforgivable sin was sandwiched in between four verses about
bearing witness to Jesus. “For
the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy.” (Rev 19) The Holy Spirit bears witness in us and for us to
deny it, to live in a way counter to it, to disobey the God we profess to love,
to bear a false witness before men about Jesus and therefore about God the
Father, is to raise a high hand at God!
“My will!” was Satan’s cry of defiance! Right. To. God’s. Face!
“18 Before destruction comes
pride,
and
before a fall, a haughty spirit.” (Prov 16)
We
are all sinners before the holy God.
We are all guilty before the law.
Even if your holy glands are solid pebbles, even if you cannot imagine a
holy God, He is. You may have
never seen the Grand Canyon. You
may doubt it’s grandeur but that doesn’t change its existence, it does not
diminish its quality! And it
doesn’t change the outcome if you choose to step off into it. God is holy! We are sinners.
But
Jesus! Jesus died. You killed him. Now, the choice is this: did he become
your sin? When you killed him,
were you the blood avenger, wholly righteous in your act, removing sin from the
community and the presence of God?
Or did you raise the hammer in anger and become the murderer of God’s
beloved Son? When you meet God the
Father, will you come, forgiven, redeemed by the death of the Great High Priest
in whom you took refuge? Or will
you meet the avenger of Jesus’ blood who will never forget, never forgive?
What
does the spirit within you say?
Saturday, November 24, 2012
A Life Well Lived
A life worth living.
A life well lived.
By Jesus
(according to Luke 12)
Out
of the gate the first thing a life must be is a real life, a genuine life, the
same inside as out. (vs 1-3) What you show on the outside must come
from what is inside. It will
anyway. If you love the praise of
men and mask yourself to become something men love and praise, at some point it
will fall apart, the mask will come off and all will see you for what you
really are. If you love people
genuinely and want to serve them, people will know that too. If you love yourself and guard yourself
above all, then no one will know you and by that they will know what you
are. And if somehow you come to
the end of your life with everyone fooled… you haven’t fooled everyone after
all. For God will strip away all
that isn’t real and naked we came into this world, naked we will stand before
Him. So the next logical thing in
life is to…
Live
a life in fear. But! Fear of the right things. “4 “And I tell you, my
friends, do not be afraid of those who kill the body, and after these things do
not have anything more to do. 5 But I will show you whom you should
fear: fear the one who has authority, after the killing, to throw you into
hell!” Makes sense. Life is at best one hundred years. Eternity is forever.
Life, no matter how bleak and abusive your life, is lived with at least
the partial blessings of the Lord.
“because he causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and he
sends rain on the just and the unjust.” (Matt 5) There
is still the possibility of love, of hope, of redemption. Hell is the absence of all God’s
blessings. It is total separation
from God and the knowledge of that separation! So it only makes sense to fear the God who has the power to
send you there. But what is the
fear of the Lord?
“3 If you, O Yah, should keep
track of iniquities,
O
Lord, who could stand?
4 But with you is
forgiveness,
so
that you may be feared.” (Ps 130)
Fear
is… knowing God forgives? Even
though we don’t deserve it? That’s
fear? Really? That sounds more like…gratitude! Maybe even love! Certainly respect!
So
we’re living out of our hearts and our hearts are cultivating this spirit of
thankfulness for what Jesus is doing for us, so if we do not fear death and
man, then we will not be able to stop ourselves from acknowledging Jesus! “8 “And I tell you, everyone
who acknowledges me before people, the Son of Man also will acknowledge him
before the angels of God, 9 but the one who denies me before people will be
denied before the angels of God.”
Jesus is how God can forgive us.
“For the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy.” (Rev 19) So we are to be prophets! Well, no wonder Jesus didn’t want us to fear death and
man. Prophets, as he goes on to
explain in verse eleven, have a nasty habit of getting themselves dragged
before men who kill them. But we
live out of our hearts and in verse twelve, we see our hearts have become a
temple of the Holy Spirit, speaking through us.
So
a life well lived is that of a prophet!
Genuine, fearless, grateful, full of the Spirit! But that life is still lived in this
economy…
“the
ground shall be cursed on your account.
In
pain you shall eat from it
all
the days of your life.
18 And thorns and thistles
shall sprout for you,
and
you shall eat the plants of the field.
19 By the sweat of your
brow
you
shall eat bread,
until
your return to the ground.
For
from it you were taken;
for
you are dust,
and
to dust you shall return.” (Gen 3)
But
Jesus! He has tried to break our
fear of men and death and now in verses 13-34 he wants break our fear of
money! He says, “29 And you, do not
consider what you will eat and what you will drink, and do not be anxious. 30 For all the nations of
the world seek after these things, and your Father knows that you need these things.
31 But
seek his kingdom and these things will be added to you.
32 “Do not be afraid,
little flock, because your Father is well pleased to give you the kingdom. 33 Sell your possessions
and give charitable gifts. Make for yourselves money bags that do not wear out,
an inexhaustible treasure in heaven where thief does not approach or moth
destroy. 34 For where your treasure is, there your heart will be
also.” He’s promising to take
care of us! How crazy good is this
God? Forgiveness, provision? What are we so freaking scared of? “31 What then shall we say
about these things? If God is for us, who can be against us? 32 Indeed, he who did not
spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all, how will he not also, together
with him, freely give us all things? 33 Who will bring charges
against God’s elect? God is the one who justifies. 34 Who is the one who
condemns? Christ is the one who died, and more than that, who was raised, who
is also at the right hand of God, who also intercedes for us. 35 Who will separate us
from the love of Christ? Will affliction or distress or persecution or hunger
or lack of sufficient clothing or danger or the sword? 36 Just as it is written,
“On
account of you we are being put to death the whole day long;
we
are considered as sheep for slaughter.”
37 No, but in all these things
we prevail completely through the one who loved us. 38 For I am convinced that
neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things present, nor things
to come, nor powers, 39 nor height, nor depth, nor any other created
thing, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus
our Lord.” (Rom 8) No wonder Paul can go on
this tirade! It’s praise! It’s joy! What are we so freaking afraid of? The rest of the chapter is Jesus showing us what will become
of those who live like this and those who don’t. We who know so much, have been offered so much, have no
excuse for not living a life of genuine prophecy! The gifts are already ours! We don’t have to wait until death, until Christmas or until
Sunday! We live this now! Anything else is a betrayal!
Friday, November 9, 2012
Jesus ain't a faker
“4 “I tell you, my
friends, do not be afraid of those who kill the body and after that can do no
more. 5 But
I will show you whom you should fear: Fear him who, after your body has been
killed, has authority to throw you into hell. Yes, I tell you, fear him.” (Luke
12)
Hupokrinesthai:
Big fat
greek word which pretty much means to “act a part, to pretend,” in short: to
lie. Lying is a form of
hiding. Ancient Greek actors even
used to wear masks portraying their characters. You’ve seen Comedy and Tragedy? Jesus is telling us in Luke 12 we do the same thing, to each
other and to God. Charles
Zimmerman, the pastor at Calvary Souderton has said, the Christian four letter
word is, “fine.” “How are
you?” “Fine and you?” “Fine.” Pleasantries dispensed. Strangers remain.
Move along citizen, move along.
You don’t care about me. I
don’t want to care about you. Love
complicates my life. Better to be
unknown and unknowable except by a chosen few. To this I say, to live in fear of being hurt is love only one’s
self.
But
justshane, we have to have defenses, don’t we? We shouldn’t cast our pearls before swine, right? Won’t some people use the knowledge and
access we give them to hurt us?
Yes. Yes they will. For proof look no further than Jesus.
When
I look at Jesus, I don’t see him hiding.
I don’t see him limiting access until after a person has chosen to mock
or attack him. Even then he
politely excuses himself only when the stones get picked up.
Haha! Got you now, justshane! Jesus taught in parables! Parables are riddles! Riddles are hiding! Yes, yes they are. Matthew 13 picks up the transition
between Jesus’ plain teaching and the beginning of the parables. When the disciples asked him about the
stylistic changes, “11 He replied, “Because the knowledge of the
secrets of the kingdom of heaven has been given to you, but not to them. 12 Whoever has will be
given more, and they will have an abundance. Whoever does not have, even what
they have will be taken from them. 13 This is why I speak to them
in parables:
“Though
seeing, they do not see;
though
hearing, they do not hear or understand.”
He
had been dispensing secrets in buckets. This is after the Sermon on the Mount,
y’know, where he said, “39 But I say to you, do not resist the
evildoer, but whoever strikes you on the right cheek, turn the other to him
also. 40 And
the one who wants to go to court with you and take your tunic, let him have
your outer garment also. 41 And whoever forces you to go one mile, go with
him two. 42 Give to the one who asks you, and do not turn away from the
one who wants to borrow from you. 43 “You have heard that it
was said, ‘Love your neighbor’ and ‘Hate your enemy.’ 44 But I say to you, love
your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, 45 in order that you may
be sons of your Father who is in heaven…” (Matt 5) He
goes from this to “a farmer walks into a bar…” What changed?
The
reception. Matthew 13 begins with
these words, “That same day…” well,
what day was that? Look in Matthew
12. It was the same day the
Pharisees and Herodians began plotting to kill him. The same day he was accused of casting out demons by demonic
power. The same day him mom and brothers
came to collect him because they thought he’d lost his mind. Jesus never stops revealing the truth,
he never stops putting himself out there but he’s been struck and now he’s
turning the other cheek and that cheek is: he now strategically hides the truth
in a field of a story so only those willing to look for it will find it. Those who “have” the grace to go deeper
will be given more. Those who want
to know and be known by Jesus will meet the real Jesus. Those who choose to squint from behind
eye-slits and filter his voice from beneath the mane of their masks of pride
and self-righteous indignation have the same access, the same information, the
same Jesus. They have only blinded
and deafened themselves.
But
Jesus, he doesn’t stop. He doesn’t
change. He constantly engages
total strangers on personal levels. He continues to speak truth in love to
everyone, even his enemies. He
doesn’t only reveal himself to people like himself. There is no one like him! The men he bares his soul to the
most, Jimmy, Jack and Pete, are so bewildered by him, so star-struck by him,
the best reaction they can come up with when he gets all naked-and-unashamey
with them is to take a nap. They
close their eyes and ears and disengage from him too! “Whoa, Jesus!
TMI, dude! We’re just here
for the free bread and fawning crowds, man. We’re just looking to get an inside track on the future
kingdom. Frankly, we were sick of
fishing. All this mushy,
heart-to-heart, sensitive-male stuff is a bit unnerving and enervating,
y’know? Gonna crash now. Peace out.” How they must have wept later at the missed opportunities. How they must rejoice now in an
eternity of greater opportunities!
Monday
I focused on how we are all now one bread, one body in Christ. How can we be that if we hide from each
other? How can we be that if we
don’t want to know each other? If
the flour and the water and the oil and the herbs all refused to mix, there’s
no bread, just flour, oil, water and herbs burning in a pan. All the law is summed up in love. Did you ever love a liar? Did you ever love someone you found out
had been lying to you all along?
Did you ever love someone who, while they didn’t lie openly, they kept
you at arms’ length? Did you ever
feel like giving up?
So
does Jesus. Be glad he
doesn’t. Did you ever love the
idea of someone without actually taking the time to get to know the real
person? Then you didn’t love
them. “21 “Not everyone who says
to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter into the kingdom of heaven, but the one who
does the will of my Father who is in heaven. 22 On that day many will
say to me, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, and expel demons in
your name, and perform many miracles in your name?’ 23 And then I will say to
them plainly, ‘I never knew you. Depart from me, you who practice
lawlessness!’” (Matt 7) Four words
I never want to hear, “I never knew you.”
They are the words of a divorce.
They are the declaration of a lover scorned, a lover who was never
loved. “20 If anyone says, “I love
God,” and hates his brother, he is a liar, for the one who does not love his
brother whom he has seen is not able to love God whom he has not seen. 21 And this is the
commandment we have from him: that the one who loves God should love his
brother also.” (1John 4)
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