Tuesday, May 12, 2015
December 21, 2012
I woke up this morning and to my dismay ... the world was still here. How could the Mayans and Hopi's be wrong? How could Nostradamus and all those other psychics be so off.
My theory on the Mayans is a simple one. Late in their history the Mayans started a grizzly practice of human sacrifice to appease the gods. Apparently the fellow working on the calender, after revealing his predictions, fell into disrepute with the Mayan chief and was placed on the to-be-sacrificed list. He never had a chance to finish his dark predictions by writing how great the world will be having been scared into near hysteria. No more bank fraud, murder, war or famine. We would finally learn to get along ... right. The down side of this is we are still in a state of hysteria and will soon start pillaging and looting abandoned stores. So ... it becomes true in spite of the Mayan chief's attempt to correct it.
Second, even simpler explanation.
The calendar guy was old and lifting those heavy stones around with the added stress of a 'deadline' caused an unsafe rise in blood pressure and he had a stroke / heart attack. He either died and was unable to finish it OR his stroke was so bad he was unable to speak or move. The Mayan chief misinterpreted this as a divine curse and immediately started the government's human sacrifice program (HSP).
Whatever the reason ... I am sure upper management had something to do with it. Working at Wal-Mart really does open the eyes.
Ray
Monday, May 4, 2015
What does death mean to you?
Let’s first consider
the following passages:
Matthew
10:37 - 39 (NASB) 37“He who loves father or mother
more than Me is not worthy of Me; and he who loves son or daughter more than Me
is not worthy of Me. 38“And he who does not take his cross and follow after Me is not
worthy of Me. 39“He who has found his life will lose it, and he who has lost his
life for My sake will find it.
Frankly, this
passages sounds a bit radical. After
all, we are to honor our parents, be responsible loving parents and are raised
to work hard and be successful. So, for Jesus to put it in such an either or
situation sends it a bit over the top for many.
What would it mean to put parents first?
Missing church
because one of them or maybe the son or daughter is in the hospital having
suffered a life threatening illness or perhaps trauma from a fall or auto
accident? Would Jesus consider us ‘unworthy’ for being at their bedside?
I suppose some
would say yes, but that’s another matter left for future studies. For right
now, lets’ explore the more personal aspects of this passage and leave those
superficial questions for a later study.
What does Jesus mean when he says, “He
who has found his life …”?
Are we to
reject promotions, management positions which might require us to spend long
hours away from family, friends, personal study time, prayer or which might
cause us problems related to stress, worry, etc.? It is clear we are to reject
the things that are illegal or on the shady side. That promotion which comes
with a sacrifice of our ethics is obviously to be avoided. There are the stress
factors to consider and the dangers which might cause us to become puffed up
with pride, transforming us into a tyrant toward those we work with and
oversee.
Many more
aspects are attached to these questions and to address each one of them, not
only expands the list, but can lead into endless debate. So, keep these two basic
ideas in mind as we move to the next passages of scripture.
- Keeping to the basics what does Jesus expect of me? Remember the beatitudes.
Mark
8:34 - 38 (NASB) 34And He summoned the crowd
with His disciples, and said to them, “If anyone wishes to come after Me, he must deny himself, and take up his
cross and follow Me. 35“For whoever wishes to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses
his life for My sake and the gospel’s will save it. 36“For what does it profit a man to gain the whole world, and forfeit his soul? 37“For what will a man give
in exchange for his soul?
38“For whoever is ashamed of Me and My words in this adulterous and
sinful generation, the Son of Man will also be ashamed of him when He comes in
the glory of His Father with the holy angels.”
In both Matthew 10 and Mark 8 we hear the hint of physical death. This leads us to ask another question.
Grim Reaper |
What does the word DEATH mean to you?
I used to think
that these passages pointed toward martyrdom.
Giving our lives for His sake was dying the death of James and Steven. Perhaps
even like Paul being beaten, left for dead and imprisoned for the Gospel by not
denying we are Christians. They certainly are legitimate points, yet some will
live their whole lives and never be confronted with the possibilities of
imprisonment or execution. I was taught that persecution was to be expected and
the examples left for me were those found in the scriptures along with those
present day examples of missionaries dying for the Gospel. Present day
missionaries illustrate how one might leave their parents for the mission field
and also put their children under the same threat as they when entering a
foreign country hostile to the Gospel.
But over the
years I realized that the hardest death is not necessarily the physical death
associated with one’s execution or persecution. Although they can’t be ruled
out we must also take into account the passage found in I Corinthians 13.
1 Corinthians 13:1 - 3 (NASB) 1If I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, but do not have love, I have become a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. 2If I have the gift of prophecy, and know all mysteries and all knowledge; and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing. 3And if I give all my possessions to feed the poor, and if I surrender my body to be burned, but do not have love, it profits me nothing.
Sounds almost
as if Paul is contradicting Jesus. In these three short passages, every aspect valued
of Christianity as it is taught in schools, churches and seminaries is
summarily rendered moot. Missionary work and their sacrifices are not what
makes Christianity work. It is the surface veneer which lays on top of the true
spirit of the individual and what they truly value. This passage will be
eventually expanded into a posting entitled “The So-Called Brother”.
I need to
clarify something at this point. I am not devaluing missions, evangelism or philanthropy.
What seems to be Paul’s focus is the motivation, that singular factor which
drives one to preach while guns are pointed and give from one’s poverty (Mark 12:41 – 44). It can be pure or impure.
One acts out of a deep desire to serve God or out of the desire to look good
before others. Be aware, this last one can even lead to a guillotine or a hang
man’s noose.
Unless Jesus is
talking about a different kind of death. Perhaps humiliation is a kind of
death.
Peeling bake the layers of deception which has metastasized within us and
the church can be very painful. In fact, it can lead to death. Death of our
pride and arrogance toward those who are not in the church, still caught in sin’s
allure. When peeled back we start to look at those outside of His Grace the way
Jesus looked upon Jerusalem (Matt23:37).
We value our
image.
Loss of
_________________.
I get caught up
into this notion that if I am to do any good for God, then I must look good
before man. I must have an answer, I must defend the Gospel, I must do
everything in my power to make Christianity appealing to others outside the
church. This notion is just as flawed as the notion of Crusades for Jesus. Some
think they ‘defend’ the Gospel by rubbing their ‘holy’ character in the sinner’s
faces. This couldn’t be further from the attitude of Jesus. He attacked the religious leaders who knew
better. It wasn’t those caught up in the passions of sin, but the ones who ‘claimed’
to be free and lights of the world.
Death can take
on the following list.
Change of
Lifestyle
Habits
Associations
Thinking
patterns
Putting to
death … deeds of the flesh is becoming ‘deadened’ to sin’s luster. We are
transformed at that moment and become new creatures. We are freed and all
things have become new.
More on the
deception of worry in later posting, but suffice it for now to say this simple
principle.
God is a big
boy and He can defend himself. He can
also defend you. He promised to defend you and protect you … not necessarily
from the iron of shackles, but from something even deadlier. Pride, deception
and arrogance.
Humility comes
through hardship. When we ask God to protect us. He will, but not the way we
expect.
This is what I
think Jesus was saying when He said, “If you lose your life for My sake, you
will find it.”
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)