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Jump Start # 843

 

Jump Start  # 843

Acts 21:30-31 “Then all the city was provoked, and the people rushed together, and taking hold of Paul they dragged him out of the temple, and immediately the doors were shut. While they were seeking to kill him…”

We continue with our thoughts from yesterday. We are looking at two principles regarding the Boston bombing. First, we looked at the state of tolerance that has taken over most folks. That was our thoughts yesterday.

The second thought we want to consider is the intense religious fervency that is seen among the radicals today. That intensity is not new. Our passage for the day illustrates that feeling among the Jews long ago. As Paul preached Christ, some in the crowd boiled with anger and hatred. The passage says that they rushed the apostle, dragged him out of town and tried to kill him. This wasn’t the only time that happened. It seems that Paul was hunted down continually. At the beginning of Paul’s ministry, he had to be lowered over a wall to escape a plot to kill him. In Acts 23, forty men took a vow not to eat or drink until they had killed Paul. Why such hatred? What had Paul done to them? The answer lies in how these Jews understood the Law of Moses. They could not accept that Jesus was the Messiah. Paul was preaching the death and resurrection of Christ. The Jews viewed that as blasphemy. The law had strict orders what to do with a blasphemer. They were simply following the law. The more Paul preached, the hotter their intensity became. Paul understood where they were coming from. He was one of them a few years earlier. He was holding the coats as others threw rocks and killed Stephen. He dragged others into prison. He was on a journey to further stop the spread of Christianity when Jesus appeared to him in a vision. Paul understood.

From this we ought to see two observations. First, it would be great to see Christians take their faith as serious as some radicals and extremists do today. Not to the point of killing or hurting others, we would never say that. But to see some life in them. To see the needle in their hearts move a bit. To view some zeal and excitement about the dying Jesus. In too many places today, church leaders must beg their own members to come and hear the gospel preached. Shame on us!  Doesn’t the Lord mean any more to us? Do we have to have a guilt trip placed before us before we will attend church services during the week? At a college ballgame we will see fans in the stands with their faces painted, wearing the team colors, jumping up and down and screaming for their team.  Contrast that to church services where people show up late and seem bored. Have we lost the awe and excitement about our faith? Are we simply going through the motions? I see some showing up with no Bible, no concern, and no effort. They will talk about the radical Muslims and what kooks they are, when they could learn something from them about being interested in what we are supposed to believe in. Maybe we have spent far too long in the huddle talking about what can and should be done, when we ought to be out telling our friends about Jesus. Invite. Teach. Show. Answer questions. Defend. Promote. Stand up. Speak out. Those are the marks of someone who believes. I cannot imagine sitting in a jail cell at midnight, as Paul and Silas did and singing praises to God with other prisoners listening. Courage, conviction, not fearing others are the things that move others to act upon their faith. There seems to be two extremes manifested today. The radicals that want to hurt others and on the other side, those complacent, who don’t want to upset anyone. It seems to me that neither one of those are correct. We shouldn’t hurt anyone, yet we can’t sit quietly on the sidelines of life. We are God’s hands, feet, and voice today.

Secondly, being passionate about something doesn’t make it right. The radicals are passionate about their faith, to the point that they will kill those who disagree. Are they right? No. Others are passionate about approving homosexual relationships, allowing abortion if a woman wants it, legalizing certain drugs, and, the promotion of evolutionary theories. People behind these movements will pour tons of hours, dollars and effort to get their agendas recognized and legalized. Their spokesmen travel the country, like preachers. Instead of preaching the Gospel, they push their agendas. They will defend them. They will write scholarly books about their positions. They will debate and defend their points of view. Yet, that does not make them right. Passion alone is not the determining factor in what is right. Now, it can look that way to some, especially when they notice the complacency of sideline Christians. Commitment, courage, passion and fervency are wonderful traits, but they must flow out of and surround that which is right. When they don’t, they are nothing more than wasted energy.

So, there we have it. Those that are excited are often wrong and those that are right are often asleep in their faith. That seems backwards to the way it ought to be. Those that are right ought to be the most excited. I think we can learn something from this. The Boston bombing can make me look at my faith and ask, “How serious am I?” Am I moved to do anything about my faith? Am I moved to try to make the world a better place? Am I moved to defend my Lord?

I taught a class once entitled, “Lifeless sermons preached to cadavers in the pews.” Great title. Sad, but true subject.

The Jews chased Paul all over the place. They tried to kill him. They left him for dead on one occasion. Yet, Paul didn’t stop. He returned and kept preaching. When arrested, he continued to preach. He kept going until death finally stopped him. He was serious. He was passionate. He made a difference.

 

Now, how about you? When was the last time you handed someone a CD with a sermon on it? Or, a written tract? Or forwarded a Jump Start to someone? Or invited someone to worship with you? Or sat down across a table with someone and talked about Jesus? The rock group, Eagles, had a hit song many years ago, “Take it easy.” Maybe we have been doing that for too long. Maybe it’s time to take it seriously and take it passionately and take it like it means something to us.

Roger

 

 

 

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Jump Start  # 842

Acts 21:30-31 “Then all the city was provoked, and the people rushed together, and taking hold of Paul they dragged him out of the temple, and immediately the doors were shut. While they were seeking to kill him…”

The Boston bombings shocked the nation. It appears to be another act of terrorism that is based upon radical and extreme religious brainwashing. It is hard for many of us to understand how religion and violence can be connected. We don’t comprehend hatred with religious differences.

There are two immediate thoughts to consider.

First, the spirit of tolerance in religion is more of an American experience than anything else. Decades ago, the concept of ecumenism became the flavor of the month. It has remained among many mainline denominations. That spirit gave us such expressions as, “Attend the church of your choice,” and the idea that there are many different roads to Heaven. Preachers from different churches exchanged pulpits with churches in town and sat in on unity and peace conferences. Those religious leaders interpreted “love” as looking the other way. The “loving thing to do” was not to judge but accept. Those front runners of this movement opened the door for churches across the country to redefine their teachings and beliefs. Divorce was no longer questioned. Homosexuality was allowed. These churches moved from teaching the doctrine of Christ to becoming social reformers. Some of the popular preachers among them proudly announced that they do not talk about sin. They smiled and taught a twisted form of love that Jesus never did.

Those who have accepted the spirit of tolerance cannot understand why some are intolerant. They are critical of those who want to stand for righteousness and holiness. They point fingers at those who still use the word “sin,” and make those who stand behind Jesus feel as if they have done something shameful. When radical groups rise up to destroy those who differ with them, these tolerant folks are in the state of utter disbelief. How could anyone be like this?

Jesus was. He was not for violence, stamping out others, or bringing fear or harm to others. No. He wasn’t. But He wasn’t for tolerance either. It’s the will of God that says in Ephesians, one Lord, one God, one Spirit, one hope, one baptism, one faith, one body. What is that ’one faith?’ It is not the generic, bland, stand for nothing, “we love Jesus,” that the tolerant folks want. It is the words of Christ. John said, if you do not abide in the teaching of Christ, you do not have God. Jesus said, if you are ashamed of me and my word, that word will judge you. The words of Jesus that says He is the only way. The words of Jesus that taught turning the other cheek, also taught there is only one acceptable cause for divorce. The words of Jesus demanded holiness. The words of Jesus taught immersion for the remission of sins. The words of Jesus demanded that we deny ourselves and follow Him. The words of the apostles were considered the commandments of Jesus (1 Cor 14:37). Those words including withdrawing from members who no longer walked faithfully with God. Those words said to do what they did and to follow their examples.

Most today have given up the idea of being right, for finding a church that makes them happy. As Phil on Duck Dynasty often says, “Happy, Happy, Happy.” That’s all that matters. Following the strict pattern of the New Testament doesn’t do much for the tolerant folks. Remove the blinders. Look carefully at what Jesus says.

I am not for radical violence. It is wrong. I’m not for hurting anyone. However, I do see in some of these radical groups, an understanding, although crooked, that it does matter what you believe. The Jews were this way. This is why they chased Paul and often tried to kill him. He was teaching something different. That didn’t fit in with their beliefs. They were not in the group of tolerance. They didn’t think, it’s ok. It wasn’t ok for them. All or nothing. In or out. With us or against us. Right or wrong. You wouldn’t find those Jews saying, “Well, that’s your interpretation. I have a different one.” They knew that God had one view. One will.

Tomorrow, we will look at our second point. If you are one who thinks it really doesn’t matter what you believe or how you worship or what a church does, think again. It does. You will not find that tolerating tone in the N.T. What you find in the Bible is that God prescribes worship. He tells us what He wants. This is why we have all those details about what day ancient Israel was to worship on. Details about animal sacrifice, including the kind of animal, the sex, the age and the condition of the animal. God was telling Israel what He wanted. Those that tried things differently insulted God. Their worship was not acceptable. God never says, “Surprise Me.” He never says, “Be original.” Follow the pattern is what God wants. The pattern for music. The pattern for raising money. The pattern for salvation. The pattern for organization. The pattern for the purpose of the church. When someone doesn’t follow that pattern are they wrong? Some just can’t say that word. It hurts them. Their lips can’t shape that expression. Wrong. Wrong because they did not follow the Bible. Some will email me, “Oh, Roger, that sounds hateful.” “Oh, Roger, you sound like you are intolerant of those who see things differently.” “Oh, Roger, you sound like a terrorist.” REALLY? Could it be that the terrorist are not the only ones brainwashed these days? Have we been drinking at the well of “happy, happy, happy” for so long that we don’t know what to think about those who are different. Do we really think it doesn’t matter. Abortion…does it matter? Same-sex marriage…does it matter? Living together before marriage…does it matter? Has sin disappeared? Does it matter what kind of music in worship? Does it matter what is preached? Does it matter who preaches? Does anything matter? Brainwashed…makes you wonder, doesn’t it?

 

More tomorrow…

Roger