Misplaced Anger

In part three of our series, Hard Sayings, we look at Jesus’ hard assurance that if we stick with Him, the world is going to hate us.  This isn’t an easy truth to hear, but millions of Jesus followers around the world and in our own backyards can attest to the fact that it is true nonetheless.  Keep reading as we talk about why and what we can do about it.

 

Misplaced Anger

Have you ever held up someone as a hero only to have them fail you?  I’ve talked before about my being a Kansas basketball fan.  When I was growing up, Roy Williams was KU’s coach.  I idolized Roy Williams.  When I played basketball in grade school, I was convinced that I was going to play for Coach Roy someday.  I wrote him a letter to tell him about it and he sent back an autographed picture of the whole team.  I got to go to several KU games and watched with keen interest as Roy led team after team to victory. Read the rest…

Morning Musing: 1 Corinthians 4:3-4

“But with me it is a very small thing that I should be judged by you or by any human court.  In fact, I do not even judge myself.  For I am not aware of anything against myself, but I am not thereby acquitted.  It is the Lord who judges me.”  (ESV – Read the chapter)

“You can’t judge me!” may be one of the premier slogans of modern, western culture.  A hundred years ago, what the people around you thought mattered a great deal.  In many cultures around the world today this is still the case.  An individual’s identity comes primarily from their social structure.  In modern American culture, we are taught to place a high value on choosing a path that explicitly rejects and even makes a mockery of the social order in which we live.  The bravest souls are the ones who take what’s expected of them and throw it in the trash to be “true to themselves” just like everybody else…
Read the rest…

Digging in Deeper: Micah 7:7

“But as for me, I will look to the Lord; I will wait for the God of my salvation; my God will hear me.”  (ESV – Read the chapter)

Do you ever feel like the world is going crazy around you?  We hear more news today than any people ever in the whole history of the world.  We know more about what’s going on in the remotest parts of the world…and most of it seems to be bad.  The culture around us is increasingly sensualized as is amply demonstrated in the media.  The political divide only ever gets sharper.  Opposing sides of issues can hardly have civil conversations anymore.  Students have been taught for years that human life is of little value and the fruits of this are coming to bear in the news of school shootings happening all the time including another tragic one just last week.  Psychological disorders are common.  People are more and more addicted to just about everything–social media, exercise, body image, pornography, opioids, alcohol, stuff.  Consumerism and materialism are rising to levels unheard of in human history.  What do we do in the midst of the filth storm that seems to be raging around us? Read the rest…

Morning Musings: Daniel 1:8

*This will be a longer Morning Musing, but I wanted to draw your attention to the case being argued tomorrow before the Supreme Court.

“But Daniel resolved that he would not defile himself with the king’s food, or with the wine that he drank.  Therefore he asked the chief of the eunuchs to allow him not to defile himself.”  (ESV – Read the chapter)

Daniel’s situation was a difficult one.  He had been taken from his home, away from everything familiar, and dropped into the deep end of a cultural situation alien to his own at every point.  What’s more, he was expected to adapt to it fully.  His masters had in mind for him to become a leader in his new nation, but they intended to make him one of them first.  Oh, and he was a teenager.

In many ways, as our culture continues to change and shift away from anything recognizably Christian, we are facing a situation not so different from Daniel’s.  On multiple occasions recently, governmental appointees to a variety of different positions who had made public statements orally or digitally that exposed them as orthodox Christians were grilled by the congressional committees tasked with interviewing them about the moral commitments that came along with their faith commitments.  In each of these situations, at least one member of the committee suggested that they weren’t fit for their appointed positions because of their beliefs.  This is a blatant violation of the Constitution’s prohibition on establishing religious tests for serving in public office, but in the new cultural day, cultural fidelity is more important than constitutional fidelity.

Tomorrow, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in the case Masterpiece Cakeshop v Colorado Civil Rights Commission.  The outcome of this case will have a profound impact on the legal and cultural understanding of the extent of the freedoms granted by the First Amendment and what it actually means to have sincerely held religious beliefs, including whether or not it is legal to express those publicly and how.

There is a growing list of victims of those who have resisted the LGBT revolution because of their religious beliefs.  Standing for the exclusivity of the Gospel can get you in trouble in many places.  In the academy, particularly in the various departments of science, holding to a belief about the origins and development of life other than the Neodarwin orthodoxy can result in a host of repercussions ranging from reassignments to refusal of tenure to loss of employment and blacklisting for future opportunities.

If we don’t speak the language, eat the food, drink the wine, and worship their gods, the pressures on us to do so will mount quickly and our refusals won’t be met with patience and tolerance.  They will be met with anger and hostility.  Even those folks who like us will be hesitant to help us because of their fear of the repercussions they will face for doing so.  In the last presidential election season, a couple of homosexual hotel owners in New York were publicly scorned and shamed by the larger gay community because they sat down to have a meal with then-candidate Ted Cruz.  They weren’t interested in changing their position at all, just in having a conversation to understand each other better.

The questions and challenges before us, then, are similar to those which sat before Daniel.  Perhaps the primary question we need to answer is this: Where will we draw the line?  How far will we go along with the cultural tide before we stand our ground?  On which points will we compromise our comfort because it doesn’t conflict with our faith, and on which points will we stand firm because our faith doesn’t allow us to go along?

Daniel drew a line at eating the food.  Ironically, this was a point on which he could have compromised on religious grounds, but the food he ate was something which gave him an identity as a follower of the One True God.  Thus, he drew a line.  It was a small thing, perhaps, but a significant one.  It marked him out in a way that wasn’t going to be in anybody’s face, but which everyone would notice as different from everybody else.  So, he drew a line.  Then, he sought to hold the line and trusted that God was going to help him.

But, how he held the line mattered.  It matters for us too.  Daniel was never aggressive or arrogant in his line drawing.  He was not rude or demanding.  He had a sterling character and was incredibly humble.  This is the pattern we must follow.  If we are going to draw and hold a line of distinction, our character must be absolutely above reproach.  We need to be in a position of accountability.  We must be humble and gracious to those who are going to oppose us.  And, we must be prepared to pay the price for holding our line, all the while trusting that our heavenly Father is going to help us hold it.

The culture around us is changing.  There’s no denying that.  It is changing in ways that are not to our comfort and advantage.  It will increasingly become more and more hostile toward us as the days roll on.  We will have to decide whether we will roll with the tide or draw a line and stand our ground.  Daniel is our model if we will follow him.  He is also our confidence that when we are wiling to stand firm in our faith, we will do it with help from our God.  He will never leave us nor forsake us.  We must be ready to do the same.