Thursday, June 30, 2022

The Matrix, the Sermon on the Mount, and the Lord's Prayer


In the model prayer Jesus said; Lead us not into temptation.  Why should we ask God to not lead us into temptation?  If God doesn’t want us to sin, why would He even lead us to the place of temptation?  What is the point of asking God to not do what His nature and character would keep Him from doing?  The word temptation has been translated as “the moment of hardship or suffering”.  That helps us a little, but still why would God lead us to the place of hardship or suffering unless it was in the long run good for us, in which case, we ought to embrace that moment?  This line from the Lord’s Prayer has been paraphrased, “keep us from the occasion of stumbling”.  Now we may be getting somewhere.  


Later in the Sermon on the Mount Jesus tells us: Enter by the narrow gate: for the gate is wide and the way is broad that leads to destruction and many are those who enter by it.  For the gate is small and the way is narrow that leads to life, and few are those who find it.  It is apparently easy to miss the right way. Along the path from here to our eternal home there are a multitude of options, all of which are opportunities for us to stumble, to fall into temptation and to take the wrong path.  Perhaps an illustration will be helpful. 


In the confusing and occasionally entertaining movie trilogy The Matrix, there is a scene in which the hero, Neo, is walking down an endless corridor filled with an infinite number of doors.  Each of these is a back door to and within the giant mainframe/software that runs The Matrix universe. Each is, or appears to be, a short cut. 


Jesus calls us to “the narrow way”. He never said there were no exits or off ramps along the narrow way.  In fact, one of the stratagems of the enemy is to provide for us what appears to be shortcuts to worthy goals and ends.  These stratagems fall into three general categories. One is the category of our appetites or the desires of our body. These in and of themselves are not wrong; the trying to find their satisfaction outside of God's will is an exit off the narrow way. A second strategy is for us to find confidence and the future in our possessions and things. Again there is nothing wrong with legitimate ownership. Provided we understand that we are stewards and not really owners, that we will give account of those things entrusted into our care and that having more of those things will never bring us the satisfaction of soul. The final and most dangerous strategy is the strategy of pride. Pride can take so many forms that the number of expressions of pride is itself infinite. It could be the pride in the color of our skin that turns into racism. It could be the pride of our good works that is a form of self-righteousness and legalism. It can be the pride of accomplishments in which we imagine in some way that because we do something that gives us value and meaning. Each of these three strategies has 1,000 or perhaps 10,000 doors that would lead us off of the narrow way.


So, what are we to do? A couple of strategies might be helpful. First, always keep our focus on the one who is at the end of our journey. Humility, generosity and purity can never find enough motivation except in wanting to do it for the sake of Christ. Second is praying that God would make us blind to the doors that would lead us away and if we should try one of those doors may God grant us the grace that that door is locked and dead bolted and welded shut and barred.


To pray, “Lead us not into temptation” is to meditate on God's grace and provision that would keep us from falling. It is not to think about sinful things and then try to resist them, that's counterproductive. It is, rather, asking God to help us to want Him more than anything else.

  


Friday, June 24, 2022

 Tell me about your heroes


We all need heroes, we just need to be very careful who we select as our heroes.  From the time we are toddlers we begin to identify people we admire, love and respect as our heroes.  Our heroes embody those things we value most, tend to shape our character and motivate us to action.  That is why the selection of heroes is so important. 


Heroes refine our values


We generally select heroes that are in some way consistent with our values.  Rarely will someone choose to admire someone we find to be repugnant and despicable.  In the beginning, even if we don’t like everything about the person, there will be some thing or things that we appreciate.  But heroes refine our values.  Suppose you like a coach’s commitment to winning and developing excellence in his players.  This coach may hold a position on an unrelated subject with which you disagree.  But follow that coach long enough and before long you might begin to tolerate and perhaps even adopt his perspective.  I once knew a man who was deeply committed to tea-totalism; he was also a passionate fan of a specific sports team.  When his team hired a coach with a history of recreational alcohol use and even a DUI this man was willing to “look beyond his drinking” if he could coach the team well.  Those people who are our heroes refine our values.  


Heroes excite our imagination

Our heroes also excite our imagination.  What we see our hero do we want to do and we even imagine doing that ourselves.  It doesn’t matter if our hero is a sports star, a political icon, a military figure or our dad. We see what they do and in some way we want to do that as well.  One of my heroes is C. S. Lewis.  He once wrote about how he loved a cup of hot tea by the fire with a good book and/or conversation.  My office has a fireplace and memorabilia from Lewis’ books that decorate the walls. I have English Breakfast tea in the cupboard and when the weather is cool enough I sit in a rocking chair by the fire to read and sip tea. I wonder, “What would Lewis say to this or that?”  


Heroes ignite our action.

What do you do for a living?  Reflect for a moment about the choice you made in your career.  Was there someone you admired, loved or respected that did that or recommended that vocation?  Have you noticed that careers tend to run in families?  I was talking to a doctor friend of mine recently about how he got into medicine.  While they each had different specialities most of the men in his extended family were doctors of some sort or another.  It seemed to have begun with one of his progenitors who at the turn of the last century was the doctor, dentist and, if need be, vet for a small rural community.  


The Church Needs Heroes


The church needs heroes or, perhaps, I should say the church needs better heroes.  Over the last generation or so our heroes have not served us very well.  We make heroes of our mega church pastors, music stars, religion iconoclasts and growth gurus.  Sadly, the church has lived down to those heroes.  They have at best reflected our culture and its values and at worst been as Paul puts it, “But evil men and impostors, will go from bad to worse, deceiving and being deceived.”  


Let me suggest a better class of heroes.  June 29th is the day we remember the greatest band of heroes, Christian Martyrs.  The Sunday before, many churches will stop and reflect on the lives and faith of those for whom Jesus’ invitation to come and die were physically lived out.  Christ doesn’t call all His disciples to become martyrs.  However, we are all to take up our cross daily and follow Him.  When we have martyrs for heroes we refine our values, excite our imagination and are moved to action.    





Friday, June 17, 2022

Getting Back to Nature

We all have a craving for something, but we don’t know what it is.  A deep longing that can’t be named and comes out in what can be odd and even dangerous ways.  We have lost something, but we don’t know what it is, where to look for it, and how to recognize it if we found it.  Sometimes this longing manifests itself when people say, “I want to find myself.”  In one sense of the meaning that is the dumbest thing a person can say.  Look at the ground, that is where you are, you have now found yourself; congratulations.  In another way, “finding oneself” is about discovering one's place and connection to the whole of life and the universe.  In their late teens and early twenties more than a few young adults have gone on lengthy expeditions to find themselves.  Walking across the continent, hiking the AT, or the Pacific Crescent, riding the TAT.  These adventures are symptoms of looking for something.  Often discovering the question is more important than finding the answer.  But what is to be found sleeping in a tent in the wilderness at the mercy of the elements?



Another example is people developing relationships with animals. I've known more than a few people who said they like animals better than human beings. In view of the behavior of some human beings, that's understandable. But this quest for extreme relationships of animals goes far beyond having a dog or cat or goldfish. People will dedicate their lives to learning about every detail about specific animals. People will travel the globe to scuba dive and see some exotic fish or coral reefs. Some climb high into the Himalayan Mountains to get a picture of a snow leopard. In some cases, they will even dedicate their lives to having exotic animals. There seems to be a search for a connection to something and these animals appear to be the doorway. What are we looking for that we are trying to find in this return to nature?


 Sometimes we find disastrous results in these efforts to go back to nature. More than a few people have died of exposure, dehydration, malnutrition, poisoning or accidents while they are out in the wild. Nature seems to be fickle and untrustworthy. The accounts of wild animals that were thought to be domesticated but turned into killers or naturalists who in the wild are killed by animals are not terribly uncommon. Nevertheless, people continue to look for something in nature the way salmon return to the stream where they were hatched.  For what are we looking?  


In Genesis 2, we learned that God made a beautiful world populated by plants, animals and  something special: the human being.  For an undetermined period of time Adam and Eve lived in a paradise along with the flora and fauna.  There was a stewardship or management of creation given to the humans, both meaningful work and delightful enjoyment.  But as a result of sin the whole of creation is thrown into chaos and corruption. The relationships within the paradise in the creation is disrupted and indeed becomes hostile.  That paradise of Eden exists only in the memory of the race who ruined it.  A memory that haunts us like a delightful, recurring dream that always ends too soon.  It is like a splinter in the mind and inflammation of the soul, an inexhaustible longing for something we know not what, but are sure we would recognize it if we ever saw it.   


We are homesick for Eden.  Every heart throb caused by a sunset over the ocean, every soul sigh that comes from looking at a perfect rose, every fantasy to snuggle a bear, play tag with a lion, or swim with a dolphin is a homesick cry for Eden.  Eden is coming back, not by man learning to live in harmony with a fallen world.  Eden is coming back because God will restore the broken world.  As Isaiah says


Also the cow and the bear will graze,

Their young will lie down together,

And the lion will eat straw like the ox.

The nursing child will play by the hole of the cobra,

And the weaned child will put his hand on the viper’s den.

They will not hurt or destroy in all My holy mountain,

For the earth will be full of the knowledge of the Lord

As the waters cover the sea.


Let every pang of your heart call you to Eden or, I should say, call you back to the God who made you for Eden.



Tuesday, June 14, 2022

Big

 The Problem with Big is not the Problem


We are all distressed about something big.  Depending on who you listen to and what ax they are grinding here is a list of the ‘Bigs’ that are out to ruin us.  There is big oil which is destroying the environment.  There is big pharma which is creating addictions and illnesses that they will treat with their new drugs, for a wallet-breaking fee.  There is big Ag which is producing more and more food of lower and lower quality and poisoning us in the process.  There is big sugar which is killing us one treat at a time.  What about big government which wants to micro-  manage every detail of our lives?  Big healthcare has removed any sense of higher calling from medicine and turned it over solely to profiteers.  Let’s not forget the big global conspiracies that want to create a one world government in which all people become slaves to the ruling elite.  Worst of all may be big tech which is moving to control and manipulate what you think on every subject.


I am not denying that many of these are, in fact, problems and in some cases actually evil. But Big is not really as much of a problem as we might think.  In fact, God has a great history of bringing big-shot individuals and organizations to nothing.  Egypt seemed as invincible as a huge crocodile.  She ruled North Africa and everyone was convinced that her Pharaoh was a god. Ten plagues later he was bribing God’s people to leave. The Assyrians took military cruelty and power to a whole new level.  The Assyrians come to Jerusalem in mass, they trash talked Judah’s God and king.  The Assyrian king offers the defenders 2,000 horses if they could put riders on them, knowing they couldn’t.  Surrounded by 185,000 troops, 2,000 cavalry would accomplish little.  But when you smack talk God long enough, you can expect to get smacked.  Overnight, 185,000 soldiers are killed by The Angel of the Lord, the king runs away and is murdered by two of his sons.  Babylon is invincible, both as an empire and as a city.  Armies could attack the city all they like and it would be like tiny waves beating themselves against a stone wall; nothing would happen.  So confident was Belshazzar that while the Persian-Mede armies laid siege, he organized a massive orgy.  But the party was interrupted by a disembodied hand writing on the wall, “MENE, MENE, TEKEL, UPHARSIN.”  Briefly the message means, “Measure, measure, you have come up short”.   The great Medo-Persian Empire was advanced, expansive, rich and powerful.  At its peak, it stretched for over 3,000 miles and was the last nation to bring the people of Afghanistan into compliant obedience.  How hard is that?  But their purpose was to return the Jews from exile and to rebuild the temple.  Dariaus from all his grandeur was a pawn in God’s plan, just a bit player.  We could go on and talk about Alexander the great Greek, no one could stand against him, one of the greatest military minds of all history.  What about Rome?  An empire of iron, brought to its knees by someone from an insignificant town in a tiny province whose followers refused to be intimidated by power, might, wealth or death. 


Relative to their world and time all of these “Bigs” were much bigger than any Big we can name today.  The problem with Big is not the problem.  The problem with Big is we fail to realize how transitory and inconsequential these Bigs actually are. In 1000 years, the most powerful, evil cabal you can imagine will be nothing compared to the most humble disciple .  What will it benefit a man if he gains the whole world but loses his very soul?  


It might be that all the forces at work in our world today will end and destroy the U.S.A., Democracy and personal freedom.  It might be God’s way of ushering in a new season of spiritual awakening, holiness, and evangelistic zeal.  If that is the case, so be it.  What we need to remember is that the only “Big” we need to focus on is our big God.  To do that we must be a people of worship.  In every case I mentioned in the history of Israel and the early church was marked by intense worship on the part of the people dedicated to God.  If you are not a person of worship, then the evil ‘bigs’ of the world ought to scare you.  But if you are a committed disciple none of these are a problem.  So, here is what we can do to keep things in perspective, say as we face things that might worry you, “Big God, little devil, Big God, little problems.”  


Friday, June 3, 2022

Why I don't believe in democracy!

 Why I don’t believe in democracy 

Last week we had our primary elections.  We participated in the supreme act of democracy, the voice of all the people making their opinions heard as we began to select our leaders.  I actually don’t believe in democracy because I think everyone is equal, or equally qualified to lead.  Sometimes you stop and ask what we believe and if what you have believed is Biblical or not. Popularly, democracy means that all men are equal. But what do we mean by “equal”?  Without carefully defining what we mean by “equal” we can come up with some pretty dangerous ideals. 

In fact, no one actually believes we are all equal. You don’t believe it and I don’t believe it. If you have ever used the reviews of past customers or patients to consider which mechanic or dentist you will use, you don’t believe that all are equal. If you did, you would simply go to whatever mechanic or dentist you happened across.  If you have ever asked a friend, “Do you know of a good barber, painter, tutor, etc,” then you believe some are better than others and you do not believe in equality.  I have a friend that I am not sure is capable of driving a car; I would never get in a car and ride with him.  I have another friend that, every so often, I lay back, allow him to poke around in my mouth, occasionally jab me with a needle and use a drill on my body.  I do not consider these men equal. 

 “We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal…”  In what ways are all men equal?  Are they equal in raw I.Q.?  What about physical ability or appearance?  In what way are all men equal?  People are equal in only two ways.  They are equal only in the sense that all men are equally created in God’s image.  The very underpinning of our concept of democracy is the concept of God the creator.  All men are of equal value because of their value before the Creator.  But that is not the reason I believe in democracy. 

There is another Biblical concept of man’s equality, and that is the reason I believe in democracy.  All men are sinners.  All men have a capacity for evil that is dramatic and terrifying.  The Biblical teaching on the Fall and the result of the Fall means that even the best of men can, under certain circumstances, become a threat to other men.  The more power that a man has, the more he has the capacity to inflict harm, and if he has unlimited power, he is capable of inflicting almost unlimited evil.  I want such men restrained by other men, by all men.  I would at this moment like to go into a lengthy discussion of my own political theory.  But I will suffice it to say that the intended representative democracy of our founders is the best possible form of government.  It is made possible by the goodness of men and made necessary by the evil of those same men.

 Finally, I want to say-need to say-that I have no hope that even the best elected officials can bring this country to where it needs to be; that can only be done by God.  And He has chosen to work through the church, the disciple, and the family.  Which means that while my voting last week was important it wasn’t nearly as important as my morning prayers.