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The Legacy of Value

In preparation for a recent sermon, I came across a list of the world’s most lavish individual purchases.  At the top of the list was the acquisition of the History Supreme Yacht for 4.5 billion dollars.  This is no ordinary boat! The History Supreme is made from solid gold and platinum. Its main stateroom displays a bed whose headboard contains genuine Tyrannosaurus Rex bones (Go figure – The “Night at the Museum” franchise just got a new movie script).  While you are I are probably not ready to run out and purchase a four billion dollar ship – we should take time to carefully consider what is most valuable to us.  This is particularly true in light of the trouble and turmoil of the last year – including the ongoing mess that we call an election.  What we value most will be the driving force behind our lives, will determine whether we live in joyful contentment or anxious vexation, and will establish our spiritual legacy.  The true measure of what we value is always revealed during times of great stress and difficulty.

So, what has greatest worth in your life?  Your car, your home, your country, your reputation, your career, your hobbies, your health, your family, your spouse?  All these have merit of one degree or another.  But there is one person who is to be of ultimate value, our Lord Jesus.  He is of infinitely greater worth than the vast fortunes of Jeff Bezos or Bill Gates, He is of infinitely greater interest than the total accumulated wisdom of the ages, He is of infinitely greater beauty than all the natural wonders of the world. 

There is, in the Scriptures, a lovely portrait of one who considered Jesus of greater profit than her most treasured possession and joyfully sacrificed that treasure to demonstrate the worthiness of her Messiah.  In doing so, she testified that Jesus is the King, who in His atoning death was worthy of her lavish love and sacrificial worship.  Her name, of course, is Mary.

We first encounter Mary in the book of Luke, as the sister of Martha and Lazarus, “who was seated at the Lord’s feet listening to His Word” (Luke 10:39).  From the very start Mary is focused on “the good part” of devoting herself to the worship of Jesus.  The most memorable picture of Mary is found in John 12 (and Matthew 26), the night before passion week in the home of Simon the Leper.  As Jesus reclines to eat, Mary anoints him with an alabaster vial of precious perfume (perhaps her entire life savings), pouring it on his head and then wiping his feet with her hair.  The entire room fills with the fragrance of the ointment (and her heartfelt act of sacrificial worship).  The disciples are indignant (spurred on by the treacherous, greedy Judas) and label Mary’s display a “waste,” but Jesus rebukes them, stating that she has done a good deed to Him, prophetically anointing him for burial.  Jesus then predicts that wherever the gospel is preached in the whole world, what Mary had done will be remembered.

Although Mary’s act is, in one sense, a unique, historical event, never to be replicated, Jesus prediction of remembrance provides us with the opportunity to apply Mary’s valuing of Jesus and the work He would accomplish on the cross (even through probably not fully understood by her in the moment) to our own situation.

First, let us see, through Mary, the greatness of Jesus.  While the disciples were considering their own prominence and the religious leaders were plotting Christ’s death to protect their own power and prestige, Mary clearly saw that only Jesus is truly great.  Although she may not have understood exactly what her act signified, Jesus stated that it was an anointing of him for burial. Thus she put an prior stamp of approval on what makes Him infinitely greater than anything this world has to offer – the atoning sacrifice for the permanent forgiveness of sin, deliverance from eternal hell, and intimate experience of the pleasures of God forever. We too should focus on increasing our appreciation of His majesty by rejecting our vain consideration of self regularly meditating on the price He paid for our redemption.

Next, let us be challenged by Mary to care, primarily, about the exaltation of Jesus.  Judas and the twelve claimed that the money from the perfume would have been better used to provide for the poor, but Jesus credited Mary with an act which exalted as essential His own character and accomplishment. In front of a room full of beard wagging, self-righteous men, this gentle woman thought nothing of herself, and in her humility exalted her soon to be sacrificed Messiah. When we properly value Christ, we ignore our own exaltation, and even the lifting up of the human downtrodden becomes of secondary importance.

Finally, let us be prompted by Mary to the sacrificial worship of Jesus.  Mary acted on her supreme valuation of Christ through a lavish act of selfless adoration.  He fragrant sacrifice of reverence cut through the foul stench of greed and pride that marred the atmosphere of the tiny room.  She was eager and willing to give up what was, almost certainly, her most valuable earthly possession.  Our lives should be characterized by similar acts – offering our very bodies as living sacrifices, acceptable to God which is our spiritual service of worship (Rom 12:1).

And so, it all comes down to value.  Not the value of some temporal trinket (like a four billion dollar yacht), but those things which are of eternal consequence.  Mary esteemed Christ above all other things and will be remembered forever.  What will you be remembered for?

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Physical Exams, Scheduled Maintenance, and Seeking Spiritual Help from Others

Last month, I went to see my doctor for my yearly physical exam. I thought I was doing better with my health than the year before, having lost a few pounds and maintaining more consistency in my exercise routine. However, even though these things were true, my bloodwork found an upward trend continuing in my LDL cholesterol. Nothing too scary at the moment, but something that definitely calls for action. Starting as soon as I left the office, I started to see my diet and physical lifestyle differently, and it has been very helpful in making some necessary changes. 

It was a little bit disappointing and not entirely pleasant to be told that I need to be aware of a potential problem and make some changes. But, since this issue was there anyway, I’m extremely glad for the yearly routine of getting checked out. 

One another note, when I was in high school, I vividly remember sitting in Environmental Science class and overhearing a girl in the class talking about her car beginning to smoke while heading down the road. After she pulled over, and someone examined the cause of her dire situation, it turned out that she had literally no engine oil in the car. Ever since, whenever my “maintenance required” light turns on, it doesn’t take me long before I’m booking an appointment with my mechanic to make sure I never encounter a similar fate. 

Not everyone is faithful to carry out these types of “preventive maintenance” (and, if I’m honest, neither am I, as there are a few things around the house that my wife would attest should have been dealt with long ago). However, no one thinks poorly of me for tending to these things before the problem comes. They don’t see me going to the doctor and say, “Wow, what a failure.” They don’t look at me visiting the auto mechanic and say “Couldn’t he just diagnose and fix that problem himself?”. Of course not! Instead, they say things like, “That’s great” or even, “Yeah, I really need to get in there myself.” 

Yet in the spiritual realm, this kind of preventive maintenance practice is all-too-often neglected, especially when it comes to things that we can’t do by ourselves. 

And indeed, Christians, for whatever reason, seem to have the idea that we should basically be able to do everything themselves. we should know how to interpret every passage; we should be able to work through and solve all of our relational problems on our own; we should be able to get out of a sticky rut of sin; all without having to get anyone else to help us. And if we find that we can’t do this, we’d rather leave it unresolved than do that dreaded thing that has such a horrible stigma: go get help from someone else

Through self-sufficiency, independence, pride, or just not wanting to be a bother, we don’t like to ask other people for help. And maybe this is because it’s particularly difficult to expose one’s own weakness to the gaze of others in areas that aren’t really about skill but rather about morality. We’re ashamed to be doing something sinful, so we shy away from getting help.

Yet this is exactly the opposite path from what we should take. 

The body of Christ exists to bear one another’s burdens (Gal. 6:1-2). The church is given God’s word for every dimension of godly exhortation (2 Timothy 3:17). The church has leaders for the sake of watching over our souls (Heb. 13:17). When we place ourselves in the care of others who love us and know God’s word, we give ourselves the best chance at finding and addressing the spiritual problems that would otherwise continue to plague us. 

If your soul care is all private and self-sufficient, there’s a decent chance that there’s an undetected issue growing, or perhaps a “spiritual oil leak” that won’t be noticed until something is on fire. It would be much better to go ahead and catch it now, rather than spend the next however-many-years struggling through it on your own.

Additionally, in many cases, no matter how much you may be able to change from the point when something finally does come to a head or get exposed, and it has to be dealt with, there is so much damage already done that all the problems that could have been prevented if addressed earlier can’t necessarily be fixed. When we reap what we sow spiritually (Gal. 6:7-9), an ounce of prevention is worth even more than a pound of cure. 

So what should you do? My recommendation is this: Don’t just have a steady devotional life or do all your maintenance alone. Don’t just get the best information you can from the internet. Don’t be a self-taught, self-diagnosing, self-reliant spiritual guru for your own soul. 

Instead, take advantage of the local body of Christ you’re a part of, and talk to your pastors and other spiritually-mature Christians on a regular basis to get help with your areas of weakness. In fact, much like getting bloodwork or a scan of some kind, which catch what might go undetected in your day-to-day life, these other people may be able to see things you can’t see despite your best efforts. Ask these people what they perceive to be your areas of spiritual weakness. Demand answers from the Scriptures and subject yourself to the Bible’s authority on every point you find, making the changes you need to make.

True shame doesn’t come from humbling yourself and seeking help (Gal. 6:2, Isa. 66:2) but from hardening your heart, even unknowingly, in patterns of sin and immaturity (Rom. 6:21). So get your maintenance appointment on the schedule, and keep things running well and growing in your spiritual life. 

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An Election Day Meditation

On the day when our nation will determine its next set of elected government officials, we, as God’s redeemed people through Christ, are grateful to know this: that though we vote as a nation, no person becomes a ruler or ceases to be a ruler apart from the active, sovereign hand of God. As the prophet Daniel said:

Let the name of God be blessed forever and ever,
For wisdom and power belong to Him.
It is He who changes the times and the epochs; 
He removes kings and establishes kings; 
He gives wisdom to wise men
And knowledge to men of understanding (Daniel 2:20-21)

We are further comforted by the knowledge that the hearts of even the most powerful rulers in the world are subject to the sovereign involvement of the LORD: “The king’s heart is like channels of water in the hand of the LORD; He turns it wherever he wishes.” (Proverbs 21:1). As the Scriptures show time and again – through Pharoah, king of Egypt (Exodus 10:1); through Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon (Daniel 4:34-45); through both Cyrus and Darius, kings of Persia (Ezra 1:1; 6:22) – even the innermost thoughts and decisions of a king are completely under God’s divine rule. No President of the United States, or congressional representative, nor any other ruler, stands outside of God’s infinite capacity for directing all things. 

In light of God’s sovereign rule, where then should we look for our help and our hope? Who is our shelter and our protection? We should remember the words of the Psalmist who said: 

My help comes from the LORD
Who made heaven and earth.
He will not allow your foot to slip;
He who keeps you will not slumber.
Behold, he who keeps Israel
Will neither slumber nor sleep. (Psalm 121:2-4)

We are most certainly blessed and thankful to have a say in who serves as our governmental authorities. And we are even more thankful when those authorities look out for what is right in God’s sight and beneficial to the church’s mission. But we also understand that these rulers are neither our ultimate defenders nor our saviors, and we remember the admonition in Psalm 146:

Do not trust in princes, 
In mortal man, in whom there is no salvation.
His spirit departs, he returns to the earth;
In that very day his thoughts perish.
How blessed is he whose help is the God of Jacob, 
Whose hope is in the LORD his God,
Who made heaven and earth,
The sea and all that is in them;
Who keeps faith forever;
Who executes justice for the oppressed;
Who gives food to the hungry. 
The LORD sets the prisoners free. (Psalm 146:3-7)

Knowing these things about our God and his complete and total rule over the kingdoms of the world give us the confidence and encouragement to anticipate and respond to the results of days like today with utter trust and comfort. 

So as we act today – whether in our vote, in our words, or in the attention or response we give to the outcome of today’s elections – we remember these things, and find our constant and immovable hope in the character, promises, and working of the God who loves us with an unchanging love. 

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Apostasy’s Judas Kiss

Having just finished up a sermon on the betrayal or Jesus by Judas Iscariot, I have found it difficult to get Jesus’ haunting phrase out of my mind, “woe to that man by whom the Son of Man is betrayed!  It would have been good for that man if he had not been born.”  While there is a uniquely historical aspect to Judas’ betrayal (no one will ever again be guilty of betraying the incarnate Jesus after having been personally called by Him and observing his character and teaching for three intense years), the issue of apostasy is ongoing and very closely related to Judas’ act. 

Apostasy is the rejection of the person and work of Jesus Christ after having professed faith in Him and been associated with the people of God (through the church) to a significant decree.  To apostasize, then, is to have experienced all the external benefits of Christ, His Word and His people and then to “betray” Him by rejecting these blessings in a functional pledge of loyalty to the evil one himself.  Furthermore, the condition of apostates as described in Scripture seems very similar to that of Judas – hardened in sin and rebellion and turned over by God to the consequences of the course they have chosen (Heb. 6:4-6, Heb. 10:26-30)  Thus, the assessment for those who reject Christ in this way could easily be summed up in Jesus’ woe to Judas – truly it would be better if they had never been born.

In light of this chilling reality, I would like to post an open letter to apostates (functional Judas’) that I penned last year after the very public statements of Josh Harris and several other prominent, formerly “Christian” leaders.  I do wish to acknowledge that,  “there for the grace of God go I,” and yet, I pray this letter will be part of the grace of God that keeps myself, and others, from “going there.”   By bringing to your attention the stinging, and terrifying rebuke Scripture provides to apostates, I hope to perform a valuable shepherding function for the church as a whole.

Open Letter to Josh Harris and the Other Recent Apostates,

While others have undertaken to expose the foolishness and hypocrisy of publicly abandoning a “faith” that was clearly not your own, I would like to address the darker side of what you have done in abandoning the Lord Jesus Christ who lavished upon you both His common grace and the unique grace of being associated with His people.  I do not write this with any malice or personal vindictiveness, but I hope to bring a jolting reminder of what the Bible has to say about your recent actions.  My prayer is that you are not yet true apostates and will turn to the loving Savior in repentance and faith.

The first terrifying thing you have done in “abandoning the faith,” is place yourself directly under the wrath of the God that you so blithely reject.  It is time for you to again read the warning of Hebrews 10:26-31

“For if we go on sinning willfully after receiving the knowledge of the truth, there no longer remains a sacrifice for sins, but a terrifying expectation of judgment and THE FURY OF A FIRE WHICH WILL CONSUME THE ADVERSARIES. Anyone who has set aside the Law of Moses dies without mercy on the testimony of two or three witnesses. How much severer punishment do you think he will deserve who has trampled under foot the Son of God, and has regarded as unclean the blood of the covenant by which he was sanctified, and has insulted the Spirit of grace? For we know Him who said, “VENGEANCE IS M INE, I WILL REPAY.” And again, “T HE LORD WILL JUDGE HIS PEOPLE.” It is a terrifying thing to fall into the hands of the living God.”

Notice again the strength of the condemnation here:

“Terrifying expectation of judgment” (the unescapable surety of condemnation to eternal hell)

“Fury of fire which will consume the adversaries,” (now, you)

“Severer punishment” (greater than one who had never received your knowledge and benefits)

“Trampled underfoot the Son of God” (disdaining Jesus as so much dung to be tread upon)

“Regraded as unclean the blood of the covenant” (viewing the cleansing fount as a defiling stream)

“Insulted the Spirit of grace (“spit in the face” of the Triune God)

“Vengeance is mine” (says God the Father)

“It is a terrifying thing to fall into the hands of the living God.” (no impotent, mythical deity this!)

Consider for moment that you, as a “naturally” sinful human being, have now multiplied that sin by abusing the work of the Son of God and rejecting the gift of the Holy Spirit, all provided by the gracious work of God the Father.  In rejecting Christ, you have removed the one hope of protection you had, and have invited the focused, intentional anger of God upon your person  – in essence daring God to follow through on His promise of wrath. This is a gambit which, as surely as the sun rises each morning, you are guaranteed to lose.  You have intentionally channeled the infinitely great, eternal love of God for His Son, into a purposed, righteous, focused fury upon yourself.

The second disastrous action you have taken is to run for refuge into the arms of those who are the objects of God’s wrath just like yourself.  You have rejected the grace of God, to cultivate the favor of those who can never truly love you.  You have been betrayed by a “Judas kiss.”  Rest assured that the open arms of acceptance into which you think you are running will soon lock themselves around you in life-crushing coils of cultural conformity from which you can never hope to extricate yourself.  Please know that for all their so-called support, you will forever be a despised “Benedict Arnold” in the pagan army, useful for a time as a trophy of secular humanism and then cast aside as a lifeless corpse when they have sucked all benefit from you.  

This is ever the way of Satan with his prey.  He lures you with promises of wisdom and power, whispering to you of your importance and ability, then, once you have renounced allegiance to his hated enemy (Christ), pouncing and ripping you to shreds through conscience and circumstance.  He shows no mercy to those he has duped, and laughingly condemns and crushes them as the fools they surely are.  Truly, he is not called a prowling, devouring lion for nothing.  You will find no rest for your soul in his deadly embrace.  You have fallen prey to the master deceiver and will pay the same price that he must, the eternal torment of your immortal soul.  

So, you have traded the security of salvation for the surety of eternal punishment, the steadfast love of God for the capricious manipulation of sinful men, the true satisfaction of God-glorifying service for the temporary soul-destroying pleasures of sin for a season.  

I beg you again to turn from this grievous course and cast yourself upon the mercy of God.  I fear that if you do not do this soon, you may find yourself forever hardened and thus unwilling and unable to repent.  For the glory of God, the sake of your soul, and the good of your family and the world, bend your knee to King Jesus in humble repentance and faith.  Don’t delay another moment.