Guidance from Overlooked Men and Women of the Bible

Category: Leadership (Page 5 of 22)

Mussolini’s Balcony and the Kingdom of God

From the balcony in the center of this building, Benito Mussolini, the Fascist dictator of Italy, declared war on Great Britain and France in 1940, launching Italy towards disaster. As I visited Rome last week and took in all this history, I was reminded of the arrogance of man and the quiet, slow work of God.

From the same balcony, Mussolini addresses the crowds.

Rome is filled with the allure of grandeur. Everywhere you turn are monuments and churches and statues and columns. Most of it built, including many of the churches, to remind the world of the greatness of the builders. It is truly awe-inspiring. However, God usually works in a different way, quietly growing his kingdom, usually out of sight. While crowds fade and leaders fall and monuments crumble, the Kingdom of God goes on.

When we are tempted to follow the “great man,” the one who draws the crowds and promises us a wonderful future, let us remember that it’s wiser to follow the humble savior, the one true king, the architect of an eternal kingdom.

Now Available on Amazon.com!

I’m happy to announce that Seers, Sayers, Schemers & Saints is now available in the Kindle version on Amazon.com. You can purchase the print version at Crustore.org. If you feel inclined, I would love for you to post a review on Amazon and Goodreads.com, which would be a great help to me as the author.

If you haven’t gotten a copy, I encourage you to download it or send for one, I think you’ll be encouraged by what you read.

Thanks so much – Dave.

A Simple Checklist of How to Live as a Follower of Jesus – Caution – It’s Hot

Photo by Timothy L Brock on Unsplash

Conviction spread through my psyche like the heat of a habanero spreads from your mouth to your pores. In reading through the Bible this year, I arrived at Romans 12, where Paul lays out his thoughts on living as a Christ-follower to the church members in Rome. Simple to read, complicated to live. I have a long way to go. Here’s what stood out to me, verse-by-verse:

Verse 1: “Present yourself as a sacrifice.” Sacrifices don’t have rights, they are given away to be used by another. More on this later.

Verse 2: “Do not be configured by the age, but be transformed by the renewal of the intellect.” Where is this age configuring me? Twisting me? Turning me?

Verse 3: Think soberly, keep a clear head. Your faith, if it is a Christian faith, requires it.

Verses 4-8: Serve as you are gifted.

Verse 9: Love sincerely, not as a hypocrite.

Verse 10: Preference other people before you.

Verse 11: Slave away for the Lord. As in, work really, really hard with no recognition.

Verse 12: Endure affliction and persevere in prayer. Suffering is part of the journey.

Verse 13: Provide for the needy by being hospitable.

Verse 14: Bless, don’t curse, your persecutor.

Verse 15: Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep. Pay attention to others and respond accordingly.

Verse 16: Stay humble (if there is one thing God hates, it’s pride).

Verse 17: Do not repay evil for evil.

Verse 18: Be at peace with all. Turn the other cheek (as a famous person once said).

Verse 19: Revenge, a dish best served cold, belongs to the Lord. Apparently, God keeps a record and settles old scores. We may not take an eye for an eye (see verse 17), but the Lord reserves the right to do so.

Verse 20: Pile your enemy with food and drink. Your kindness may lead to their repentance (i.e. “heap burning coals upon their head).

Verse 21: Extinguish evil with good.

What a list. I’m not sure I’m doing so well – how about you? Described here is not a therapeutic faith existing primarily to meet our needs and salve our wounds. Rather, Paul lays out a counter-cultural lifestyle of clear-headed thinking, hard work and service. This includes taking blows from others without retaliating, rejecting wisdom promoted by the world and staying ever humble. Small wonder so few step this direction.

How to even start living this life? Remember verse one. By thoughtfully giving God everything you have and everything you are and everything you will be, in other words, “presenting yourself as a living sacrifice,” you open yourself to the Lord. His hands mold you, while the Holy Spirit empowers you to live as Paul recommends.

I’ve seen sacrifices in other parts of the world, gifts to the gods, including food & drink, money and even live animals. Paul used imagery that was common in his day, but now much harder for us to imagine. The life of the animal serving as a sacrifice is taken, never to return. It is bloody and final. Dead on the ground.

Thankfully we remain a “living sacrifice,” one God uses to serve and care for others. A sacrifice that reminds the world of God’s goodness and presence, one alive and transformed to live out God’s good, acceptable and perfect will. A will that involves suffering, humility, and loving those we don’t like. Did I mention earlier that I have a long way to go?

The Teachers and the Boy Jesus

Matthew 2

William Holman Hunt – The Finding of the Savior in the Temple (1860)

Walking into the crowded, chaotic temple grounds felt like going home, a weird sensation for a twelve-year-old who had never been far from his own house. As the young Jesus wandered around that consecrated area, he experienced the presence of God the Father in a new and refreshing way. It has been said that there exists in this world certain “thin places,” localities where the heavenly realm resides especially discoverable to our senses. Jesus moved across one of the thin places that afternoon.

Naturally, the boy struck up a conversation with one of the many teachers present in the temple area. Judaism was, and remains, a learned religion, with teachers and rabbis and commentators arguing about their sacred texts and how to apply them. Jesus engaged the finest minds, those at the center of Jewish learning, not unlike a symposium one of our top universities today.

Jesus did not just converse, however, he held court. As he dialogued with one teacher, others overheard the conversation and drew near. Soon, a small crowd gathered, alternately asking Jesus questions and listening to his answers. Then Jesus reversed roles, asking them questions and responding to their opinions. All present enjoyed this give and take among scholars, the exercise of the mind that so enriches intellectuals.

Except the center of this learned party was not an ancient sage, but rather a twelve-year-old boy from the country. Matthew tells us that the teachers were “astonished” at Jesus’ intelligence and responses. Teachers recognize bright students, and good teachers understand genius on the rare occasion it appears. These teachers sitting with Jesus had never interacted with such brilliance. They apparently were so engaged that the conversation went on for three days, until Mary and Joseph returned for their errant child.

Those teachers. They loved the boy Jesus; quick-witted, intelligent, soon to join their ranks, destined to become a great rabbi himself. Sadly, they hated the adult Jesus, the man who drew crowds and contradicted their teachings and overturned their tables. The boy Jesus represented a mascot, evidence of the wonderful culture of learning they represented. The grownup Jesus proved a menace, threatening to tear down their masterpiece of laws and rules and pride and power.

The boy, tussled on the head with smiles and blessings, was sent home with his mother and father. The man, a crown of thorns forced over his brow, was sent to the execution grounds. How many teachers were present for both send-offs? How many remembered the boy Jesus as they jeered him to the cross? Twenty-one years is not that long, not in the life of a teacher, and at least a few remained. I wonder what they were thinking? Did they remember the bright days in the temple courts, or were they only focused on the darkness before them?

Three days later, on a bright new morning of hope, these teachers heard remarkable news about Jesus. I wonder if it all clicked in their minds; the questions of the boy Jesus, the teachings of the adult Jesus, and now the resurrection of the Savior Jesus? Did they finally realize that all those years ago they were sitting with the Way, the Truth and the Life? They were teachers, after all, but were they also learners? History tells us some did learn, and finally embraced the Risen Jesus.

How about you? Are you in love with the boy Jesus, safe and loving and non-threatening? Or have you leaned into the teachings of the grown-man Jesus, passages that challenge and prod and tear away at your facades and pretenses? Is Jesus merely a mascot in your life, a good-luck charm, or is Jesus a teacher yielding ultimate authority? Is he the Way, the Truth, and the Life for you? We all get to choose. As one of my old teachers used to say, “be sure to choose wisely.”

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