Guidance from Overlooked Men and Women of the Bible

Category: Leadership (Page 6 of 22)

Ananias – Quiet Bravery

The message was clear. Unambiguous. No doubt from the Lord, the significance of it rocked Ananias, leaving him confused and frightened. He was to present himself to the chief persecutor of the fledgling Christian faith. A man to hide your babies from rather than to embrace, a man to avoid at all costs. Saul, brilliant and murderous, tormented Christians, yet the Lord sent Ananias to actually help him in his time of pain and confusion. Ananias walked into the room with Saul representing the bravery of many, many Christians who followed him over the centuries.

Saul, an energetic zealot, saw Christians not as people but as problems. His life work morphed into the eradication of the new, dangerous, sect of Judaism. Not only did he approve of the murder of Stephan, the first martyr of the early church, Saul set out to add to the list of beaten and imprisoned followers of Jesus. Today we might call him a radicalized fanatic, even a terrorist. Saul certainly spread terror as he pursued anyone who lined his or her life up with Jesus. This was the Saul on the mind of Ananias when the Lord sent him on his mission to heal his new affliction of blindness. Ananias did not know of Saul’s dramatic encounter with the risen Christ on the road to Damascus. Ananias did not know of Saul’s remarkable change of heart, or his new devotion to Jesus, or of his humble conversion. The Lord didn’t fill in many details as he sent Ananias to Saul’s aid.

Ananias questioned the Lord and received a bit more intelligence in return. The Lord had plans for Saul, plans involving both speaking before kings and plans for suffering and humility. Then Ananias went. No pause is recorded, no taking a night to sleep on it or time to kiss his family good-bye, maybe for the last time. Ananias walked to Saul’s house, placed his hands on Saul and prayed. Ananias even welcomed Saul to his new club of Christ-followers by calling him “brother.” From despised enemy to brother. Only then did the scales fall from Saul’s eyes.

Leading involves bravery. Ananias showed us the way by going to meet Saul. Ananias walked straight into the house of a man who could kill him and his family. That’s bravery. Some might say foolhardy, but it paints for us a picture of faith. Ananias heard God speak, so he went. Acting on faith always involves a level of bravery. Even if you go with questions in mind, just like Ananias, you demonstrate bravery when you step out your door. You don’t just think bravely, you act bravely. You may feel brave in your mind, but unless you follow up that thought with action you’re only daydreaming. The world holds lots of daydreamers, far fewer brave leaders.

Saul, soon to change his name to Paul, demonstrated bravery throughout his life as he spread the gospel across the Roman world. Whether in beatings, shipwrecks, persecutions, or facing crowds filled with hateful people just like he once was, Paul stood bravely for the Lord. There is no more powerful example of bravery in Scripture except for Jesus himself, and maybe Ananias, the quiet man just living out his faith, who quickly and unreservedly acted on the Lord’s command. Ananias left home that day to heal the devil himself. God used his hands to remove the scales from Saul’s eyes and from Paul’s heart. Ananias was literally the first Christian to touch Paul. In doing so, God used Ananias to change a life that changed the world. A simple man acted in brave obedience. Happens every day. God grant us the grace to do the same.

Eaten to Death by a Moth

Photo by Shannon Pifko from FreeImages

When I picture God’s judgement, images of an overwhelming flood, or fire and brimstone, leap to mind. You know, real wrath of God type stuff.

The prophet Hosea, however, paints a unique portrait of wrath for us, when God himself tells Hosea that, “I am like a moth to Ephraim, like rot to the people of Judah” (Hosea 5:12).

Judgement does not have to come in like a lion (also used to describe God’s wrath), as here it’s described as being eaten by a moth, or by rot, a wasting away of life and vigor. Rot slowly turns articles we value to dust, filled with holes and smelling of mildew, good only for the dumpster.

This type of judgement is slow, under our noses, within our gaze. We tend to ignore it, we don’t pause to care, we hope that it won’t catch up to us. But it does catch up, our lives face ruinous circumstances and we are forced to start over.

Consider your life. Perhaps some of the thorny issues you face, those you just wish would go away, might be attributed not merely to bad luck or faulty genes or mean people. Perhaps some of the angst in your life could be a result of God’s discipline? His judgement might come as a bolt of fire from the blue, or it might settle gently on your shoulder and begin to nibble.

What’s nibbling at you? Could God be trying to get your attention in a kinder way than you will discover years from now when the floor of your life collapses, shot through with rot? Pause. God works on you because he cares for you. Don’t ignore what he’s trying to show you, especially if it flutters by in the evening shadows, for this is how God often chooses to work.

The Insanity of Nebuchadnezzar

Daniel 4

“Those who walk in pride God is able to humble

Simply magnificent. The great city, the capitol of the world, stretched before him. He breathed in its air and listened to the sounds of commerce humming below him. He owned this town, he created it, he sustained it. As his heart swelled with pride, he understood that this city reflected his power and his glory. He prayed often to the gods, but the gods did not lift Babylon to these heights. His wisdom and strength undergirded all that lay before him. He stood like a god himself, a lord of the earth. No one compared to the king.

Just then, at the height of his revelry, a voice boomed from the heavens. To others it sounded like a mighty rumbling of thunder, but Nebuchadnezzar clearly heard these words, “the Most High is sovereign over all kingdoms on earth and gives them to anyone he wishes.” Then, to punctuate the message, the Lord condemned King Nebuchadnezzar to seven years of insanity.

Madness. Not famine on the land or invasion by an enemy nation. The punishment arrived targeted and specific. For seven years the king lived in the open countryside and ate grass like an ox, letting his hair and nails grow wild, sort of like a desert Yeti. Psychologists call his mental illness boanthropy, where a person believes they are a cow or ox. Nebuchadnezzar was the poster child for the disease. It would take seven years for the pride to drain from the king’s heart.

Pride. God hates it. We love it. From a young age we are taught to embrace our pride, but really it comes naturally. Of course, we all need a healthy self-image and we cannot grow without understanding something of God’s love for us. He sent his Son for us, we are precious in his sight, we can enjoy that sort self-esteem. But here God confronts a darker manifestation of pride, one with roots in the garden. We see ourselves on par with God. We don’t say that out loud, but in places in our hearts it lives and festers, like a cancer.

Few of us deal with pride on the level of Nebuchadnezzar. He built a golden image in his honor and told everyone to worship, truly the mark of over-stimulation. Our pride emerges more subtly. It surfaces in the comparisons we make with one another, in the comments we make in the privacy of our homes, in the jealousies experienced at the good fortune of our friends or co-workers. Our world encourages us to embrace the “look at me, look at me, look at me” ethos and lifestyle. Social media elevates pride and comparison to unseen heights. Combine advertising with social media and you get “influencers,” people who you really don’t want to influence you or your children at all. Advertising appeals to your pride hundreds of times a day. This message is even found in our praise choruses where we sing of what we get from the Lord and how the Lord exists for us. All the world, for me. For Me. FOR ME.

God pointedly reminds Nebuchadnezzar, the most powerful man on earth, and thus reminds you and I, that only God is sovereign. God gave you and I everything we have, and God can take away everything we have. Believe it or not, we could all be out grazing with the cattle on a thousand hills if God sends us there. Let us not be confused about the Lord of Creation. You are not God’s sole focus. God is not involved in our lives to give only good gifts and stroke our egos and let us party and then comfort us when we feel bad. Miraculously, God does some of that. God is concerned about the dark corners of your heart, and you do have some. God pursues you with love, and God pursues you with justice and God pursues you so that you know who God is and who God is not. You and I are that “not.” The text says that “all the peoples of the earth are regarded as nothing” to God. Sobering.

After seven years of insanity, of sleeping in the mud and eating fescue, Nebuchadnezzar finally understood his place before the Lord. Then God, in his unequaled goodness, restored the kingdom to Nebuchadnezzar. How about you? Perhaps it is time to take a hard look at your beliefs about God and your beliefs about yourself. If you’re brave enough, ask God to root out areas of pride in your heart. This is a life-long task as the cancer never totally goes dormant. The Lord will show you, and you may even avoid some of the pain and humiliation of a foolish king. Then, may you walk ever humbly before the Lord your God.

The Lord is Near

The Lord is near; do not be anxious about anything...

So begins one of my favorite passages of scripture, found in Philippians chapter 4. The writer tells us to present our requests to God, to petition the Lord of the Universe with thankfulness, and as a result the peace of God will guard our hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. That’s really amazing, don’t you think? We can bring our problems to the Creator?

Alongside that thought, in Matthew 6, Jesus tells us that we needn’t worry about what we should eat or what we should wear, because the Lord feeds the birds and clothes the flowers, and He cares much more for us.

I have to admit, when I worry about things in my life I don’t compare myself to birds or flowers. My issues feel bigger than theirs, I’m a more complicated creature. I have deeper issues rolling around in my mind than seeds or sunshine.

While I certainly face complicated issues, Jesus points out that the Lord doesn’t find my issues complicated at all. A glance at the flowers outside my door (pictured above) reminds me that their beauty and complexity result from the Lord’s voice. Just as he takes the time to craft the beauty of those coneflowers, which bloom and fade in a few short weeks, God takes the time to craft us into his image.

So, I go again to one of my favorite passages, reminded afresh of this wonderful, astounding promise revealed graciously to us…

The Lord is near; do not be anxious about anything...

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