Thursday, March 29, 2018

Following the Crowd


From last Sunday, Palm Sunday, until next Sunday, Easter, is Holy Week.  The week began when Jesus entered Jerusalem on a borrowed donkey.  A crowd gathered along the roadway and symbolically waved palm branches as a king entered Jerusalem.  That crowd “went out to meet him, shouting, ‘Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord! Blessed is the King of Israel!’” (John 12:13).  A crowd also gathered early Friday morning, without a doubt most of the same people from last Sunday were in this crowd, but they exhibited a demeanor with a radical change.  The Friday crowd gathered and shouted, over-and-over again, “Crucify him!  Crucify him!” (Luke 23:21). 

How can a crowd welcome the King of kings one day and a few days later want to free the rebellion criminal named Barabbas and have Jesus executed in his place?  To which the Roman governor, Pilate asked, “Why? What crime has he committed?” (Matt. 27:23). 

But, “the chief priests stirred up the crowd to have Pilate release Barabbas” (Mark 15:11) and the crowd shouted back at Pilate, “Give us Barabbas!” (John 18:40).  Pilate, in political correctness, followed the crowd’s desire.  Such is the craziness of following a crowd, a deceived crowd.  But, isn’t that the point?  Jesus had “been tempted in every way, just as we are — yet was without sin” (Hebrews 4:15) and the “Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures” (1 Cor 15:3).  Similarly, we are under the judgment of eternal death, but Christ Jesus took our sins on himself and took them to the grave and left them there when He rose from the grave, in turn, all who follow Christ are freed from death to eternal life with our Lord.

The clamor of deceivers stirs us up, we follow the crowd, and become deaf to truth in midst of all the noise.  We have always questioned what the truth is throughout our human history (see Gen. 3:1-10), and with deaf ears follow the crowd that is deceived by the lie of satan and chant the lie together.  Truth can be hard to accept, but following the crowd is easy.  There is an emptiness in us that we desire to be filled, mistakenly we think that comes by recognition in the crowd.  We’re all that way to some extent – we just follow the crowd, which is why Jesus warns us to “watch out that no one deceives you” (Mark 13:5).

Following Jesus, not the crowd,

Owen <><

Monday, March 12, 2018

Spit


We are a people who are often concerned with where we came from and desire the answer to “Who am I.”  Today there are companies that will ask you to spit in a tube, in turn, they can analyze what percentage, if any, Neanderthal you are.  

They can also let you know what your family’s genetic roots are.  Sometimes verifying granny’s stories, sometimes bringing a shock to who you are.  The genetic tests can even tell you what your potential is for disease or heart failure.  But, science can’t tell you spit about being healed, and a lot more.  

Then, there is Jesus.  Who was asked by his followers if sin had had caused a beggar to become blind.  I guess the man hadn’t spit in one of the little tubes and mailed it in.  But, Jesus, stopped and nonchalantly “spat on the ground and made mud with the saliva. Then he anointed the man's eyes with the mud and said to him, ‘Go, wash in the pool of Siloam’ (which means Sent).  The blind beggar, went to the pool he had been Sent and after he had obediently washed, he “came back seeing.”  (John 9:6-7) 

I guess a little spit can do a lot.  Some spit can only tell you that you’ve a “potential” for an ailment.  A miraculous spit brings healing, restoration, and joy.  If all Jesus has for me is spit, then please, spit on me Lord – may a wave sweep me away ….

Where my heritage has come from is interesting.  But, to be overwhelmed by God’s Spirit, and swept away in a wave that manifests salvation, healing, and a fire of God’s Spirit (which is beyond what I can comprehend) is what will fill my inner emptiness – my spit in a tube cannot do all that.

Wash me in the pool you have Sent,
Owen <><