The Gospel Proclaimed

A plethora of voices surrounds us. Our companions and loved ones communicate with us while our employers provide instructions on performing our tasks. We receive their distinct viewpoints on the events unfolding in the world through various media outlets, such as news sources, social media, and podcasts. Additionally, figures in positions of authority articulate expectations and guidelines for our behavior and lifestyle. With so much noise around us, it may be hard to understand what we should say and when especially in mixed groups. However, Paul reminds us that no matter what is being said, we should always strive to proclaim the Gospel in all circumstances. Therefore, when we find the opportunity to speak, may the love of God come forth from our mouths.

We must always proclaim the Gospel because we comprehend that the messages thrown around us can be confusing, and the world strains to find any cohesion to a message of hope in our loud environment. The Gospel reminds us that no matter where we come from, where we are right now, and what our status will be in the future, we are empowered to share God’s loving grace with everyone, and no one is exempt. Therefore, brothers and sisters, there is no excuse for us; as long as we live, we can share God’s message of freedom with all the people.

The Gospel’s spread was paramount to Paul after his encounter with Jesus. He fought with Jews, Romans, and other Christians to ensure that the Gospel would remain GOOD NEWS. This passion ultimately landed him in prison, where we presume he wrote this letter to the people of Phillippi. Never fearing the repercussions, Paul was confident that his imprisonment would ultimately lead to a more complete proclamation of the Gospel worldwide.

12 I want you to know, brothers, that what has happened to me has really served to advance the gospel, 13 so that it has become known throughout the whole imperial guard and to all the rest that my imprisonment is for Christ. 14 And most of the brothers, having become confident in the Lord by my imprisonment, are much more bold to speak the word without fear. 15 Some indeed preach Christ from envy and rivalry, but others from good will. 16 The latter do it out of love, knowing that I am put here for the defense of the gospel. 17 The former proclaim Christ out of selfish ambition, not sincerely but thinking to afflict me in my imprisonment. 18 What then? Only in every way, whether in pretense or in truth, Christ is proclaimed, and I rejoice.

The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2016), Php 1:12–18.

No matter your circumstances before or now, God can and will use them to advance the Gospel. Paul understood that his predicament in prison allowed God’s message to travel to Rome. In this situation, we can learn from Paul that instead of looking at our lives and sitting and wallowing or worrying, we can look at the obstacles placed before us as unique opportunities to share the Grace of God. Hardship tempts us to focus on what we can’t do, but the Holy Spirit empowers us to use even adverse events in our lives to pursue the message of God from a new perspective. From prison, Paul had access to people and authorities that he couldn’t have had if his missionary journeys did not have opposition, and Paul took advantage by bringing the Gospel with him to the center of power. We, like Paul, need to look at where we have been, where we are going, and how we can bring the Gospel with us and share it with people to whom we didn’t have access and in places we were not previously. We need to understand that by proclaiming the Gospel, we don’t “win” souls; that is the job of the Holy Spirit. We, instead, offer encouragement to others that boldly following Christ offers a witness to the power of Christ over even the darkest situation.

Even among Christian circles, several voices proclaim Christ but do not do so that the name of Christ will be lifted, but rather that their profile would be lifted or that they could use the church’s influence to obtain power and influence over people. The message of the Gospel cannot focus on selfish ambitions because the Gospel is about proclaiming freedom from sin, which is powerful. It comes as no surprise that those that seek after power would be intrigued and interested in being able to harness this power for their ends. Such abuse of God’s power can lead to adverse reactions toward the church and division among Christians. Paul reminds us that no matter people’s intentions, the Gospel is powerful enough to be proclaimed despite the proclaimer’s intent. We see this in situations where people proclaim messages with malicious intent, but people turn to Christ anyway. When this happens, Paul rejoices, and we should rejoice as well. 

God calls us to follow Paul’s example and focus on the proclamation. The Christians voicing the Gospel with their mouths, living the Gospel with their bodies, and embracing the Gospel with their minds bring unity, truth, hope, peace, and love to the whole world. No one is exempt from this mission; you are never too old, too young, too bright, too unintelligent, too outgoing, or too shy to share the Gospel with the world. Christ came bringing release to all those captive to sin, and there is no one that we can deem unworthy of God’s grace. Therefore, pray for your enemies, even those that mean to harm you, because if they are redeemed, we rejoice. Until there is no more life in our bodies, God calls us to proclaim the Gospel.

The Gospel reminds us what Christ has done for the world, and our lives need to be representative of an understanding that we are not the focus, but instead, we need to reflect God’s love for others. There is no excuse to drive division among one another; rather, we strive to lift others up. God calls us to proclaim the Gospel in all seasons, even in our deepest despair, because in doing that, we will show Gospel and encourage others in their need. Paul would agree with the phrase often attributed to St Francis, “Preach the Gospel at all times; when necessary, use words.”

Connected By Covenant

In our relationships, especially those with our parents or other adults that helped raise us, time changes how we see those relationships and how they manifest in our lives. We rely on our parents to provide for us when we are young. As we get older, our parents become our peers. If we are lucky enough, our parents’ age and begin to rely on us to fulfill some of their needs. Through time, our relationship changes, but because we are connected through our familial relationship, or as stated in another way, a covenant, we still find a loving and caring relationship.

The Hebrew people had a changing relationship with an unchanging God. The change was due to their context. When God made a covenant with Abraham, it was a covenant of blood, connecting Abraham’s lineage to obedience and following God. As the people ultimately fled to Egypt, they recontextualized their relationship with God from the context of bondage and servitude. This disoriented them from the context established with Abraham, and upon leaving Egypt, they needed to reconnect with the covenant, where we find the people as they approach Mount Sinai. This is where God delivers to Moses the law, upon which they will reconnect with the covenant through obedience.

The passage below is where we see the people of Israel reconnecting with the covenant as a response to God’s goodness and protection for the Hebrews in leaving Egypt and the deliverance from the nation through God’s care for His people.

On the third new moon, after the people of Israel had gone out of the land of Egypt, on that day, they came into the wilderness of Sinai. 2 They set out from Rephidim and came into the wilderness of Sinai, and they encamped in the wilderness. There Israel encamped before the mountain, 3 while Moses went up to God. The Lord called to him out of the mountain, saying, “Thus you shall say to the house of Jacob, and tell the people of Israel: 4 ‘You yourselves have seen what I did to the Egyptians, and how I bore you on eagles’ wings and brought you to myself. 5 Now therefore, if you will indeed obey my voice and keep my covenant, you shall be my treasured possession among all peoples, for all the earth is mine; 6 and you shall be to me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.’ These are the words that you shall speak to the people of Israel.” 7 So Moses came and called the elders of the people and set before them all these words that the Lord had commanded him. 8 All the people answered together and said, “All that the Lord has spoken we will do.” And Moses reported the words of the people to the Lord.

The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2016), Ex 19:1–8.

When God made a covenant with Abraham, obedience was understood. The covenant was sealed in the blood through the practice of circumcision, and God promised Abraham a future filled with descendants as numerous as the stars of the sky as long as Abraham showed obedience to God’s instruction. Abraham’s relationship with God was based on obedient living, which was credited to him as righteousness. However, his descendants, the people of Israel, had a different relationship due to their enslavement in Egypt. Further, this changed as they made their way out through God, carrying out their deliverance through the final plague and the Passover and ultimately carrying them across the Red Sea. This miraculous incident allowed the people of Israel to understand their relationship with God not only as a protector but also as a deliverer, but their time in Egypt separated them from the understanding of God’s covenant with Abraham, so they approached the Sinai Mount to reconnect with God’s covenant and allow the law to come down and lead them to obedience.

The connection made through the covenant reminds us that God carries us through many places of turmoil. The guidance of the Holy Spirit reminds us that no matter where we have been, God has been beside us and lifted us out of trouble because God is a good Father. Just like God’s people needed help out of Egypt, we often need help to escape a situation we are powerless to escape. The experiences are varied, as we have been in relationships that were toxic and abusive, or received a negative health report where the prognosis was bad, or in a financial hardship that seemed bleak, or simply unable to find employment when we were desperate; these are but a small set of examples of situations that God can guide us through and helps us out. However, they all require us to maintain the faith that the God we worship is also powerful enough to get us out of this situation. Sitting at the river’s bank, Moses knew he had nowhere else to turn and that the situation required supernatural assistance. There he raised his staff, and God took care of the rest. God wants us to make it through our problems, and He wants us to have the faith to raise our arms and ask for it.

God upholds the covenant, connects us to the covenant through relationship, and gently leads us to the covenant through the life and ultimate death of Jesus Christ. During the Last Supper, as Jesus raises the cup, He brings us all to the base of Sinai and helps us understand the covenant with fresh eyes and ears. We cannot get ourselves free from the problem of sin, and with Jesus’ blood, the covenant is fulfilled. This sacrifice does not release us from our obligation to obedience; rather, we can focus on living our lives in service to God, not having our hearts troubled by how we would return to our relationship with God through endless sacrifice. Jesus makes the covenant relationship focus on two things loving God and loving our neighbor. We connect with God’s covenant through Jesus and following these two commands.

United

Our world is defined by division. We have opponents at every turn, and we amplify our differences in ideology, culture, and politics by creating and growing echo chambers that do not engage in conversation but rather strike a wedge between us. The church is not immune to this divisiveness; it has never been immune to this, as Paul addressed the many conflicts that arose in the church in Corinth. Corinth dealt with their new faith by quarreling within themselves, as documented in their letters back and forth with Paul.

In the two letters Paul exchanges with the church, we see the evolution of how a church’s issues lead to division.  The triune God is diverse as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, and the church is a reflection as it is also diverse in its background, makeup, and point of view. God’s unity in diversity calls for the church to unite in its differences. However, Paul’s admonishment and closing words to Corinth remind the church that it is called to be like God and united in the face of its diversity. Paul closes his last known letter to the church with the following refrain.

11 Finally, brothers, rejoice. Aim for restoration, comfort one another, agree with one another, live in peace; and the God of love and peace will be with you. 12 Greet one another with a holy kiss. 13 All the saints greet you. 14 The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.

The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2016), 2 Co 13:11–14.

The call toward unity includes restoration, comfort, agreement, and peace. These four parts connect us to ensure that when we speak and engage with people, we treat them with dignity and respect, not because they earned it but because God created them. With everything in our power, we must strive for peace with all those in our faith community. Even in our disagreements, the church should be a place where God’s people exemplify living together as one people, sharing God’s love with each other, and exemplifying God’s love to the rest of the world.

Paul next instructs the church to greet one another with a holy kiss. We have too often just cast this aside as a cultural norm and something we don’t do in our modern world. However, the holy kiss reminds us, as Christians and church members share an intimacy that mimics the Trinity’s closeness. Therefore, when there is disunity among church members, it is a brokenness that mimics the brokenness that happens when a marriage fails. There is inevitable collateral damage to those around the dispute, causing irreparable damage sometimes. The church must understand its call by the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit to unite in holiness and set aside the petty differences we often use to wedge between us. 

We are broken people and require Christ’s love to support us through some desperate times. This love should be broadcast from the church to the people in the congregation and around the congregation. The song “They Will Know We Are Christians By Our Love” must ring true inside and outside our church family. The love that unites the Trinity also unites the church. In the diversity of the church, there is a fellowship that comes as a gift from the Holy Spirit, a presence that clings us together in peace, and a knowledge that there is grace when we fail.

Thus, as a church, we must remember to lay aside our differences in opinion and instead cling to what draws us together, which is our Triune God. God models connection and unity, while three are also connected as one. Thus the church should be united in proclaiming God’s love and peace in the world so that the church may be a sanctuary from the division that plagues our society. Just as the divisions arose in Corinth, Paul reminded the church that unity leads to holiness and shows the world what God’s love looks and acts like.

Following Jesus

“Are you in, or are you out?” The famous question from reality television often gets asked of people in the church. From the church’s beginning, there have been questions and debates about which people belong in our worship services and fellowship. The debates have ravaged the church about the requirements for the Kingdom of God, ultimately leading to splits among followers. However, when we look at the life of Jesus, we can see that he converses and spends time with people that many would claim are on the outside. This encounter made the religious elites uncomfortable and created a rift, ultimately leading to the conspiracy to kill Jesus. 

The following passage in the Gospel of Matthew shows us how Jesus ultimately called the outsiders and sinners to come and sit at His side.

9 As Jesus passed on from there, he saw a man called Matthew sitting at the tax booth, and he said to him, “Follow me.” And he rose and followed him. 10 And as Jesus reclined at table in the house, behold, many tax collectors and sinners came and were reclining with Jesus and his disciples. 11 And when the Pharisees saw this, they said to his disciples, “Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and sinners?” 12 But when he heard it, he said, “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. 13 Go and learn what this means: ‘I desire mercy, and not sacrifice.’ For I came not to call the righteous, but sinners.”

The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2016), Mt 9:9–13.

Jesus passes by one of these undesirables, a tax collector who has taken part in a profession that has taken advantage of his people and would be seen as a traitor to the religious elite, a tax collector. Jesus doesn’t pass by him and hurl insults or pass by and ignore him, but rather Jesus simply asks him to join him as he passes. This action was something that someone of Jesus’ stature would never have done, and thus a surprise to Matthew. Matthew was likelier to hear sermons about how he was a vile sinner than to be invited to join the party. Additionally, they created a particular subclass by pulling out the tax collector from the rest of the sinners with whom Jesus was spending time. When the church casts people out because of their prejudices, they create a subclass of people who thus behave more like the religious elite than Jesus. 

The Pharisees looked at the scene before them and began to ridicule Jesus and the disciples. They didn’t openly address Jesus but spoke loudly enough for Jesus to hear. This passive-aggressive judgment of the disciples and Jesus points out to everyone around that they disapprove of the people with whom Jesus chose to surround Him. When we surround ourselves with sinners, and the subclasses of sinners out in the world, the religious among us will scorn and ridicule our decisions. Sometimes this will be quiet and behind our backs; other times, the words won’t be directed at us but will be loud enough for us to hear; while still, other times, we may face the ridicule head-on. When facing scorn for the people we share a table with, comfort yourself that Jesus faced the same, and God calls us to the outcast, and to share the love of Jesus with sinners, even the sinners that get called out specifically. So that when asked why we hang out with sinners, we can answer, “I do because I’m following Jesus’ lead.”

Much of Jesus’ ministry was spent sharing the good news with the undesirables of society. Often the people around Jesus and the situation pointed out how this behavior was highly irregular and bucked many of the traditional norms. However, in every circumstance, Jesus reminded them that the Gospel was not just for the religious elites, but rather the Good News of forgiveness and redemption is for sinners and those that fall short of the Glory of God. Jesus did not participate in the revelry and sin, but He spent time and opened up the mystery of the mercy of God to people that the Pharisees and Sadducees had previously shut out. In following Jesus, we must walk with, eat with, and share life with the sinners, the religious shut out of the church. God desires us to do the work of the Gospel rather than ensure that we look the part. If we sacrifice time with people to show ourselves holy, we aren’t fulfilling the call of God to show mercy to the world. Follow Jesus’ lead and embody God’s mercy to the sinners and outcasts from the church. 

To follow the lead of Christ, the church must fulfill its role as a healer of the sick, mender of the broken, and sanctuary for the lost. As we fulfill the role given by Jesus, we seek out the brokenhearted, the government official, the immigrant, the lawbreaker, the hurting, the homeless, and all those the church is called to bring the hope of salvation. We cast aside all thoughts about how we look to the outside and embrace the mission of Jesus to show mercy and not mere sacrifice for the sake of sacrifice. Instead, let us sacrifice our perfect image for the love of God for all people. By doing this act, we truly follow the example Jesus set out for us.

Troubles Come and Go, But God Remains

At the core of modern life, we find trouble. Trouble finds us during bad decisions, but trouble also waits for us when we do everything right. Often we can’t connect any rhyme or reason for our troubles, although we often strive to point at something as the cause of our issues. Doing such will take us in different directions that simply distract us from the benefit that God provides during our trials.

The Psalmist exemplifies that all trials must be wrapped in a firm knowledge that The Almighty God surrounds any calamity. Our trust in God must be our central focus during trouble, as it focuses the follower of God on their purpose. The 93rd Psalm uses the flood example to remind us that God is always greater no matter what problems arise.

Psalm 93 

1 The Lord reigns; he is robed in majesty; 

the Lord is robed; he has put on strength as his belt. 

Yes, the world is established; it shall never be moved. 

2  Your throne is established from of old; 

you are from everlasting. 

3  The floods have lifted up, O Lord, 

the floods have lifted up their voice; 

the floods lift up their roaring. 

4  Mightier than the thunders of many waters, 

mightier than the waves of the sea, 

the Lord on high is mighty! 

5  Your decrees are very trustworthy; 

holiness befits your house, 

O Lord, forevermore.

The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2016), Ps 93:1–5.

Every person that has ever lived has experienced trouble. Trouble wants us to focus on it, obsess over it, and allow it to dictate every decision. That’s precisely what makes it trouble. The inconvenience and distress that each circumstance brings up can derail any plans we have because if we fixate upon them, they will become the steering wheel of our lives. However, we all must understand that no matter what path we take, whether perfect or problematic, troubles will find their way into our lives. The Psalm begins with a focus on God and finishes with how God is greater than any problem, but right in the middle, the flood waters come. Therefore, problems are a part of life, and it has nothing to do with how we live.

As trouble arises, we lose sight of our purpose because our vision gets distorted when we focus on problems and troubles. When we think more about our problems than our purpose with God, we start thinking about how to gain retributive justice because someone must’ve done this to us. However, trying to obtain revenge for our troubles is sinful and something we must steer clear of doing. The Psalmist guides us through this because even when trouble arises in the midst of our praise, while it may guide us away from worship, prayer and praise will lead us back to the source of our worship and toward the solution to our problems.

Trust in God is our only route toward fulfillment and grace-filled living. Troubles will continually arise around us, striving to distract us from the goodness God has for us. They constantly say, “Look at me!” They are often looked at and focused upon to divide humanity through blaming and hatred. However, God reminds us that none of these problems are enough to break us from the love of God in Christ Jesus, and instead of dividing, Jesus calls us to the foot of the cross and unity in faith.

Now What

Approaching Pentecost, a festival day that celebrates God by setting aside the first fruits and the beginning of the harvest, and commemorating the giving of the Torah, or Law, to the World, finds us in a particular circumstance where we as the church also celebrate the coming of the Holy Spirit. Throughout time, God has prepared the people of God for a beneficial life by granting us people and gifts of blessing to walk through the world and carry out the mission of God. However, too often, we want more.

Jesus was preparing to leave the disciples but wouldn’t physically leave them alone. Like many of us with a loved one that passed, or a friend that we lost touch with, even those of us with children, we often want more time with them, just as the disciples wanted more time with Jesus. Without Jesus, many of them felt rudderless and without direction. However, in preparation for one of the three festivals that required travel to Jerusalem, and just as God showed up to give the Torah, God showed up with the triune presence in the form of the Holy Spirit. Below we look at the narrative as delivered in Acts.

When the day of Pentecost arrived, they were all together in one place. And suddenly there came from heaven a sound like a mighty rushing wind, and it filled the entire house where they were sitting. And divided tongues as of fire appeared to them and rested on each one of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance.

The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2016), Ac 2:1–4.

The significance of this event reminds us that God does not idly sit back and watch creation but actively participates in believers’ lives. We often don’t feel as if God is present; however, the problem with our feelings is that they deceive us and can lead us to act in a way that does not bring glory to God. The presence that the disciples experienced at Pentecost was not a feeling but rather an experience that completely overwhelmed their understanding of the Holy Spirit. While we can get overwhelmed that our experience was not the same as the Apostles, the same promise exists for us that existed for them, that God walks with us through life. Any doubts or concerns that arise in us necessitate our examination of how, even when they wanted more of Jesus, God granted a presence that never fades or goes away. No longer would the disciples or us need to worry the refrain from the Fifty-first Psalm because God would no longer take the Holy Spirit away or cast us away from the Presence.

With confidence that God was by their side, the disciples boldly spoke the truth to the many sojourners that had made the pilgrimage to Jerusalem. The power that the Holy Spirit gave them enabled people from diverse backgrounds to hear the Gospel, which was packaged for their ears and understanding. In the same way, we need to allow the Holy Spirit to package the Gospel as it comes out of our mouths and exudes from our bodies so that the people around us can understand and draw near to God without first needing to become more like us. God calls us to help people follow the Triune God, not people to follow us; therefore, as we deliver the message of the Gospel, we need to ensure that the Holy Spirit guides and directs people to Jesus and the Father, and may our words simply fade into the background.

This must necessarily bring comfort. We do not need to worry about saying the wrong thing if we lean into the Holy Spirit to guide our words, thoughts, and actions. We don’t save people, nor do we cause people to have a transformed life, because that is purely the action of the Holy Spirit. However, even though we do not save people, God invites us in mission as the Church. The early church learned to heed this call and allowed the Holy Spirit to guide and direct them through the synagogues teaching the Gospel. Thousands came to know the saving work of Jesus as the Holy Spirit spoke, and Paul continued this mission through the Gentile world. Everywhere they turned, they faced persecution and opposition, yet they persisted because of the Holy Spirit. Therefore, as God’s church, we must persist through whatever excuses we come up with and share the Gospel with the world.

The early church was empowered to go out and do more than this relatively small group of people could have imagined doing, and by the power of the Holy Spirit, the number of people joining the church could not be counted. However, we sit back in comfort and complain about the coffee served at fellowship hour. Let us rise out of our comfort this Pentecost and celebrate this day as the time we, as a church, remember the gift God gave us and allow the Holy Spirit to use us unencumbered. Let this not just be a day where we wear red or orange to church but a day where we all share the Gospel with the world. God loves the world and asks the Church to go out and tell them.

The Promise

A promise represents the sacred bond that we have in our various relationships. Broken promises are tantamount to broken relationships and deteriorate our connection. The Scriptures look at promises in various forms, such as oaths and covenants, made between leaders and their community and between leaders and other leaders. These serve to maintain order in society and build trust between partners. 

Oaths, covenants, and vows connect us. They are used in contracts, and they ensure that we keep our word. However, Jesus promises us, and because of the trust built up with His disciples and, by proxy, us, we are assured that the promise of the Holy Spirit is not just idle talk but a living presence of God that watches over us individually and corporately as the Church. Jesus addresses the disciples about the change that is coming and how they need to prepare in John chapter 14.

15 “If you love me, you will keep my commandments. 16 And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Helper, to be with you forever, 17 even the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it neither sees him nor knows him. You know him, for he dwells with you and will be in you. 18 “I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you. 19 Yet a little while and the world will see me no more, but you will see me. Because I live, you also will live. 20 In that day you will know that I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you. 21 Whoever has my commandments and keeps them, he it is who loves me. And he who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I will love him and manifest myself to him.”

The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2016), Jn 14:15–21.

The open bookend of the promise begins with a connection between love and obedience. Jesus preempts the promise by imploring the followers of God to remain obedient to God’s law. This reminder is that any promise, oath, covenant, or contract is made among multiple participants and that there is a responsibility to carry out the contract by all parties. We might be tempted to skip to the part where Jesus promises us Holy Spirit, but Jesus reminds us that we can’t passively receive, but God requires our participation. Love and obedience don’t come easy for us, but if we look at what we receive, it seems very little in comparison. When we look at any relationships that don’t have a promise or oath connecting them, we can see love and trust; therefore, how much more love, trust, and honor can we give our Heavenly Father? 

While the covenant begins with our trust, the bulk of the promise details God’s part in caring for us. Just as Jesus walked with the disciples, gave them teachings, and cared for them by providing them with a better way to live, even when Jesus no longer walks with them, there is a promise of another helper in the presence of the Holy Spirit. The promise that those who trust in God will receive the Holy Spirit and not be left alone speaks to us poignantly today as a loneliness epidemic has arisen. 

Even in a world that has more opportunities to connect than any previous generation, people spend less time connecting with one another. The trend started with the advent of social media and got increasingly worse as we became people that increasingly moved our lives online. Even the biggest outdoor advocates also ensure that they have a dynamic online presence. However, the online presence ensures we see only in part, not the whole, of a person. Therefore, people are often broken into pieces and oversimplified to the point that they lose humanity and become only a topic or issue. We think we are connecting, but in reality, we ensure that fewer people get access to our true selves. We disconnect from reality and exchange for a false reality.

God calls us back from disconnection through the promise. This promise has nothing to do with introverts or extroverts because we all need connection. The Holy Spirit provides a connection to the Almighty God while at the same time connecting each of Jesus’ followers to each other. This promise provides opportunity and access to the cure for loneliness, a deep connection to one another. Jesus welcomes the whole person, inviting us into a relationship with God and the church. 

The promise also extends to cure us of sin, which causes the disease of loneliness and brokenness. Ultimately, our sin broke our connection to God, which created the need for Jesus to save us. Therefore, Jesus reminds us that through His resurrection, our sin no longer keeps us away from a relationship with God; therefore, we cannot allow our sin to prevent us from connecting with one another. How many relationships have left our lives because of unresolved conflicts where we have not sought reconciliation? Jesus came to die for those irreconcilable differences. Thus, we cannot harbor bitterness and anger for each other because God has called us to do something more. For bitterness leads to suffering and loneliness, but God’s promise leads to connection and joy.

Jesus closes the bookend of the promise by reminding us that God’s love is available to everyone. We are called to obedience and to love God, but that obedience and love are met with an abundance of love that comes to us through a connection with the Almighty God that is embedded with us through the presence of the Holy Spirit. As the Holy Spirit dwells with us, we must remain at peace with all people and strive for connection and reconciliation with people, just as Jesus brought us to hope through His death and resurrection.

Becoming Building Blocks

The church can be a mighty fortress, or it can be a crumbling ruin. Too often in the current climate, we think that the church’s physical structure must be paramount and luxurious for the world to come and see the beauty and purpose of God. However, God builds the church with the people of God. All of it depends on the people that make up the structure. Upon the people of the church, a building is built to shine for the people of the community. People will look upon the church community and determine whether this collection of people will give life or take energy from its neighbors. Christ intends for the church to be a lighthouse, and we must allow God to build us into that mighty fortress. However, if we take our direction and power from anything outside of God, we become a ruinous shack that breaks down and pulls our community down with us. 

As we look at Peter’s instructions to the church, we find guidance on how we can be made into the fortress of God as a church and church members.

So put away all malice and all deceit and hypocrisy and envy and all slander. 2 Like newborn infants, long for the pure spiritual milk, that by it you may grow up into salvation— 3 if indeed you have tasted that the Lord is good. 4 As you come to him, a living stone rejected by men but in the sight of God chosen and precious, 5 you yourselves like living stones are being built up as a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ. 6 For it stands in Scripture: “Behold, I am laying in Zion a stone, a cornerstone chosen and precious, and whoever believes in him will not be put to shame.” 7 So the honor is for you who believe, but for those who do not believe, “The stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone,” 8 and “A stone of stumbling, and a rock of offense.” They stumble because they disobey the word, as they were destined to do. 9 But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his own possession, that you may proclaim the excellencies of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light. 10 Once you were not a people, but now you are God’s people; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy. 11 Beloved, I urge you as sojourners and exiles to abstain from the passions of the flesh, which wage war against your soul.

The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2016), 1 Pe 2:1–11.

Everything begins with purification. The Kingdom of God has no room for deceit, hypocrisy, envy, or slander. These items introduce cracks into the bricks that prevent the building from establishing a solid connection with one another and the community. We cannot accept a little bit to promote growth or to achieve a better result. This negotiation introduces impurities, leading to broken trust and hurt within our communities. As Peter states that we must be a church that “longs for the pure spiritual milk.”  Pure scripture reading without all the filler our society brings into the Word of God. Both conservative and liberal readings of Scripture, used to bring an agenda forward, have no place in the community of God. Still, instead, we must get back to the core of becoming pure and focusing on loving God and our neighbor. With our focus on God’s purpose for the church, we allow ourselves to eliminate the impurities and build up the Kingdom of God.

Once purified, the church readies itself to approach Jesus. Jesus is the cornerstone that the church builds upon and grows. For the blocks of the church to become useful, they must first approach the building process as followers of Jesus, making ourselves emulate how Jesus lived and ready ourselves for the same type of refinement that following Jesus brings. This continual refining process ensures that cracks do not form and that the building may guide the community to Jesus.  Occasionally, the blocks may begin to think they are foundational and that the other blocks should look more like themselves. Nobody comes before Jesus, the church must remember that we need to look at everything we do, and if anything is not pointing to the love of Christ, then it must be tossed into the refining fire. Fissures and breaks will form and taint the entire building if we neglect this task. The blocks must constantly guide people to becoming more like Jesus.

As we engage with the work of the Kingdom of God, guiding people to Jesus, we understand that we have been picked to do this work by God. Like any good builder, God looked through the materials and ensured that the proper materials were selected among many. We can make excuses about not participating or sharing the Gospel. Still, Peter reminds us that God selected us to carry out this task and that no one should think of themselves as “not up to the task” because God does not make mistakes when selecting the building materials for the church. God wants us to bring light to the world, and as God’s selected block to build the church, we must ensure that we keep the block sturdy and ready for God’s tasks and purposes. 

Peter concludes this section by reminding us that God calls us to remain focused on the task and glorify God in all circumstances. People may look at the church and its building, but God needs the heart of the people of God to remain focused on doing good and sharing the goodness of God, for God chooses to build the church with the building blocks that were hand selected for the task of building the church of God. This task is for you and me to become holy, share God’s message, and guide the world to the light as God’s chosen people. Let us remind ourselves daily that a disciple’s task is building the church for the glory of God. Let us make ourselves into a robust structure free from defects and bring light into the darkness.

Where Is Our Trust?

Looking at the current discourse environment, a constant vacillating force is guiding us about how we should live in the world. A danger exists that we get swept up in anger and frustration, and our actions and words create havoc and distress. Ultimately, as we look at the teachings from Scripture, we would not be swayed to give into bitterness and violent behavior. Our hearts would remain focused on striving after peace, even if our lives are not peaceful. Our behavior must align with righteousness, goodness, and grace to remain focused on living in peace. In turbulent times we are most prone to slipping off this ideal, but if we place our trust in Christ Jesus and the results of His suffering, we have an anchor leading us to a transformed understanding and living. 

Peter reminds us where our minds should be focused during these times in 1 Peter 2:19-25.

19 For this is a gracious thing, when, mindful of God, one endures sorrows while suffering unjustly. 20 For what credit is it if, when you sin and are beaten for it, you endure? But if when you do good and suffer for it you endure, this is a gracious thing in the sight of God. 21 For to this you have been called, because Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example, so that you might follow in his steps. 22 He committed no sin, neither was deceit found in his mouth. 23 When he was reviled, he did not revile in return; when he suffered, he did not threaten, but continued entrusting himself to him who judges justly. 24 He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree, that we might die to sin and live to righteousness. By his wounds you have been healed. 25 For you were straying like sheep, but have now returned to the Shepherd and Overseer of your souls.

The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2016), 1 Pe 2:19–25.

We are surrounded by injustice. Some of the injustices we encounter have existed as long as there have been humans, while others are brand new; however, all originate with sin, a separation from God’s ideal. It is far too familiar for Christians to claim injustice when it might be confused with inconvenience. Still, we must carefully approach this allegation, understanding that God calls us to be aware of the various areas in our world where justice is denied to the poor and powerless. When we focus only on how injustice affects us personally, we participate further in the chaotic nature of injustice. God seeks to root out the negative ways that injustice affects those genuinely powerless. Trusting in God allows God to transform our thinking to fight against the actual oppression of sin in our world.

As our minds are transformed to seeking justice and peace, God will guide our hearts toward living in righteousness. Many of our misplaced accusations of injustice come from the consequences of ungodly living. This is not injustice, nor is the suffering we experience building character. During these periods, we need to seek repentance. Our hearts must focus on doing good, and anything that pulls us away from God’s goodness must be cast aside. Doing this guides us back to righteousness, which allows our eyes to see God’s holiness and helps lead us. When we find ourselves in an unenviable position because of the sin in our hearts, we might cry out, asking for salvation from our predicament. Jesus Christ did come to save us from our sins and established peace and justice, which had previously been absent.

God is the primary actor in bringing peace and justice through the death and resurrection of Christ Jesus. Our minds and eyes will stray; however, Jesus brings us back after He pursues our hearts endlessly. This pursuit of our salvation comes because Jesus seeks to restore us and restore peace and justice in the world. Therefore, at times, life is going to be difficult and seem unfair, but during these moments, we must focus on the sacrifice of Jesus and trust that God is carrying us through the most challenging junctures. While Jesus calls us to pursue justice and righteousness, we also understand that none of this is possible without the sacrifice of the Holy Son.

If we trust that Jesus came to do what He said, then our hearts will be moved to honor God with all of our heart, mind, strength, and soul. We don’t wallow in our circumstances; instead, we look for opportunities to help others and bring justice to those trapped in chaotic cycles. In all things, we work to maintain or restore the righteousness in our living, which is the best and most wholesome act of worship. This worship is not because we need to act for God, but God acts because the all-powerful Creator of the universe loves us and acts on our behalf. Therefore, we should trust in Jesus because He already showed Himself trustworthy.

When In Doubt, Do Good

With the internet’s emergence and social media’s advent, innumerable voices claim absolute truth. Even among Christian sources, there is a lack of unity of thought and several competing voices. While the internet amplifies the differences, they are not new. Splits in the Christian church date back to Acts 15, where disputes among differing factions caused not a minor issue regarding circumcision. With so many competing voices, it can be hard to know which voices we should listen to and which lead us to the truth. Jesus was repeatedly challenged regarding how to follow the Sabbath properly, and his response should guide us whenever we have doubts about what is right to do when we are uncertain of the truth. Matthew 12 shows us an example of how Jesus handled the opposition.

9 He went on from there and entered their synagogue. 10 And a man was there with a withered hand. And they asked him, “Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath?”—so that they might accuse him. 11 He said to them, “Which one of you who has a sheep, if it falls into a pit on the Sabbath, will not take hold of it and lift it out? 12 Of how much more value is a man than a sheep! So it is lawful to do good on the Sabbath.” 13 Then he said to the man, “Stretch out your hand.” And the man stretched it out, and it was restored, healthy like the other. 14 But the Pharisees went out and conspired against him, how to destroy him.

The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2016), Mt 12:9–14.

As Jesus verbally danced with the Pharisees regarding what was lawful during the Sabbath, Jesus directed us to question the source of their truth. The scriptures direct us to observe the Sabbath and keep it set apart, but the Pharisees added to it, as laid out in the Talmud and other commentary-esque literature. They placed restrictions on some tasks because they might lead to transgression, but not a transgression. However, there was also the ability to allow a Rabbi to state that some actions were necessary, which is what Jesus references about the allowing of saving a sheep. When we look to our source of truth in the scriptures, we must refrain from mixing up interpretation or commentary with the plain language of the text. Many of us come from differing traditions that interpret Scripture differently, but we must hold to the source of truth as Scripture and that our traditions are lesser than the truth found in Scripture.

Traditions lead to disputes because we come from different backgrounds and want to think the best of our interpretations. Too often, we lean into the thoughts originating in our background, but looking at scripture honestly will open our eyes to differing interpretations of the exact text. The Pharisees could only see their traditional observation of the Sabbath as truth; anything outside of that observation was worthy of death. Therefore, they get flustered and angered when Jesus pokes a hole in their understanding through their tradition of exception. If we get frustrated that someone doesn’t view Scripture the way we do, we must look back to the Scriptures as a whole and strive for peace with God and others. Jesus directs us to the purpose of the Sabbath, not the practice. We must understand why God created the Sabbath, and it was certainly not to hold people in suffering but to create space for worship. How better to worship God than to liberate someone from a life of pain and suffering?

The Gospel liberates the world’s people from their separation from God, bringing peace between God and humanity. Therefore, our interactions with people in the name of the Gospel should bring peace and unity, not division and strife. Jesus brought healing to the man at the synagogue, bringing about a wholeness previously withheld because of the day of the week. He gave the afflicted life, which was authorized by the purpose of the Sabbath. Even though this conflicted with the Pharisees, Jesus reminded them that the Sabbath could not be oppressive but liberating to worship. Most of the time, we won’t come to a consensus about how we understand all the Scriptures. Still, as long as what we are doing is giving life and guiding people toward freedom in Christ, then we represent the Gospel, and our differences are inconsequential.

When we strive to find out how to understand what God wants us to hold as truth, there is far too much noise generated by the many opinions and traditions in the world. The Scriptures guide us to God’s purpose for us, which is to bring peace to the chaos all around, and instead of shouting about our differences, God calls us to unity in the Gospel. The Gospel brings life and not disunity and separation. Therefore, the Gospel will always lead us toward doing good and helping alleviate suffering and pain. Even if our actions may cause others to see us as doing something wrong, if we bring good to our community, it will always outweigh the need to follow a legalistic tradition.