Monday, December 10, 2012

Going Backwards In Order To Go Forward


I love watching the Olympics. Track and Field has got to be one of my favorite things to watch.  Runners always move forward. You never see them go in the opposite direction. However, when it comes to the long jump, in order to move forward, you have to first go backwards, and the further back you go, the longer will be your jump.

The bible teaches that when we invited Jesus into your lives and surrendered to His Lordship, we were placed “in Christ” forever. Paul says that we were “made a new creation in Christ” (2 Cor. 5:17).  Being “in Christ” has many wonderful benefits, such as:

In Christ, you are the very righteousness of God!  (2 Cor. 5:21; Phil. 3:7-9)
In Christ, you are perfect!  (Hebrews 10:14)
In Christ, your sins are forever forgiven and forever forgotten (Hebrews 10:12, 14, 17)
In Christ, you are God’s friend (Romans 5:10-11)
In Christ, your redemption is eternally secure!  (Hebrews 9:14)
In Christ, you are God’s Temple, a member of His Church and body (Ephesians 2:19-22)
In Christ, you are sealed and gifted by God the Holy Spirit! (Eph. 1:13, 1 Peter 4:10-11)

However, I ask myself, since all this is true for me, why then do I still struggle?   The answer can be frightening. For many of us, in order to move forward, we need to go backwards. We have to go and revisit our past and deal with unfinished and unsettled issues.  

Such things may involve a bad decision we made that we often times regret or try our hardest not to think about. It may mean making contact with a person we don’t want anything to do with. It may involve reliving the trauma of being abused sexually and physically.

Underneath the surface of our lives, we continue to live in the negative patterns of our past which were shaped by our family origin and past experiences.  How we handle…
Conflict,
Gender roles,
Failure and success,
Parenting,
Grieving,
Singleness,
Money,
Pleasure, are often influenced by our past that messes up how we think and behave in the present.  

Personally, I do not like to go beneath the surface and travel back to my past.  It’s too painful.  Just the thought of having to revisit my life with both my alcoholic parents, the sexual abuse by my uncle, and bad decisions I made which almost wrecked my life and first marriage are taboo.

But if I don’t go and revisit the past – especially if such experiences are still affecting the way I think and behave, then the pain I am trying to escape only magnifies negatively and hijacks the beauty of my present reality.

So what should I do?  In order to go back to my painful past, I must travel back and interpret those experiences through who I am in Christ as a new creation.  Jesus’ work in my life frees me from self-condemnation.  How I was treated and what was done to me I cannot change. But in Jesus, I am a new creation, therefore, despite such things, I am changed by the grace of God.

It is only by the integration of the Gospel over time, does my walk begin to match my position in Christ. But it takes time and the courage to go backwards in order to move forward. There are still lessons for me to learn from my past that I have not yet fully understood. God does not waste a hurt. All things do work together for good.  Nothing which has happened to me, even the trouble that I have caused is not without golden lessons.

If I walk up to the line and try with all my might to jump forward, I will advance a few inches. However, if I step back, way back, and then look ahead and fun as fast as I can, when I come to the line and jump, I will advance several feet, much more than standing still.

Going backwards may seem scary. But moving forward successfully is not an option. It is what a person “in Christ” must do. It’s worth the journey.

Saturday, December 1, 2012

Hell Will Be Populated With Sons of the Kindgom


I’ve been meditating on Matthew 8:12:  “But the sons of the kingdom shall be cast out into outer darkness, in that place, there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth.”

It seems to me as I read the New Testament, those who are truly saved and become part of God’s kingdom do not go to hell. But here is a verse that seems to say the opposite.

If Jesus said, “the sons of the evil one shall be cast into outer darkness,” I would not have a problem. But Jesus uses the phrase, “sons of the kingdom.”

To be sure, Jesus is referencing Jews. Verse 11 indicates this: “Many shall come from the East and the West and recline at the table with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, in the kingdom of heaven.” Therefore, “sons of the kingdom” is referencing covenantal Jews who are in some way in the kingdom.

To break it down further, “sons of the kingdom” in this passage must refer to those who are lost or without Christ. How else can it be said that they end up in hell?

But are “sons of the kingdom” used also as a reference to the lost? Yes it can. Remember back in Genesis 6, where it talks about demons cohabitating with women? In Genesis 6:2 it states, “the sons of God saw that the daughters of men were beautiful; and they took wives for themselves, whomever they chose.” No doubt, the phrase, “sons of God” is used here as a reference to demons.  Therefore, the term does not always point to true believers or godly creatures. Only the context can define this.

Moreover, in Matthew 13:24-30, Jesus tells of a parable about the kingdom of heaven being compared to a man who sowed good seed in his field. Then one day an enemy came and sowed tares. Both the wheat and tares grew together.

It was mentioned to the landowner if he wanted his servants to remove the tares from the wheat. His reply is quite instructive: “No, lest while you gather up the tares, you may root up the wheat with them” (v. 29). Then he adds: “Allow them both to grow together until the harvest” (v. 30).

So in the present kingdom of God that is invisible and in its mystery form (v. 11), saved and unsaved sons grow together until the time of the harvest (i.e. judgment) and then God will do the separating.

That’s why I am not surprised when I hear how the world has so many who claim to be Christians.  When you bring together the saved and unsaved – both claiming to be Christians, you will have a huge number or percentage.

I am also cautious about the fact that it just isn’t easy to know who is saved and who isn’t. Sometimes the saved live and talk like they are lost and the lost live and talk like they are saved! Jesus said, “Let them both grow together!”  If only they understood this during the time of the Crusades and Inquisition.

So having established that the lost can also be identified as “sons of the kingdom,” it is not a problem to see them being cast into outer darkness.

Man may not know the true condition of a person’s heart, but God does. In the end, He will make the determination and there will be no mistake.