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WHO CAN BE SAVED?
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Mark 10:24-27
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The disciples were amazed at his words. But Jesus said again,
'Children, how hard it is to enter the kingdom of God! It is easier for a
camel to go through the eye of a needle than for someone who is rich to enter
the kingdom of God.' The disciples were even more amazed, and said to each
other, 'Who then can be saved?' Jesus looked at them and said, 'With man this
is impossible, but not with God; all things are possible with God.' (NIVUK)
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Read the verses around this Bible passage from the Internet Bible: in English, and many
other languages
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You might have thought that Jesus would make it easy for people to
become His disciples. He did! Those who obeyed His commands (fishermen
to leave their nets, lame people to get up and walk, and sinners to repent)
found immediate access to His kingdom (Luke
23:39-43). The difficulty about entering the Kingdom is not
of God's making because He wants everybody to be saved (1 Timothy
2:4); it is the resistance of people's hearts against obeying
Jesus. The rich young man in this narrative (Mark
10:17-23) had been told to sell everything, and give the
money away. But he refused and walked away - because his heart was hard
against Jesus (even though he was enthusiastic for religion!).
That religious man would have been taught that riches were a sign of
God's blessing - a foretaste of the Kingdom (Proverbs
10:22) . But that sign was so corrupted by the man's
sinful and acquisitive nature that it became a barrier against obeying the
Word of God (1
Timothy 6:10). The man had made his possessions his god and they
were in charge - that was why they could not be sacrificed. And so, the
command of Jesus fell on deaf ears. The call of human ambition and
self-satisfaction reflect the voice of the unholy world. It so easily
drowns out the Word of God. 1
John 2:16-17 says, "For everything in the world
– the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life – comes
not from the Father but from the world. The world and its desires pass away,
but whoever does the will of God lives for ever."
The disciples were hungry for fame and fortune too (Mark
9:33-34) and could not understand how possessions could be a
spiritual handicap. Jesus wanted them, as the future leaders of the
church, to see how the apparent power and security of money would drive
people away from security in God (Acts
8:18-23) . He further amazed them by the ludicrous word
cartoon of a camel trying to get through the eye of a sewing needle.
Impossible, they thought. 'Who can be saved', the disciples asked, 'if
rich, moral, religious people find it so difficult?' No! Not
impossible, said Jesus... if God is involved and in charge. Those who
will listen to Him and respond in obedience will be glad. Otherwise
their sadness will extend to eternal grief.
Jesus cannot be a bolt-on extra to a self-serving lifestyle. He
has the right to be your God because He is God! So, He has the right to
command according to His wisdom, and expect obedience. Refusal to submit (and
its eternal consequences) is our problem and not His. However, the Lord
is more than willing to help those who are willing to let Him. Our task
is to tell the truth about how to inherit eternal life, and pray that the
Lord will give them the desire to be obedient to the truth (1 Peter
1:13-16).
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Dear Lord. Thank You for helping me to be willing to listen to Your
voice and to obey You. Forgive me when I have soaked up the values of the
worldlings I work with and justified my selfish lifestyle. Please show me one
area today in which I need to change - so that others can see the real
Christian life, and desire to follow Jesus too. In Jesus' Name. Amen.
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Thursday, May 2, 2019
WHO CAN BE SAVED?
Wednesday, May 1, 2019
FROM BUST TO BOOM
FROM BUST TO
BOOM
By all
immediate measures, Jesus’s ministry was a total failure. But
it wasn’t for lack of effort or commitment.
At
the prime of life, Jesus left his carpentry bench in Nazareth for the dusty
roads of Palestine. For three years he promoted his brand, wowing crowds with
miracles and captivating them with his teaching. On more than one occasion he
drew thousands to a remote place to see him and hear him. He invested himself
in the training of twelve handpicked men to carry his message to the world.
But, despite all of his good intentions and effort, at the time of his death,
his following numbered scarcely more than one hundred individuals.
Worse,
at the end of his ministry, one of his trainees betrayed him, another
vigorously denied him, and the rest abandoned him, leaving a handful of women
to stand by and mourn as life oozed out of his scourged and nail-pierced body.
When
the stone was rolled over the mouth of the tomb, Jesus was just one more in the
parade of misguided leaders whose visionary movements failed to outlive them.
Or so it seemed. Within two months after his death, something extraordinary
happened: the Jesus Movement didn’t wither and collapse, it flourished.
Numbers and
Impact
Within the span of a few weeks, the small band of deserters regrouped and their ranks began to swell—first to 3,000, then to 5,000 (not including women)—despite sustained opposition from detractors. And for two thousand years their ranks have continued to increase, making Christianity the world’s largest religion with over 2 billion adherents and counting.
Within the span of a few weeks, the small band of deserters regrouped and their ranks began to swell—first to 3,000, then to 5,000 (not including women)—despite sustained opposition from detractors. And for two thousand years their ranks have continued to increase, making Christianity the world’s largest religion with over 2 billion adherents and counting.
But
it is more than numbers that make Christianity a singular phenomenon: Against
every other movement, ideology, and belief system, the culture-shaping impact
of Christianity is unequalled. In fact, Christianity is the seed from which
Western civilization sprang up and blossomed.
It
was the belief in an intelligible universe populated with intelligent beings
whom the Creator entrusted to care for, manage, and enrich his handiwork that
enabled the shift from astrology and alchemy to modern science. Christian
notions about equality, freedom, and man as a divinely endowed being led to the
Western rule of law. Sacrificial love, as taught and modelled by Jesus,
inspired the establishment of the first hospitals, orphanages, and charities.
And believers who took their faith into the public square, rather than leave it
at the doorstep of the church, became the vanguard of the great social
movements of abolition, suffrage, and civil rights.
If
that doesn’t strike you as strange, it should.
Screaming
for Explanation
The Macedonian Empire of Alexander the Great began splintering soon after his death. Within five centuries of the assassination of Julius Caesar (the “dictator in perpetuity”), his “Eternal City” was sacked, leading to the collapse of the Roman Empire. Scarcely one century after the death of Karl Marx, the Berlin Wall fell, the rest of the Iron Curtain came down, and the Eastern Bloc was dismantled.
The Macedonian Empire of Alexander the Great began splintering soon after his death. Within five centuries of the assassination of Julius Caesar (the “dictator in perpetuity”), his “Eternal City” was sacked, leading to the collapse of the Roman Empire. Scarcely one century after the death of Karl Marx, the Berlin Wall fell, the rest of the Iron Curtain came down, and the Eastern Bloc was dismantled.
Yet
the kingdom inaugurated by a Galilean carpenter has not only endured for two
millennia, it has grown numerically and influentially, despite being driven
underground for the first 300 years of its existence, and being a target of
persecution from its beginning to the present day.
How
did Jesus accomplish what no other person in history ever accomplished? The
phenomenon of the Church is a fact screaming for explanation.
It stems from the fact that the
early Christians believed, really believed, that
Jesus was more than a great moral teacher or charismatic leader; they believed
that he was Lord and God. Their belief was based on the testimony of eleven men
who claimed to have seen something that defied scientific explanation, reason,
and common sense: the risen Lord.
Singular and
Unprecedented
When Jesus, three days dead, passed through the locked door of the upper room, the disciples became witnesses to a thing unprecedented in history.
When Jesus, three days dead, passed through the locked door of the upper room, the disciples became witnesses to a thing unprecedented in history.
Sure, there were cases of
resuscitations by physicians and stories of “raisings” by metaphysicians. There
were the biblical accounts of the Sidonian widow’s
son raised by Elijah and the Shunammite’s
son who was raised by Elisha, as well as Jesus’s raisings of Jairus’s
daughter and Lazarus that
the disciples were privileged to witness first hand. But never before had the
disciples (or anyone else) known of a dead person rising on
their own power, and in a reconstituted body. Only
Jesus had done that.
Initially
dazed and confused by what they had seen, the disciples soon realized that
Jesus’s mastery over death only made sense if he was the God he had claimed to
be. The disciples became so convinced about the Resurrection (and what it
meant), that barely one month after they bailed on their crushed leader, they
boldly entered Jerusalem to broadcast their news to the most unsympathetic
audience on the planet.
The Turnabout
The shift from jellyfish to ironman was exemplified in Peter.
The shift from jellyfish to ironman was exemplified in Peter.
Shortly following his second
imprisonment for preaching the resurrection, Peter was brought before the
Sanhedrin for repeatedly defying their gag order. After the robed masters rail
against his intransigence, Peter responds bluntly:
“We must obey God rather than men!” Then, continuing in his obduracy, Peter
reprises his unwelcome testimony:
The God of our fathers raised Jesus
from the dead—whom you had killed by hanging him on a tree. God exalted him to
his own right hand as Prince and Saviour that he might give repentance and
forgiveness of sins to Israel. We are witnesses of these things,
and so is the Holy Spirit, whom God has given to those who obey him. (My
emphasis.)
Talk about chutzpah! Especially
recalling that just a few weeks prior, Peter cursed at the suggestion that he
even knew Jesus. The only rational explanation for Peter’s turnaround is that
he really believed
in the Resurrection; and the only rational explanation for his belief is that
the Resurrection really occurred.
A Mistake or
Ruse?
Could Peter and the other eyewitnesses have been mistaken about what they had seen? Hardly—considering that all of them remained steadfast in their belief, despite every motivation and opportunity to reconsider what had happened that Sunday morning and in the weeks that followed. Even to the point of martyrdom, an end to which all but one endured, none of the disciples ever retracted or revised their testimony.
Could Peter and the other eyewitnesses have been mistaken about what they had seen? Hardly—considering that all of them remained steadfast in their belief, despite every motivation and opportunity to reconsider what had happened that Sunday morning and in the weeks that followed. Even to the point of martyrdom, an end to which all but one endured, none of the disciples ever retracted or revised their testimony.
Could the disciples have hatched the
whole resurrection story for some personal gain? That was the explanation the
robed masters leaked shortly after the receiving the shocking news of the empty
tomb, and it is what is commonly held today among critics who spin various
Passover plot scenarios. But as has been competently argued by others, while
people may die for what they believe to be true, they won’t die for what they
know to be false.
The Test
It is not a little ironic that after Peter’s saucy response to the Sanhedrin, one of their number, Gamaliel, proposed a litmus to his colleagues:
It is not a little ironic that after Peter’s saucy response to the Sanhedrin, one of their number, Gamaliel, proposed a litmus to his colleagues:
Men
of Israel, consider carefully what you intend to do to these men. Some time ago
Theudas appeared, claiming to be somebody, and about four hundred men rallied
to him. He was killed, all his followers were dispersed, and it all came to
nothing. After him, Judas the Galilean appeared in the days of the census and
led a band of people in revolt. He too was killed, and all his followers were
scattered. Therefore, in the present case I advise you: Leave these men alone!
Let them go! For if their purpose or activity is of human origin, it will fail.
But if it is from God, you will not be able to stop these men; you will only
find yourselves fighting against God.
Gamaliel
was right. If Jesus was just another dead messianic leader, his following would
come to nothing—but it didn’t. Despite the suppressive forces of the cross, the
stake, the coliseum, the gulag, and anti-religious legislation, law suits,
speech codes, and political correctness, the kingdom has steadily advanced in
hearts of men and in man’s institutions.
Outside
of the truth of the Resurrection, the phenomenon of the Church is
inexplicable—a fact, which itself is sufficient to establish that the “faith
once given” was given by none other than God. By his own criterion Gamaliel
would be compelled to agree, as would persons of any era who honestly consider
the facts.
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