John 9:39 MSG. Jesus then said, “I came into the world to bring everything into the clear light of day, making all the distinctions clear, so that those who have never seen will see, and those who have made a great pretense of seeing will be exposed as blind.”
Observations
Jesus clashed violently with His culture and the religious practices of His time. Jesus, the Light, confronted the darkness promulgated by the religious leaders of His time, such as:
- the “necessary compromises” with Roman conquerors to keep the peace and avoid upsetting the status quo of their power over the people of Israel (John 11:45-53 NIV),
- the ugliness of greed beneath the surface of rituals in the Temple, which had become more a lucrative business for the Sadducees than a place of worship, prayer and adoration of God (Mt. 21:12-13 NIV),
- the increasing burden of religious laws created by the Pharisees that obscured the heart of God toward His people (Mt. 23:23-24 NIV)
The Jewish religious leaders maintained a level of profit, power and control over the people by preaching “peace at any cost” to placate and minimize the intervention of the Roman conquerors who wanted nice, peaceful, obedient subjects across their far-flung empire. Jesus’ preaching and teaching both drew large crowds and exposed the ugliness hidden behind the pretense of the religious practices (impersonal, judgmental, weighted down with ritual, attempting to earn holiness through impossible works).
While the large crowds worried the Romans (concerned about sedition), the largest concern for the religious leaders had to be another sort of sedition – losing influence over the people who came out of the darkness of religion to embrace relationship with Promised Messiah, people who were considered blind spiritually but now could clearly see and know their God, His character, His heart. This new insight resulted from the violent clash of Jesus with the existing culture through preaching true holiness, true worship, true love, true religion.
Impact on me
As I consider the chaos of our times, I am reminded that Jesus did not come to bring peace (lack of conflict and chaos) at any cost; He came to bring truth, grace, wholeness and redemption (shalom regardless of circumstances swirling around us) at any cost. Events of the last few years have exposed to Believer and non-believer alike how little control we really have over the circumstances of our lives. However, believers in Christ know that He is with us in it all.
If I truly desire to be Christlike, I must consider that I, too, am called to be a radical, one who dares, like Jesus, to unite with the Body of Christ in love, grace and mercy to overcome any cultural or religious blindness at the cost of my status quo for the sake of revealing true peace and the heart of our God toward all people. Jesus was one man who seeded the truth into 12 and then 70 and then thousands who embraced His light shining into their darkness so they could embrace the true nature of God and become sighted so that others might also see clearly. Am I willing to trust that He can use me to continue to bring His light into the darkness today?
From this small beginning, Jesus by His Holy Spirit reached out over the ages to find and redeem me, to draw me out of my personal darkness into His marvelous light because He gave His life for His radical beliefs,
- no necessary compromises to preserve the temporary peace or even His own life,
- being willing to sacrifice Himself to fulfill the Father’s price for us when we were lost in sin,
- dying to redeem even the man who drove the nails in His hands or held the whip, those in the crowd who yelled “crucify” or the religious leaders who plotted His death.
Am I willing to do the same? Am I blind or do I really see clearly? What am I willing to sacrifice for my enemies? I have to ask the questions because, if I say I want to be like Jesus, don’t I also have to be willing to submit myself to the Father’s will and purpose for me regardless of the cost? Do I really trust Him enough to go the distance, to step out into the unknown, be willing to be considered a radical, trusting that the light of Christ in me will dispel the darkness – to have the courage to clash with my culture regardless of what I might lose?
My prayer
Lord, I stand before You and ask for any blindness in me to be healed that I might walk in Your light, seeing clearly Your will and purpose for me. I do want to be like Christ, but my heart worries over what the cost might be. Work in me to grow my trust in You so I might have the courage to willingly obey what You ask of me, leaving You to weigh the benefit to Your kingdom of whatever it costs me. Help me to give You the keys to the places within me where I restrict Your access – places of shame, fear, selfishness, sin. Let me see and know You more clearly every moment of every day. I want to hear, “Well done, good and faithful servant,” when I stand before You on that day. Make it so in the name of Jesus.
Amen:)
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