Of Box-Cutters and Neck Irons
July 29, 2014
We love our boxes.
Boxes keep people isolated and crumpled up. And religious people can be experts at building boxes with labels to put people in.
A young woman wears something deemed inappropriate and a so-called “Christian” slaps a box on her labeled “tramp” or “whore” or “slut”, and then goes on their way.
You see, if I can place another person who is different from me in a box labeled “liberal” or “conservative” or “weird” or “snob”, etc. then I am off the hook. I don’t have to do the hard and uncomfortable work of building an actual relationship. Or, dare I say, loving that person!
But Jesus Christ is in the business of cutting boxes and breaking neck irons (I will explain that one below), and loving people for exactly who they are.
Three exchanges take place in Luke 5 and 6 that back this up. First, the Pharisees ask Jesus why his disciples don’t fast (abstain from food for religious purposes). Jesus explained that they didn’t fast because they were with the Bridegroom himself. No asceticism was called for. Celebration was more appropriate. Later they would fast, Jesus told them, but now was not that time.
But wait! The Pharisees didn’t understand that. It was outside of their religious box.
A little while later, Jesus and his disciples were walking through a field on a Sabbath and they picked grain and ate it. The Pharisees considered that a violation of the law. Now technically it was not because they were poor travelers, and the law made that food available to them. But for a recognized Rabbi, the action was outside of the religious box.
The third examples happens again on a Sabbath, but this time in a synagogue. A man was there with a withered hand. He could not open it and stretch it out. The Pharisees (expert box-makers that they were) actually preferred Jesus not heal him rather than do a “work” on the Sabbath day. Jesus told him to stand up in front of them all and “STRETCH OUT YOUR HAND”.
You and I are supposed to stand tall and strong and enjoy the freedom and liberty of a lively faith that Jesus paid a dear price for us to enjoy. We should not be cramped and crumpled inside a box of our own or anyone else’s making.
When John Newton (the author of Amazing Grace) was a slave-ship captain, God was beginning to move on his heart. On his last journey he saw that the slaves he was transporting were actually mothers and brothers and fathers and children. They were people and they deserved dignity. He felt an urge to unshackle them all but knew his crew would mutiny if he did. He recognized one thing he could do, however.
Remove the neck irons.
One of the most undignified and cruel devices used on slaves was the neck iron. It would prevent people from lifting their heads. They had to walk and moved in a hunched over position. John Newton ordered the neck irons removed.
Apparently, the Holy Spirit was stimulating Jesus-type action through John Newton.
Will you continue that work?
Start with yourself. Lift up your hands, your heads, your life itself! Stretch out to your full height! You are free! You have liberty. Jesus has cut that box and removed those neck irons.
Now look around and see if anyone else needs a box cut open or a neck iron removed.
That’s what Jesus does. Hallelujah!
“Happy in Jesus”
July 16, 2014
One of the great hymns from the 19th Century is “Trust and Obey” by John H. Sammis. It has a wonderful refrain… “Trust and obey, for there’s no other way, to be happy in Jesus, but to trust and obey.”
Being Happy is one of the undeniable results of our faith and a central tenet of our preaching…that to follow Jesus Christ will result in a happy and joyful life!
I am afraid I don’t remember or declare that as much as I should. But the truth is, I am very HAPPY since I gave my life to Jesus.
Yup… Just plain ‘ol happy!
In the documentary of the same name (“Happy”), the professors and social scientists who studied the reasons for happiness around the world and for successive decades, shared the three central reasons that produce happiness in people no matter their nationality, income, race, or creed. The three universal indicators of happiness are (1) Strong Familial Relationships, (2) Helping Others and (3) Personal Growth.
When I saw the documentary, I realized that church can provide all three! Is it really any wonder?!?!?
We are one family in Christ. We gather together for worship and to serve others. We daily seek to grow in our relationship with God and in understanding His Word.
Those exact elements of close familial relationships, service, and personal growth are what secular scientists have discovered are the formula for a happy life. No wonder we are so happy!