Sign, Sign, Everywhere a Sign

Sign, Sign, Everywhere a Sign

The Holy Spirit was active in a mighty way during the church’s first century. The Holy Spirit revealed and confirmed the message of the kingdom as well as directed men to specific areas of work. The Holy Spirit directed the church at Antioch to send Paul and Barnabas on a missionary journey (Acts 13:2, 4).

How did the Holy Spirit communicate with those brethren?

Did He make the sun break through the clouds at just the right time to give them a sign? People are always looking for a sign. They see the “face of Jesus” in the clouds, in the bark of a tree, even in their bologna  sandwiches! Bobby prayed that God would direct him to the best job. He was choosing between car sales and carpentry. Later that day, he jumped into his old clunker…and the engine started right up with no spluttering at all! He felt God was speaking to him telling him to go into car sales. Most signs men and women “see” today are of this nature. But this was not how the Holy Spirit spoke in the New Testament.
Did the Holy Spirit give them a nudge in the right direction? I have many friends who say they have been “led by the Spirit” to do this or that in their life. When it comes down to it, what they mean by “led” is they got a strong feeling one way or the other. Kathy was in the store “making groceries,” as they say here in Louisiana. As she shopped, she noticed a young lady who was having trouble with her 3-year-old son. Kathy felt she should talk to this girl about godly discipline. Later, Kathy explained to her friends that the Holy Spirit led her to that conversation. “I just felt led to talk to her,” she said. Perhaps we could be nudged in this way – I don’t know. But this was not how the Holy Spirit spoke in the New Testament.

Man's Communication

Man's Communication

What the Holy Spirit DID was this: He communicated very clearly with words. Yes, He spoke words to the brethren at Antioch. The Holy Spirit said, “Set apart for Me Barnabas and Saul for the work to which I have called them” (Acts 13:2). The elders of the church and the prophets of the church did not see a sign or “feel led” by the Holy Spirit. They WERE led – no question. It was not vague or open to interpretation. There was no guess work.

And I want us to understand: this is the way God always communicates to man! When God wants to tell us something, He does so in a clear, objective manner. When He communicates with us, we are not left wondering if God really spoke or not – we KNOW God spoke. He communicates with words, with language.

The Holy Spirit communicates with us today the same way as He did during the first century. He speaks clear words. His messages are obvious. He speaks through prophets. The only difference today is that all of God’s words are WRITTEN DOWN for us. God is the ultimate master communicator, and we CAN understand what He says. Ephesians 3:4: “When you read you can understand my insight into the mystery of Christ.”

What do you think?

May God bless us in the understanding of His word,
Nathan

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Ten Commandments

Which is the Greatest?

Jesus had silenced the Pharisees, Herodians, and Sadducees. A scribe then took the stage with a third and final challenge for Jesus. He was unlike the first two questioners. He did not first flatter Jesus to disarm Him. He did not present some weird scenario to prove his own position. He simply asked a question – and it was a good question: “What commandment is the foremost of all?” (Mark 12:28).

Jesus’ answer was straightforward, too. He did not accuse this man of false motives or of misunderstanding Scripture, as He had in the first two challenges. He simply answered the question.

If someone asked YOU to boil down God’s law to it’s barest essentials, what would you say? It sounds formidable. Yet this is something a great teacher should be able to do. If a teacher cannot express the purpose of his material in a sentence or two, it usually means he does not have a very good grasp of his subject. Jesus showed that He had a perfect grasp of God’s word. It seems He did not hesitate for an instant. I am humbled by the brevity and wisdom of His reply.

The greatest commandment: “Hear, O Israel! The Lord our God is one Lord; and you shall love the Lord your God with all of your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength (Mark 12:29-30). This is the kind of love that gives body and soul into His service. Our thoughts, the intent of our heart, our actions, our words – we commit it all to Him and the work He has designed for us.

The second greatest commandment: “You shall love your neighbor as yourself” (Mark 12:31). This is derived from the first commandment. If you love God, you will love your neighbor, because that is God’s will.

The scribe was (rightfully) impressed with our Lord, and he said as much. He said, basically, “To love God and love your neighbor is much more than all burnt offerings and sacrifices” (Mark 12:32-33).

The text does not say Jesus was impressed with the man’s heart or enthusiasm. Jesus was impressed with the man’s INTELLIGENT answer. The scribe had a good level of understanding, and that impressed our Lord. Coming into God’s kingdom is a matter of the heart, but FIRST it is a matter of the mind and the will. This man was not far from the kingdom, Jesus said. He had the understanding. We can only hope that he made the commitment later.

God bless,
Nathan

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Challenge

The Challenge

Big-shot Jewish leaders were challenging Jesus with the hotly-contested questions of their day. Pharisees and Herodians brought the first challenge – to pay or not to pay taxes to Caesar. In Mark 12:18-27 some Sadducees brought the second challenge to our Lord.

The Sadducees did not believe in the resurrection of the dead (Mark 12:18) or in angels or spirits (Acts 23:8). That’s why they were so SAD, YOU SEE. They did what men often do. They came up with some off-the-wall scenario to “prove” their position. Their scenario had to do with the Jewish law. If a man died having no children, his brother was to take his widow and attempt to conceive a child for his brother’s name so his brother’s family name would not die out. (I know, it gives me the shivers, too…but this was their society and their rules, given by God.) So the woman married the oldest brother, who died, and so the next brother in line took her in. Let me say, if I was the law in their town, I’d be mighty suspicious. All seven brothers took this woman to wife, and all seven brothers died. Fishy. But that’s not the point. The point is, she had married seven men during her stay on this earth. I dare say there are some women today who come pretty close to this number, unfortunately.

“In the resurrection, when they rise again, which one’s wife will she be? For all seven had married her,” they said (Mark 12:23). They sat back with their thumbs in their suspenders mighty satisfied with themselves for presenting such impenetrable proof against the resurrection. Isn’t it funny how we do the same thing? We put forward some impossible, or improbable, scenario and think we have just disproven the word of God or wormed our way around one of God’s laws! How funny we are. How silly. How stupid!

Jesus’ answer stung, I’m sure. He confronted them on two fronts.

(1) He said they did not understand the Scriptures. What?? They had spent their LIVES studying the scriptures. They were the authority at the time. To tell these men they didn’t understand is like telling Joel Osteen, Benny Hinn, or Billy Graham that they don’t understand the Scriptures. That was unexpected.

(2) He said they did not understand the power of God. In our little brains, we think we know what can and can’t happen. But God operates outside of all the rules which bind us on this earth. God is not bound by gravity, heat or cold, time, distance, life or death, etc. How humbling (or humiliating) it must have been for Jesus to tell them they didn’t understand the power of God.

But Jesus didn’t stop with this statement. He backed His answer up with Scripture. We learn a couple of things from His response:

(1) We should use Scripture when we talk about God and what He wants or what He said. It is meaningless to simply assert there is or is not a resurrection unless we have Scripture to back it up. Our word is not the authority – God’s word is the authority!

(2) Many Scriptures have applications beyond what we have traditionally understood. When God spoke to Moses at the burning bush, He said, “I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob” (Mark 12:26). Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob were dead and gone. But God still said “I AM their God.” He used a present tense verb. He was their God at the time He spoke to Moses. Jesus said this meant that Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob were still living, even though they were dead and gone. “He is not the God of the dead, but of the living; you are greatly mistaken,” Jesus finished (Mark 12:27). Even the tenses of verbs in Scripture are important! We should handle the Scriptures carefully.

Is there anything else that made an impression on you in this reading?

God bless,
Nathan

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