I never knew you
'At times we have sit back and take stock of where we are'
Mat
8:15-29, Acts 19:13-20
Looking at the two readings chosen for today, its
quite easy to spot a common theme running through. In the gospel
of Matthew we hear Jesus at the end of a long passage which started
two chapters back with the Sermon on the Mount, and was followed
by a number of other quotes regarding that which we might call lifestyle,
warning his followers to beware, to be on the lookout for anyone
trying to persuade them that there was perhaps an easier way, one
that didnt demand the commitment that Jesus was telling them
was required of anyone who wanted to be a disciple, and receive
the benefits that this brought - both in the present and the future.
Watch out for false prophets, he warns, the sort that
come up brimming over with innocence, a wide smile on their face,
soft voice and the sweetest of words which sound so convincing.
Treat them with the same suspicion as a door-to-door salesman who
offers you no proof of identity, just an enticement to get a foot
through the door. Jesus didnt say all of that, but I think
thats probably what he meant. They are like wolves in sheep's
clothing, he says. Theyre like the one particular insurance
salesman I grew to dislike intensely after he sold me a poor pension
plan on the basis of confusion over numerous graphs and figures.
He was so plausible, his sales pitch honed by years of practice.
But his product was poor.
By their fruit you will recognize them.
In our reading from Acts, we heard of some other slightly
dodgy characters. Not door to door salesmen this time, but exorcists.
Jews who went around trying to drive out evil spirits by using the
name of Jesus as if it was some form of magic wand. They would say,
we are told. In the name of Jesus whom Paul preaches, I command
you to come out.
This doesnt sound like the words of someone
who was a follower and believer in Jesus, more like someone trying
to make a fast buck, on the back of all the exciting miracles that
the disciples were seeing happen as they laid hands on people. Listen
to the previous two verses;
God did extraordinary miracles through Paul. Handkerchiefs
and aprons that had touched him were taken to the sick and their
illnesses were cured and the evil spirits left them.
By their fruit you will recognize them
What was the outcome of these Jews trying their hand at exorcism?
The spirit answered them Jesus I know and Paul I know about,
but who are you?
Jesus had already warned his disciples that such things
would happen. Many will say to me on that day "Lord,
Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, and drive out demons and
perform many miracles?" Then I will tell them plainly "I
never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers!"
False teachers, and people going around miss-using
the name of Jesus. That was well over a thousand years ago. It was
different then of course, wasnt it? Wed soon recognize
someone trying to sell us something other than the gospel message
that weve come to know and love.....wouldn't we? Its
easy to spot the difference between the person with a gift of healing
and the faith healer who has no allegiance to our God and sells
his gift as given by nature....isnt it?
Let me throw a few choice phrases across to you. Toss
them around in your mind and see if any of them seem familiar. See
if you can spot any that seem to fit in with your view of Christianity.
Are you ready?
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Even if you think the bible says something wrong, you have
no right to force your views on others.
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You have no right to discriminate against people whose sexual
behavior is different from yours
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People do antisocial things due to the environment in which
they live and their genetic makeup
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If it feels good, then it cant be bad.
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The Christian view is just one of many - and as right or wrong
as the rest of them.
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If you dont like it, you dont have to watch it.
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What is wrong depends on the circumstances at the time.
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There is no religious blueprint for life that everyone should
follow.
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It doesnt matter what you believe as long as you are
sincere about it (Thats a quote from TVs Anne Diamond)
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No-one should impose their sexual values on anyone else. You
must do what is right for yourself.
I could go on, but then perhaps you think I already
have. Theyre all views expressed by the world and the media,
and at times no doubt like me some of them seem so plausible, but
they all clash with the lifestyle contained within the teaching
of Jesus. What the world sees as right and wrong is not always what
Christians believe.
We live in an age that is entitled Postmodernism.
Strangely enough, it followed on after a long period of 300 years
called Modernism. I know youre dying for me to give you a
detailed explanation of just what Modernism and Postmodernism are,
but Im not - mainly because I find it all fairly confusing,
I must confess. But they exist and I mention them both because I
want to bring out just a couple of points which show us where the
world was, and where it seems to be heading very quickly now. Hopefully
you will recognize some of these ways of thinking.
Modernism, with its roots in the C18 emphasized human
reason and logic as the basis for society, saw science and technology
as the instruments of progress, was set in the context of a residual
Christian belief within the nation, and asked of life What
is the meaning?
Postmodernism, which has crept quite quickly onto
the scene due to the failure of its predecessor to come up with
the goods - to do away with hunger, disease and war - the negative
aspects of science such as the atomic bomb, inequalities in wealth
and power - failure to satisfy the spiritual and emotional dimensions
of life - now says that anything can be true for anyone, and that
what may be true for you may not be true for me. Its set in
the context of a virtual absence of residual Christian belief within
the nation, is often suspicious of science and asks not What
is the meaning? but rather Whats the point?
It is demonstrated in such things as
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A dead sheep being accepted as art
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The erosion of the family as a unit. Casual relationships.
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The decline of industry and the growth of remote home-based
employment.
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Religion (if any) is casually selected from a range of options.
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Its bad to steal an old ladys purse, but its
OK to do 90mph on the motorway because thats what all
the other traffics doing.
Enough of long words and explanations. What Im
trying to get you to see is where this world of ours is at with
regard to how men and women believe they ought to live their lives.
This is the lifestyle which is being peddled at the moment. These
are the influences among which our children are growing. You might
quite rightly say that Carmarthenshire is not exactly at the forefront
of such thinking, and that you dont see a lot of evidence
for this round here, but look hard enough and you will. Watch the
television, read the newspapers and magazines.
Where your children used to watch Yogi Bear and Booboo
pinching picnic hampers in Jellystone National Park and being told
off by the ranger, today's kids want to watch Beavis and Butt-head,
who spend a lot of time sat in front of a television watching meaningless
music videos and making astute comments such as This sucks
or This is cool. Times they are a changing, as a sixties
song said. None of us are immune to the influences that are around
us, and none of us must be fooled into thinking that what the world
is offering our children is a better.
What did Jesus tell his disciples? Watch out
for false prophets. They come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly
they are ferocious wolves. By their fruit you will recognize them.
Its so easy to fall into the trap of picking
up what seems to be perfectly sensible ideas, hopes and ideals and
apply them to our lives without even thinking about whether they
fit in with the teaching of God. Let me give you just one example,
and one which I freely admit to. I have two children, and naturally
enough I want the very best for them. We are fortunate in that when
we started off on our marriage house prices werent too high,
and as weve moved around with jobs to different areas of the
country weve been able to get a better house each time. A
better job and better pay was where I was at - and wasnt that
the call of the Thatcher years in the eighties?
Theres a childrens story called Hope for
the Flowers about an ambitious caterpillar named Stripe who decided
to go climbing - not a mountain but a pillar. Have you ever seen
the way some caterpillars seem to form a wriggling mass on a plant,
well this was a mountain of caterpillars all climbing over each
other and trying to reach the top. As Stripe plunged into the pile
and began his climb he turned to another one and asked Whats
at the top? I dont know said the other caterpillar
But it must be good because everybodys rushing there.
Stripe was pushed and kicked and stepped on from every
direction. It was climb or be climbed. Dont blame me
if you dont succeed. he yelled at the competition. Its
a tough life!
Well, Stripe struggled towards the top, and then saw
something disturbing - a tremendous pressure and shaking was sending
many at the top crashing to their death below.
Stripe felt awful with this new knowledge. The mystery
of the pillar was clearing - he knew now what must always happen
on the pillar. Frustration surged through Stripe. But as he agreed
that this was the only way up he heard a tiny voice
whisper Theres nothing here at all! It was answered
by another Quiet fool! Theyll hear you down the pillar.
Were where they want to be. Thats whats
here.
What a disappointment to find that theres nothing
at the top, and that it only looks good from the bottom? And yet
thats what the expectations of my generation were - to reach
the top however hard the struggle might be to get there, but without
being told what there was at the top. Without ever asking Why
am I doing this?
This is no different than the Great American Dream,
and this is the same dream that we are so often guilty of selling
to our children. We want the same, if not better for them. My children
have an expectation, based upon the life that they have now, and
that expectation is that they will do as well if not better than
we managed. And I admit that I would love them to be able to achieve
that.
But is this right? Surely we have to ask ourselves
as we send them off to University to take out student loans in order
to survive, as they come out with their degrees into a shrinking
job market already in debt, as they contemplate having to take on
a job with only a short-term contract, and look around for somewhere
to live and find they have to borrow vast amounts to buy a small
house. Where debt, and a pocketful of credit cards is the accepted
norm. Where uncertainty and long-term job security are a thing of
the past - have we been as guilty as the door-to-door salesman of
selling a lifestyle that is false?
There is only one answer to this dilemma, and its
contained within the reading from Matthews gospel, and is
rooted in the words of Jesus.
Therefore everyone who hears these words of mine and
puts then into practice is like the wise man who built his house
upon the rock. The rain came down, the streams rose, and the winds
blew and beat against that house; yet it did not fall, because it
had its foundations on the rock. But everyone who hears these words
and does not put them into practice is like a foolish man who built
his house on sand. The rain came down, the streams rose, and the
wind blew and beat against the house, and it fell with a great crash.
The first Christians didnt set out to impose
the standards that God had made known to them on the rest of society.
Rather they provided a living model to the rest of their community
as to a better way to live - rooted and grounded on the rock of
their faith in Jesus. And this is our defense against the variety
of false teaching which rains down on us from every direction, the
streams of frustration that seem so prevalent in today's society
and threaten to engulf us, and the wind of change which tries to
batter us into weakening our faith in the word of God.
We have to examine our own lives and our cherished
lifestyle and hopes for our children, in the light of the teaching
of Jesus, for the Christian lifestyle, based on love, compassion
and often self-sacrifice, is often at odds with the lifestyle that
the media is promoting. We cant have both, sit on a fence
dangling one foot into one camp and one into another.
At times we have sit back and take stock of where
we are - struggling like Stripe the caterpillar up the pillar only
to discover that the effort was for nothing, or busying ourselves
cementing our foundations to the rock - hearing the words of God
and putting them into practice in our lives.
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