Sunday, February 1, 2026

Qualities of the Kingdom

The scriptures referred to are Micah 6:1-8, Psalm 15, 1 Corinthians 1:18-31, and Matthew 5:1-12.

Last week I spoke of the explosion of superheroes in the 1930s and 40s as a reaction to the Great Depression and with the rise of Fascism on the eve of the Second World War. While Superman was not the first costumed hero, his appearance in 1938 opened the floodgates to others. They were either non-humans like Clark Kent, enhanced humans like Captain America, or humans who used technology and well-developed athletic abilities like Batman. They fought criminals, slum lords, abusive husbands and increasingly the Nazis. People loved them because they had the power to do things ordinary people couldn't. In a world where might makes right, we love to see people use might to make things right. It is a fantasy that goes back to figures like Hercules, King Arthur and Robin Hood.

The problem is that people with actual human powers like wealth, influence, charisma, military and political power rarely do use their strengths to help the less powerful. They use them to enrich themselves, often at the expense of the powerless. They are more likely to oppress the downtrodden than to liberate them. And thank God that people with superpowers don't exist. There is a horror film called Brightburn, which is a disturbing but more realistic picture of what an adolescent boy with Superman's powers would do.

Unfortunately some who call themselves Christians don't actually worship the God who is love revealed in Jesus Christ. They worship power. And not God's moral power but his power to control the world. They would be just as happy to worship Zeus or even Kali, the goddess of death and destruction. Because that is the godlike power they crave.

Last week we talked about ways in which the kingdom of God is different than the kingdoms of this world. And as we get into Jesus' Sermon on the Mount, we see that Jesus is not praising power but highlighting things that we associate with not having power. He pronounces as blessings stuff we see as the opposite of being blessed.

The Greek word translated as “blessed,” makarios, means “happy or fortunate.” So it is ironic that Jesus uses it to describe states of being that we would see as unfortunate and that would make us unhappy. So why does he say that? Let's look at these statements and see if we can discern his reason.

First he says, “Blessed are the poor in spirit...” The Greek doesn't just mean poor but destitute. It refers to someone who is a beggar, who is absolutely dependent on the charity of others. These are people who are under no illusion that they are self-sufficient. J.B. Phillips translates this phrase as “Happy are those who know their need for God...” The rich and powerful may think they don't need anyone else, not even God. When disaster, injury or illness takes away their control over their own circumstances, it comes as a rude awakening. It turns out they are not masters of their own fate. But folks who acknowledge their spiritual poverty know that the only person they can turn to is God. And the reason this is good news is that “theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” God will give them his kingdom. It is made up of people who are not arrogant and who don't think they can do anything they want. God's kingdom is made up of people who know that all that they have are gifts from God. We cannot take credit for our brains or bodies or talents or the position in society into which we are born. The powerful are fooling themselves if they think they achieved everything on their own or that they had no help. The people who realize that God is the source of all goodness and all gifts, and that these are on loan from him to use for the benefit of all, are the fortunate ones.

Next Jesus says that those who mourn are fortunate. Again the Greek is more specific. It means those who are grieving, especially over a death. It could be the death of a person or the death of a hope or dream. When a person dies, the plans that their loved ones had with them also die. When a person becomes disabled, the dreams they had for achieving certain things may die. The same is true when a disaster radically changes your life. And the reason that is good news is that “they will be comforted.” The Greek means not only emotional comfort and encouragement but also actually receiving help. God's kingdom is made up of empathetic, supportive people who embody Jesus' compassionate Spirit. When a member of my congregation became disabled after a series of small strokes, we took turns helping her husband care for her. I used my nursing skills. Others sat with the woman as her husband went shopping or just took a break from being her full-time caretaker. When he got her a place in an out-of-state nursing care facility that also had homes for the spouses of the patients, we helped load her into their RV so he could take her there. This had not been the couple's plan for their lives but it would have been worse had not their friends from church given them comfort in the form of concrete acts of help and support.

Next Jesus says, “Blessed are the meek...” The Greek means not weakness but strength expressed in gentleness and humility. This world idolizes those who just burst into a situation and disrupt everything to get what they desire. The world mistakes arrogance for confidence. It says, “Yes, he is rude and crude and a real S.O.B., but he gets things done.” And thus those who get pushed out of the way and trampled in the process are seen as just collateral damage. Recently a government offical dismissed “international niceties” to say “...we live in a world, in the real world...that is governed by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power.” And that has been used as an excuse for others to do whatever they want to do using force: invading countries, breaking laws, separating families, and killing people. They not only assert that this is the world we live in but this is the way they think the world should be. The powerful do whatever they want and that is fine with folks like that official and his ilk. But as our reading from Micah says, “...what does the Lord require of you but to do justice and to love kindness and to walk humbly with your God?”

Jesus says that the humble and gentle “will inherit the earth.” How is that possible? The powerful are volatile and surprisingly fragile. Those who are strong but not gentle often break things that they later need to continue to function. And the ambitions of the powerful cause friction between them. Eventually they go after each other. Emperors and kings are assassinated or overthrown by other ambitious men. Powerful empires overextend themselves and collapse or fight one too many wars of conquest and are themselves conquered. The humble and overlooked often survive. The Jewish people have survived the empires of the Egyptians, the Assyrians, the Babylonians, the Persians, the Greeks, the Romans and even the Nazis. Similarly, the church grew from a tiny persecuted group of believers in Judea to a faith that knows no borders.

Next Jesus says “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness...” Again the Greek is more intense. The word for “hunger” doesn't refer to those who have eaten a few hours before and are ready for their next meal. It means those who are famished. Likewise, the Greek word for “thirst” doesn't refer to those who would like to take a sip of something. It means those who are parched, who are suffering from thirst. And the word for “righteousness” also means “justice.” So Jesus is talking about those who are starving and desperately thirsty for God's justice. They want to be like those described in our psalm: “Those who lead a blameless life and do what is right, who speak the truth from their heart; they do not slander with the tongue, they do no evil to their friends; they do not cast discredit upon their neighbor...They do not give their money in hope of gain, nor do they take bribes against the innocent.” They long to see everything and everybody put right with God.

And the reason this is good news? “...they will be filled.” They will be fully satisfied. God will make them righteous and bring justice to the earth. The kingdom of God is made up of people who want to get right with God and with other people. They are fair and gracious in all their dealings.

Jesus now switches from talking about attitudes found in those who populate God's kingdom to the actions they take. He starts with “Blessed are the merciful for they will receive mercy.” Some people only point out what others do wrong and do not acknowledge it when they themselves do something wrong. But we all screw up. If you are unforgiving of other people, they will also be unlikely to forgive you. However if you forgive others they tend to be forgiving in return. The kingdom of God is made up of people who are merciful to each other because they have received God's mercy.

Next Jesus says, “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God.” In the Bible the “heart” doesn't refer to the organ in the center of your chest that pumps blood but to the center of your being: your mind, will and emotions. The problem is that no human being has a pure mind or heart. But the Greek word for “pure” basically means “clean.” Dirty things can be cleaned. And only God can clean our hearts. The kingdom of God is made up of people who have let God clean up their hearts and minds. The good news is that those who seek and serve God without mixed motives will see him in themselves and others and one day will see him face to face. (1 John 3:2)

Next Jesus says, “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.” There are those who thrive on chaos because it creates opportunities for them. They exploit those who are caught up in the mess and who are fearful and stressed out by it all. But God desires peace. In Genesis 6:11 we read, “The earth was ruined in the sight of God; the earth was filled with violence.” When God reboots creation after the flood, our part of his covenant is to not shed each other's blood because God made humankind in his own image. (Genesis 9:6) He doesn't want us murdering each other. He wants all those made in his image to be at peace. There are lots of people who like to fight and harm and even kill others. The kingdom of God is made up of people who make peace between people. After all, Jesus, in whom we most clearly see the image of God, made peace between God and humanity and made peace between different peoples. (Romans 5:1; Ephesians 2:14-17) The good news is that there is peace and wholeness for those who live in God's kingdom. It is made up of people who are peacemakers.

The most ironic thing Jesus says is “Blessed are those who are persecuted for the sake of righteousness...Blessed are you when people revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely for my sake.” How is it fortunate to be persecuted for doing what's right in God's eyes? Because there are plenty of people in this world who will do the right thing if there is no cost to them. But few people will put themselves at risk to do the right thing, like helping someone who is in trouble or who can't repay them. Just this week an ICU nurse at a VA hospital helped a woman who had been shoved to the ground and he was murdered for doing so. And now people are saying all kinds of evil and false things about him because they do not want to admit that a good man was murdered for doing a good thing. The good news is that God's kingdom is made up of people who are good even when it is inconvenient or dangerous.

And the ultimate example is that Jesus was executed for doing what's right: healing people and telling them that God loved them and was forgiving. In fact Jesus displayed all of the beatitudes. He was completely dependent on God, grieved over the coming destruction of Jerusalem, was strong but gentle, was fueled by his commitment to righteousness and justice, was merciful to sinners, was singleminded in serving God, was a peacemaker and was persecuted for doing all this. And this is good news because the kingdom of God is made up of people committed to becoming like Jesus, God's self-sacrificial love incarnate, through the power of the Holy Spirit.

The beatitudes turn the values of the world upside down. They make no sense to the powerful and worldly wise. Which is why Paul says in today's epistle that “...God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise; God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong; God chose what is low and despised in the world, things that are not, to abolish things that are...” A world ruled by strength, force and power is one of the things that are. A world governed by the values Jesus preached is not. Or not yet! The schemes of the violent will fall upon them. (Psalm 7:16) God's plans for us, though not yet complete, will triumph in the end, just as Jesus Christ who was killed by the state triumphed over death. And his kingdom of justice and mercy and peace will prevail.

Sunday, January 25, 2026

Power Failure

The scriptures referred to are Isaiah 9:1-4, 1 Corinthians 1:10-18, and Matthew 4:12-23.

In the distant past, when humans lived in small bands competing for food in various regions, one of the strategies for survival was fighting other groups in defense and to take over their territory. So having a strong man for a leader made sense. The problem was that a strong man was not necessarily a wise man. The ability to fight and conquer a territory was not always accompanied by the ability to rule it well. And so eventually humans came up with laws, rules for how everyone is to behave that ensured peace and cooperation within the group. But when those laws impinged on strong men's ability to do whatever they wanted to, they resisted. A great deal of history is made up of strong men usurping power, trying to consolidate it and fighting others who either attacked them or rebelled to become independent of them. Powerful men never seem to have enough power to satisfy them. Their ruthless drive to gain and retain power inevitably leads to cruelty, causing great suffering for many.

An example of that common scenario lies behind our reading from Isaiah. The Assyrian empire lasted from the 14th to the 7th century BC. One of the casualties of its merciless quest for control was the northern kingdom of Israel, which was conquered in 721 BC. Israel had broken away from the southern Davidic kingdom of Judah 200 years before. The Assyrians carried out mass deportations to lessen local resistance, resulting in what have been called “the ten lost tribes of Israel.” They weren't so much lost as dispersed to other Assyrian-controlled territories. Then people from those territories were deported to what used to be Israel. The peoples intermarried, eventually becoming the Samaritans.

Needless to say the poor former Israelites left behind were demoralized. And so Isaiah's prophecy promised hope. The darkness that enveloped them will be pierced by a great light. God promised to break “the yoke of their burden and the bar across their shoulders, the rod of their oppressor...” How? Unfortunately our passage ends before the answer given just a couple of verses later: “For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given and the government will be upon his shoulders. And he will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.” (Isaiah 9:6) In other words, God is promising an ideal Davidic king, the Messiah.

The problem with this is that in a world where “might makes right” people always want another strong man, just one who is on their side, in this case, the Messiah. Bad times lead to such a longing. There's a reason why there was a huge surge of superhero comics during the late 1930s and 40s, when the average person was struggling with the effects of the Great Depression and the rise of Fascism, just preceding the outbreak of World War 2. The cover of the first issue of Captain America showed him punching Hitler. In his first appearance Superman stops a crooked lobbyist corrupting a politician. We love to imagine that a supremely strong person can solve all our problems.

But as Stan Lee, longtime editor of Marvel Comics, said, even superheroes can't solve “the deadliest social ills plaguing the world today.” He continued, “unlike a team of costumed super-villains, they can't be halted with a punch to the snoot, or a zap from a ray-gun.” Lee was talking specifically about bigotry and racism but his point is true of many other problems we face. They arise not from external problems but from internal ones: our attitudes and self-centered ways of thinking. Are we not able to solve problems like poverty, lack of access to healthcare, homelessness and food insecurity because they are physically impossible or because we don't want to make the necessary societal changes? It doesn't help when the people with the money and power to make those changes convince us that the problem is really other relatively powerless people.

There is a cartoon with 3 men sitting at a table. One man has a huge pile of cookies, one man has only one cookie and the third man has none. The guy with lots of cookies says to the man with only one that the third guy “wants to steal your cookie.” Of course the obvious solution is for the guy with tons of cookies to share with the other two. But he would never suggest that. And politicians who are themselves rich and powerful will never suggest that the 1%, who hold as much wealth as the bottom 90% of society, should be more generous. The powerful do not willingly surrender their power.

Which is why Paul says that “the message about the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing...” Because the cross was an instrument of shameful, torturous death inflicted on slaves and on those who rebelled against the Roman government. As historian Tom Holland pointed out, the idea of a crucified God was revolutionary. It completely went against the values of the Roman empire, with its emphasis on power and conquest. It made no sense to Greek intellectuals and was seen as blasphemous by Jews. The cross said that God identified with the suffering, the poor and the powerless to the extent of becoming one of them. And by his rising again Jesus, God Incarnate, removed the fear of death which is the primary tool of the powerful. It turned the accepted way of looking at the world upside down. (Acts 17:6)

In today's reading from Matthew we see the beginning of Jesus' ministry. His basic message was “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near.” So Jesus is setting up a kingdom that rivals the kingdoms of earth but this is one where God reigns “on earth as it is in heaven.” And the way you become a citizen of the kingdom of God is not by simply being born into it or having your country conquered by it. Instead you must repent, that is, change your heart and mind and as a logical result of that, change how you live. For instance, after having a heart attack at age 69 and getting a quintuple bypass, my father-in-law changed his mind about his lifestyle and lived till he was 91. If we really trust what Jesus says, we will change how we live our lives. In the next few weeks we will look at what this entails as we go into the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus' more detailed description of what being a citizen of the kingdom of God is like. But right now we will look at some obvious differences between his kingdom and the kingdoms of earthly origins.

Earthly rulers gather armies. They somehow convince men to fight and possibly die so that the rulers can have power over more people. The term “emperor” comes from the Latin word for military commander. Until the modern era, rulers led their armies into battle. Today's rulers do not expose themselves to such danger. But like the kings of old, they secure their kingdoms and expand them by shedding the blood of others.

Jesus did not gather an army. In fact, Matthew tells us that “Jesus went throughout all Galilee, teaching in their synagogues and proclaiming the good news of the kingdom and curing every disease and every sickness among the people.” Healing is the opposite of killing. And the scandal of the cross is that in order to secure his kingdom, no one's blood is shed but his. Nor does he die in battle, taking down others with him. He lets himself be led by his enemies, carries his own cross, and lets them nail him to it.

So how does Jesus spread his kingdom? By proclaiming the good news of the kingdom of God. Everyone knows what happens when humans reign. They, their friends and their top supporters get the all best stuff. If the common folk are lucky, they get peace and security. But the situation for most people rarely gets better.

God's kingdom is different. The 5 books of Moses say that in Israel provisions are to be made for everyone to receive justice. The poorest and least powerful—widows, the fatherless and immigrants—are singled out for fair treatment. (Exodus 22:22-24; Deuteronomy 10:18; 14:28-29; 27:19; Leviticus 19:33-34) Women are protected from incest. (Leviticus 18:6-18) In one chapter of Leviticus alone we are told that the poor must be fed, deception and lying are forbidden, nobody is to defraud anyone or cheat the people working for them, the disabled are not to be mistreated, justice is to be unbiased, nothing can be done that endangers the lives of others, and both neighbors and resident aliens are to be loved as one loves oneself. (Leviticus 19:9-18, 33-34) We know from the prophets that the people of Israel frequently failed to live up to these principles. Yet these standards are accepted by many today though still not practiced as they should be.

Jesus knew that merely having laws does not change people. The problem is that harmful behavior comes from the heart and mind. (Mark 7:20-23) Again we must change those attitudes and ways of thinking, becoming as open and trusting as a small child, if we are to enter God's kingdom. (Matthew 18:3) And that's another way in which earthly kingdoms differ. You read any history of an empire or kingdom and you see where George R.R. Martin got his inspiration for Game of Thrones. Rulers are rarely trusting. Coups, betrayals, and intrigue arise again and again. Rulers have killed brothers, fathers, cousins, spouses and even children to secure or keep their thrones. Herod killed his wife, her mother, her grandfather, and 3 of his sons. He had plans to have a large number of prominent Jews killed upon his death so that even people who hated him would mourn. This is why I have no trouble believing he wiped out all the toddlers in a small town like Bethlehem. It was totally in character.

The problem is that trust underlies all healthy relationships. And it's not restricted to close relationships. You trust your mechanic to fix your car and he trusts you to pay him. Without trust, not only personal and commercial relationships but societies and civilizations fall apart. When rulers do not trust their people and subjects do not trust their rulers, it spells doom for a nation or empire.

It can do the same for a church. This is one reason Paul is distressed by the divisions he sees in the Corinthian church. They shouldn't break up into cliques centered around their favorite preachers and teachers. They need to realize that their unity is found in Christ. It is he who died for them and he who gives them new life. A preacher or teacher is valuable only in so far as he or she points us to Christ and helps us follow him. That's why it always bothers me when a ministry is named after a preacher or evangelist. When he retires or dies, their main attraction is gone. If he falls into grave sin, he damages the faith of others and the good he had once done for the church. Many times when people leave the faith it is not because of God but because of people who represented God.

Jesus is the only person in the Bible, the church and in the whole history of the world who never sinned. And he is the only person who can help us live up to the high standards of his kingdom. He sends us his Spirit to live in us and produce in us spiritual fruit like love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, gentleness, faithfulness and self-control. (Galatians 5:22-23) On the cross Jesus saved us from the penalty of sin. The Spirit at work in us saves us from the power of sin in our lives. But we have to let him. He will not coerce us because real love does not coerce the beloved.

And that's another distinctive feature of God's kingdom. No one is forced into it. Jesus is not like the conqueror who shows up one day and says, “From now on you are my subjects.” Citizenship in God's kingdom is strictly voluntary. That's why even in churches that baptize babies we have confirmation classes for those old enough to decide if they want to make the faith they were brought up in their own.

The rulers of this world do not like giving people choices. They refuse to give up any of their power. They are scared to look powerless. Instead they are always seeking to expand their power by taking it from others or taking over other territories. They are the antithesis of Jesus Christ. He gave people a choice to accept him or not. He did not cling to his divine prerogatives but gave them up to take on our humanity. (Philippians 2:5-7) He let himself be powerless before his enemies. They killed him. And then he showed that even death did not have any real power over him.

His power reveals the weakness of mortal kingdoms: they all will die. The Assyrian empire ceased to exist, as did the Babylonian empire, the Persian empire, the empire of Alexander the Great, the Roman empire, and the British empire. Nations and empires that exist today will one day cease. But not the kingdom of God. Jesus lives, no longer to die, and he shall reign forever and ever. (Romans 6:9; Revelation 11:15) Nor will we ever have to worry that he will rule unjustly or mercilessly. Because his strength is not based on bullying or violence but on his eternal love. And if we accept his love and join his kingdom, we will reign with him for we too shall live forever and ever.

Sunday, January 18, 2026

All Our Needs and Desires

The scriptures referred to are Psalm 40:1-11 and 1 Corinthians 1:1-9.

For more than 20 years at 5 radio stations, I was the production director and copywriter. I wrote and recorded the ads and promos heard on the station. As such I found that there are many reasons to advertise: to simply let people know your business exists, to let them know what you have to offer, and to tell them how to visit or contact your business. But mainly you want to encourage the listener to buy your goods and services. If what you supply fills a basic need, that helps. Everyone needs food, clothes, transportation, and a good doctor. Then you just have to show that what you offer is more attractive than that of your competition. You might offer more convenience or friendlier service or other extras. In Key West just having free parking is a big plus.

But what if your product or service is not something anyone actually needs? Then instead you want to create a desire for what you offer. You can do this by making it seem cool or fun. For example, nobody really needs to drink soda or beer. In fact we all would be healthier if we didn't. Since ads can't talk about the actual effects of the drinks, they show people having fun and doing things with friends while holding a can or bottle of the beverage. Of course, you can have fun without drinking but they don't want you to think about that. They want you to associate their product with good things.

Sometimes advertisers go farther and try to make a desire feel like a need. They make it seem as if you must have the latest cool gadget or you will feel left out by all your friends who do have it. If you don't use this product you will be seen as less attractive, less sexy, less informed, less competent, less cool and less a part of the group you wish to belong to. The idea is to make something that you actually can do without feel like a necessity. They want you to feel that you lack something that will make you happy.

This works on kids. They see a new toy and whine that they need it. But it also works on adults. Look at how people will line up for the latest smartphone which has new features that they have never needed before or even knew existed. Part of it is that we desire novelty. So much so that one guy took rocks, put them in cardboard boxes with care and training booklets, called them Pet Rocks and became a millionaire. Right now someone is doing that with Labubu dolls, as they did with Cabbage Patch dolls and Beanie Babies. And we think that Orcas wearing dead fish on their heads are silly.

“I have something you need” is the subtext of every sales pitch, whether it is from a company, a politician or a cult leader. You need to ask yourself if what they are offering really is a need or just a desire. Not all desires are bad. But you should be suspicious of those who deliberately try to confuse the two. For instance, in today's world having a cellphone is practically a necessity. But do you really need one that will allow you to make studio quality videos or that folds or that has A.I.?

In the same way, politicians always say we need to increase our military budget though we spend more on our military than the next 9 countries combined do on theirs. They don't need to spend more; they just want to. CEOs will always say their company needs to make more money, no matter how many millions or billions in profits they already make. Folks running pyramid schemes always want more people to join and invest. Although, actually, a pyramid scheme does need that or the whole thing collapses.

Lots of cults are pyramid schemes. So cult leaders create and exploit an insatiable spiritual hunger in their followers. They convince them that they need more and deeper spiritual knowledge, which only the leader or his system can provide. They create tiers or levels that they encourage their followers to ascend if they really want to be enlightened. And leveling up costs the followers in money, time and labor.

Which makes for an interesting contrast with what Paul says in our passage from 1st Corinthians. He writes to the church that he gives thanks to God “because of the grace that has been given to you in Christ Jesus, for in every way you have been enriched in him, in speech and knowledge of every kind just as the testimony of Christ has been strengthened among you so that you are not lacking in any gift as you wait for the revealing of our Lord Jesus Christ.” Paul is not saying “You need to purchase my special course on spiritual gifts for just $29.99.” No, he is saying in Christ you have all the gifts you need to live until he comes again. No add-ons or upgrades required.

And this is “because of the grace that has been given to you in Christ Jesus.” Roman gods did not really care for humans. They were like mafia dons who offered protection and favors in return for loyalty and sacrifices. But the God revealed in Jesus Christ is gracious. He is not transactional. He gives what we do not deserve and cannot earn: his grace. When he created us he gave us gifts of greater intelligence and language and dexterity and persistence. We have used them to harm and dominate and exploit our fellow human beings. And so he gives us his Son, who in turn gives his life to save us from a situation that is our own doing. And all he asks is that we respond to his love by loving him back and by loving all other people, because he loves them too.

Knowing that good news enriches our lives in every way. The world can be scary. Knowing that God loves you lets you trust him and not shrink from life and its challenges. It reframes the way you look at your life and at the people you encounter. They are all people created in the image of God. They are all people for whom Christ died, whether they know it or not. Letting them know about God's love through what you say and what you do gives your life purpose. Knowing that God intends to restore the world to the paradise he intended it to be gives our lives meaning. It also gives us something to do with the talents and gifts he has given us. John Cleese said he did not go into comedy with any greater sense of purpose but when he met soldiers who had fought for their homeland in Kosovo, he found out that every night, after the shooting and bombing stopped, they would hang up a sheet and project Monty Python shows and movies. These comedians gave them the much needed gift of laughter in hard times.

When Paul says that “you are not lacking in any gift” he is not talking to individuals. The word “you” is plural in the Greek. He is talking to the church as a whole. No one is good at everything. Nobody has every gift necessary for the body of Christ on earth to function. (1 Corinthians 12:29-30) Later in this letter, Paul says, “Now there are different gifts, but the same Spirit. And there are different ministries but the same Lord. And there are different results, but the same God produces all of them in everyone. To each person the manifestation of the Spirit is given for the benefit of all.” (1 Corinthians 12:4-7) In this letter and in Romans 12 and in Ephesians 4 Paul gives lists of some of the spiritual gifts. But nobody is left out and nobody should be envious of the gifts of others. Paul reminds us that “Now it is one and the same Spirit who is active in all these things, individually distributing them to each person as he wills.” (1 Corinthians 12:11)

The ultimate purpose of God's grace and his giving us these gifts is to strengthen the body of Christ, and cause us to stand firm until the very end. By each of us employing our gifts to help and serve our community of faith we can stand up to and meet the challenges we face as Christians.

And we are assured we can do this because “God is faithful...” We can trust him. As it says in 2 Timothy, “This saying is trustworthy: If we died with him, we will also live with him. If we endure, we will also reign with him. If we deny him, he will also deny us. If we are unfaithful, he remains faithful, since he cannot deny himself.” (2 Timothy 2:11-13) God cannot go against his very nature. So we can stand on his promises, especially that he will never leave us or forsake us. (Hebrews 13:5; Deuteronomy 31:6) That promise alone is a gift that gives us strength.

Another reason to trust God is that by him “you were called into the partnership of his Son, Jesus Christ our Lord.” Unlike a Bond villain, God does not abandon or betray those he called to be his partners. He upholds and equips us. He wants us to be good partners.

And how mind-blowing is it that we are called into partnership with Jesus! He does not need us but chooses to have us work with him. It's like that day when your parent trusts you to help work with them on building their pet project or making their special dish. Jesus calls and equips us to continue his mission to spread the kingdom of God. He doesn't tell us to force others to convert but to plant and nurture the seeds of the good news of God's love revealed in the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. As Paul says to the church in Corinth, “I planted, Apollos watered, but God caused it to grow.” (1 Corinthians 3:6) We have our work to do but it is God who brings the results.

When I was a copywriter, one thing I could not guarantee was results. We could present the offer in the most attractive way possible but we could not make people buy. The best way to run a successful business is to offer people what they want at a price they're willing to pay. But even reasonable offers can be turned down by some people.

Sadly, not everyone wants to be saved. I saw that as a nurse. Some patients did not want to be healed. Maybe they thought they were just fine, despite evidence to the contrary. Maybe they liked having people pity them and cut them slack for their pain. Or maybe they thought the price—changing their diet or lifestyle or having to undergo the pain and inconvenience of surgery and recovery—was too high. I saw people with new hips or new knees who did not want to do the physical therapy that would permit them to walk again.

God has done his part. He has taken on the infinitely greater pain of redeeming us from the consequences of our sins. Jesus has offered us new life at the cost of his own. All he asks is that we put our trust in him. And, like learning to walk again after having your broken legs fixed, as I can tell you from personal experience, there will be some pain. So, yes, we must take up our cross daily and follow him. But it is nothing like the pain of the actual cross he endured.

And the benefits of walking with him are immeasurable. We receive forgiveness of our sins, a new start, help in facing the challenges of life and a loving community to support us and help us withstand the storms we all must face. Plus we find peace in having a faithful God as our constant companion. We find purpose and meaning serving him through serving others. We find assurance that this life, no matter how hard or painful, is not the only life we live. We find hope in the risen Jesus who will come to set things right, fill the world with true justice and real mercy and amazing grace, make all things new and wipe away every tear as he abolishes pain and death and mourning. (Revelation 21:4)

The greatest satisfaction comes when you find something that not only meets a need but also fulfills a desire. We all need the love of someone trustworthy to help us survive. But we also desire that love and faithfulness so that we can thrive. In the loving and faithful God revealed in Jesus, we find both. And so we can join our psalm in saying, “May your steadfast love and your truth continually keep me safe.”

Sunday, January 11, 2026

Word

The scriptures referred to are Isaiah 42:1-9, Psalm 29 and Acts 10:34-43.

When I was a kid, I was taught that what separated humans from other animals was (1) our opposable thumbs, (2) our tool making, and (3) our use of language. Since then those supposedly unique traits have been diminished. Other primates and mammals also have opposable digits, though our thumbs are larger and allow for more dexterity. Other animals use sticks and rocks as tools, though none of them have ever created anything like a Swiss Army knife or a computer. And other animals do communicate vocally, though nowhere in the world is a non-human delivering a sermon. It seems to me that the difference between humans and other animals is not found in exclusive categories but in the much greater degree of complexity with which we have or can do these things.

I want to focus on one aspect in particular: words. While researchers have taught apes to use sign language and other animals to press buttons with symbols to indicate what they want, these things do not arise spontaneously in nonhumans. And there is the question of whether these animals actually understand what they are communicating, or do they just know that to get a treat or a toy from a human they have to perform this trick in this way. Perhaps these things were a more elaborate version of the Clever Hans effect. This is named for a horse in Germany a century ago who seemed to be able to do math problems by stamping his hoof the proper number of times. When investigated, it was found that the horse simply kept stamping until his trainer unwittingly indicated he had gotten to the correct number by relaxing. Then the horse would stop. A more sophisticated version of this might account for the apparent intelligence of AI. They are simply doing what they are programmed to do. They will not spontaneously wax poetic or philosophical. They just respond to prompts by scanning their database and stringing together words by using rules of grammar and normal usage. Google's AI is forever trying to correct my quotes from the Bible when they don't match its programmed style.

Our ability to use words is amazing. We can give precise descriptions, issue specific instructions, make logical arguments, tell jokes, create metaphors and create things that don't exist, like a plaid elephant. And now that you've read those two words, I have created a picture in your mind. More than that, I have caused synapses in your brain to make physical connections that didn't exist before. That is an astounding power for mere sounds or symbols on a page to have.

Last week in John's gospel we read about how Jesus is the living Word of God. We saw how in Genesis God created everything simply by speaking it into existence. In the second to last book of Narnia, The Magician's Nephew, C.S. Lewis describes how the Christ-figure of his books, Aslan, calls things into creation by singing. He recreates the magic of the first chapter of Genesis by using a different form of vocal expression.

Human attempts at magic also use words. The problem is that, unlike God, we cannot create reality just by speaking. But what we can do is reframe reality in people's minds using words. We can persuade people to help us in altering aspects of reality. We can tell people how to do things. We can explain problems and suggest solutions. We can start a movement using words. As we've seen, a person skillfully using words can get people to do things and change the world. That can seem like magic.

But like all powerful things, words can do great good and great harm. A person can disseminate truth or lies. Cult leaders, internet influencers and politicians can use the power of words to deceive. If they are charismatic enough, they can even get people to believe things that go against logic, common sense and even the evidence before their own eyes. George Orwell in his novel 1984 called this doublespeak. In the book the government's Ministry of Peace conducts wars, its Ministry of Love performs torture, its Ministry of Plenty obscures famine and its Ministry of Truth puts out propaganda. It uses slogans like “War is Peace,” “Freedom is Slavery,” and “Ignorance is Strength.” He nailed how authoritarian leaders misuse the power of words to deceive people.

Words can do great good as well. I think that's what Psalm 29 is about. The power of the voice of the Lord is the power of his words, the ideas he has expressed. We see them in our passage from Isaiah. Using images of verbal expression, God says, “I have called you in righteousness...new things I declare; before they spring forth, I tell you of them.”

Of course, what is important is the content of what is said. In our passage in Isaiah, God is talking about his servant who will “bring forth justice to the nations.” When we think of justice, we mainly think of bringing punishment to the bad guys. But the picture we get here is not of someone who swaggers around, dishing out God's wrath. Rather he “will not cry or lift up his voice or make it heard in the street; a bruised reed he will not break, and a dimly burning wick he will not quench.” This is someone who is gentle. The imagery of a bruised reed and a barely burning wick represent people who are almost broken and whose lives are on the verge of being snuffed out. In other words, these are the poor and the weak, those who are oppressed. The justice he will bring is restorative justice. It is about making things right.

Addressing the servant of the Lord, God says, “I have given you as a covenant to the people...” This is odd. The Hebrew for “you” in the singular. It is an individual. How is a person a covenant? A covenant is an agreement. In what way can a person be an agreement? It could if the person is Jesus Christ, who is both fully God and fully human, and who sealed his new covenant with his blood. When you make an agreement, you give your word and in this new covenant God gives us his Word, his Son, as the promise that he will do what he says: bring about his kingdom where his will is done on earth as it is in heaven. God expresses who he is in his Word. He is both just and merciful. As such Jesus is “a light to the nations, to open the eyes that are blind, to bring out prisoners from the dungeon, from prison those who sit in darkness.”

This Word from God is good news. And in our passage from Acts, Peter gives us a great summary of that good news. He is speaking to Cornelius, a centurion, and his household. This is the first group of Gentiles he has been called to preach the gospel to and baptize. First, Peter says that God shows no partiality when it comes to people. He accepts all people, whatever their nationality, provided they respect him and do what is right.

Then he gets right to the heart of the good news. “You know the message he sent to the people of Israel, preaching peace by Jesus Christ—he is Lord of all.” The Greek word for peace apparently comes from the word “to join or tie together into a whole.” So the message is preaching wholeness through Jesus Christ, who is the Lord of all. Last week in Ephesians and in John's gospel, we looked at how God's plan is to bring together everything in Christ, through whom all things were made and who is the ultimate pattern and design of all creation. Jesus Christ is the God who is love Incarnate. The creation is to reflect this love, which is the glory of God.

Peter goes on to say, “That message spread throughout Judea, beginning in Galilee after the baptism that John announced: how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and with power; how he went about doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil, for God was with him.” Peter shows the power of the message in 2 ways. First, it is a good enough message to spread beyond Galilee, which was, in the eyes of Judeans, a somewhat suspect region where there are too many Gentiles and which held no great centers of Jewish learning. On the other hand Jerusalem, the city of David, where God's temple, the center of the Jewish faith, stood, was in Judea. Yet this message, about a handyman from an obscure town never mentioned in the Hebrew scriptures, spread all the way to the city of God.

Secondly, the content of this message was powerful. Jesus was anointed (the meaning of the word Messiah and its Greek version, Christ) with the Holy Spirit and with power. And how did he use this power? To make himself king? To make himself rich? No, instead, he went about doing good and healing people. He did not use his power to conquer others but to liberate those oppressed by the devil, the essence of evil. Jesus made people better, both physically and spiritually. Because God was with him. This last phrase seems to hint at the prophecy from Isaiah that predicts a child who is named Immanuel, which means “God is with us.”

The message is powerful because Jesus is powerful. In fact, Jesus is the message. As we saw in John's gospel, Jesus is the living Word of God. You can't have the gospel, the good news, without Jesus. He is the expression of the God who is love. And that expression is not simply in what he says but what he does: doing good and healing people.

After establishing that Peter and the apostles are not repeating hearsay but are eyewitnesses to Jesus and his ministry, Peter then says, “They put him to death by hanging him on a tree...” As we've discussed a few weeks ago, the Romans frequently saved themselves the trouble of making a whole cross by simply stripping a tree of its branches and then attaching a crossbar, and the condemned criminal, to it. But Peter may also be referring to Deuteronomy 21:23, which says that a person executed and hung on a tree is cursed by God. So this man who was anointed by God's Spirit because God was with him becomes cursed by God? Yes, and paradoxically Jesus turns this curse into a blessing by redeeming us from our slavery to sin, to the things that harm us, others and our relationship to God.

That is not the end of the story, however. Peter says, “But God raised him on the third day.” Many people have died for their faith in God. What makes Jesus special is that God raised him from the dead. This marks him out as more than a mere prophet. When prophets die, they stay dead like any human being. Jesus' resurrection vindicates his message. It shows that God is indeed with him and that the Spirit and power with which God anointed him are still active in him.

Peter says that this was no illusion or metaphorical resurrection but that the apostles “ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead.” They were chosen by God to be witnesses to not only Jesus' teachings but his life, death and resurrection. “He commanded us to preach to the people and to testify that he is the one ordained by God as judge of the living and the dead.” That is quite an exalted position. How could a mere man be able to judge accurately the fate of every individual? He couldn't. He couldn't know everything everybody did or know what the intentions of their hearts were. But God could. In other words, Jesus is not merely a man but God as well. He knows every human's secrets but he also knows what it is like to be human. He will judge us with justice and mercy.

Finally Peter says, “All the prophets testify about him that everyone who believes in him receives forgiveness of sins through his name.” Jesus is the anointed prophet, priest and king the prophets of the Hebrew scriptures predicted. As God, only he has the authority to forgive sins. And you can't earn forgiveness. What you have done cannot be undone. Forgiveness is more than mercy; it is an act of grace. You don't deserve it. When it is offered, you can only accept it humbly.

Notice that Jesus did not send out his followers to fight for him or to establish any kingdoms in his name or to shed the blood of others. That is the way sinful humans spread their power. No, Jesus commanded us to testify about him. We are to use words, not fists, not swords, not guns. He calls us to be witnesses, not warriors. Which is why the Greek word for “witness”—martus—eventually came to mean “one who dies for a cause,”: a martyr. The greatest testimony is to trust Jesus with your life even when it can cost you your life.

When Paul lists the equipment of the armor of God, all of it defensive—except for one thing. He tells us to take up “the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.” (Ephesians 6:17) Words are powerful. They can change hearts and minds. They can rally people to a cause. They can also do great damage if we let them. Let us only use words that do good and that heal and that liberate people who are oppressed by evil. And the only words that can do that are the words of God, coming from the living Word of God. As Jesus said, “The words I have spoken to you are spirit and are life.” (John 6:63) 

Monday, January 5, 2026

One

The scriptures referred to are Ephesians 1:3-14 and John 1:1-18.

The world is so large and complex that it is impossible for any one human being to comprehend it all. So early peoples attributed control of each aspect of nature to a different deity. If you wanted good weather you prayed to one god. If you wanted your crops or your spouse to be fertile you prayed to a specific goddess. If you wanted healing you went to the shrine of a particular god who had that power.

In addition every city and nation had its own god. When nations fought, it reflected a cosmic battle between the gods. If it sounds chaotic, it was. There might be a chief god but he couldn't always control his family of gods. And he usually wasn't the creator god or goddess. In fact, the chief god might have fought the creator and the earth may have been made out of his or her body. Basically the chief god got to his position the way a human king might have: by overthrowing or murdering his rival. Often this was the chief god's father or mother. That's how polytheism worked. The people of earth were violent and divided and they projected that onto the powers that controlled the earth.

The God revealed in the Bible is different. He both created everything and is in charge of everything. The disunity of peoples is not attributed to various competing gods but to the sinfulness and short-sighted attitudes of humans who compete with one another over God's gifts instead of cooperating for the good of all.

So what does God do to restore things to what they should be? Because he gave us the ability to choose, he must use persuasion. He chooses to work through a man and his descendants. As he says to Abraham, “In you will all the families of the earth be blessed.” (Genesis 12:3) Seeing how a people committed to a covenant with God lives that out is supposed to convince the world to come around to the one true God.

Of course, the repeated failures of the people of Israel to honor their part of the covenant and demonstrate righteousness, justice and compassion for the poor and oppressed is a constant theme throughout much of the Old Testament. So God resolves to make a new covenant, one where, as he says in Jeremiah, “I will put my law within them and write it on their hearts and minds. I will be their God and they will be my people.” (Jeremiah 31:33) This is the covenant God makes through his son, Jesus Christ. That sets up the main theme of Paul's letter to the Ephesians.

One of my favorite YouTube channels is Disciple Dojo, in which Bible scholar James Michael Smith does deep dives on scripture and theology. He brings in other Bible scholars, reviews books and study Bibles, and answers viewers' questions. When he looks at a particular book of the Bible or passage, he goes into the original Greek or Hebrew behind the text. But you don't have to be an expert yourself to follow what he says. This last year, in discussing the letter to the Ephesians, he pointed out something I had never noticed before, namely, how often the phrase “in Christ” pops up in this letter. In the 11 verses of our passage alone, the phrase “in Christ” or “in him” occurs 8 times. It occurs another 11 times in the next few chapters.

What does the phrase “in Christ” mean? This varies a bit depending on the context but generally it means “in our union with Christ.” The theme of Ephesians is that the one God wants to bring all peoples into one community united by their trust in Jesus. That has been God's plan all along.

And as he promised, being united in Christ brings blessings. God chose us in love to be holy and blameless before him, to be adopted as his children, to be redeemed through his blood and have our sins forgiven, to know his plan to gather up everything in Christ, to obtain an inheritance, and to be marked with the Holy Spirit. He does all of this out of the riches of his grace, God's undeserved, unreserved goodness toward us.

Paul calls God's plan a mystery. Paul is probably playing off of the idea of the mystery religions that were popular in the Roman empire. Like various cults we have today, these mystery religions appealed to people's desires to have secret knowledge about the world that others didn't. They had initiation rituals and some had levels through which initiates had to pass to rise within the religion. Basically it comes from the idea that knowledge is power and this secret knowledge, kept from the duller, ordinary people, makes the members of the mystery cult superior to the uninitiated.

But Paul is essentially saying that the “mystery” revealed by God is in fact an open secret: the gospel of salvation. Not only do Christians not have to keep this good news a secret, they are to proclaim it to the world. Because ultimately God wants to redeem the world and restore it to what he intended it to be. As it says in 2 Peter, God “does not wish for any to perish but for all to come to repentance.” (2 Peter 3:9) The gospel is not exclusionary; it is not for the elite or for people who are smarter or better than others. All people are equal before God. (Proverbs 22:2; Romans 2:11; Acts 10:34) We all have been created in God's image. (Genesis 1:27) Yet we have decided we know better than God and so we fall short of the glory of God. (Romans 2:12; 3:23) And Jesus died to redeem all of us, whether we know it or acknowledge it. (1 John 2:2; 2 Corinthians 5:15)

After coming to Jesus, no one is superior to others. In another letter Paul says, “There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female—for all of you are one in Christ Jesus.” (Galatians 3:28) The oneness Paul is talking about is unity, not uniformity. Elsewhere he compares us to parts of one body, all with different features and functions yet none of us is nonessential. (1 Corinthians 12:12-27)

And that is what we are talking about in verse 10 of today's passage. God's plan to gather up all things in heaven and on earth in Christ does not mean we are all mashed together like a ball of clay or that we lose our individuality like a drop of water when it falls into the ocean. Instead we find our special place in God's universe. We use the unique gifts he has given to each of us to serve him, each other and the whole of creation with love.

Serving with love is the key part because God is love. (1 John 4:8) God sent his Son to us out of love. (John 3:16) But this doesn't mean Jesus was merely an instrument. Instead what we see in him is the whole goal of creation. He is the organizing principle. That is what is meant in our passage from John's gospel in which he is called the Word.

Philo of Alexandria was a Jewish contemporary of Jesus who tried to reconcile Greek philosophy with Jewish theology. He seized upon the idea that the divine principle that brings all things into existence was called the Logos by the Greek philosopher Heraclitus. And in Genesis God brings all of creation into existence by his word. “God said, 'Let there be light.' And there was light!” (Genesis 1:3) And God calls into existence all the other aspects of the universe by speaking. Now the Greek term for “word, speech and reason” is logos. Philo called this Logos, which was common to both Jewish and Greek thought, “the first-born of God.” The Logos was the design for creation, which also pervades the world and supports it. The Logos was the “high priest” who expiated sins and is the mediator and advocate for humanity before God. The Logos interprets and “announces God's designs to humankind, acting in this respect as prophet and priest.” The Logos illuminates the human soul, “nourishing it with spiritual food, like the manna...” (Thanks to Wikipedia as the source of this paragraph.)

Philo's Logos is just an philosophical idea for tying together the great thoughts of the Greeks and the Jews. However, the gospel of John says that the Logos is not merely an abstract notion. Yes, the Logos or Word of God was in the beginning and all things were created through him. Yes, the Logos is the light that illuminates all people. But “the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father's only son, full of grace and truth.” (v.14)

How does the Logos or Word reveal God's glory? If a person is honest, his word reveals who and what he is. God's Word is the expression of who and what God is. In Jesus we have the fullest revelation of God. God, as we said, is love. To be in love with someone is to be in harmony with them. We were created in the image of the God who is love. When we choose to love him back, we come into harmony with him. When we come in harmony with God, we come into harmony with the other people created in his image and redeemed by his Son. And we come into harmony with the rest of his creation.

That's God's plan. We keep trying to replace his plan with our own plans. We keep trying to replace his love with money or technology or power over others. It's like trying to replace a good diet with junk food. In 2012 a British teen was hospitalized for breathing problems, anemia, vitamin deficiencies, and malnutrition. And the cause was that she had been eating nothing but chicken nuggets, fries, chips and toast for 15 years. We may not be as bad as this teen but our society does eat a lot more junk food these days. The problem is it doesn't do the job properly and it degrades the health of the people who are trying to survive on it. The same is true of all the things we try to nourish and fuel our lives with other than the love of God.

Colossians is another letter that takes a cosmic view of Christ. In it we read “He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation, for all things in heaven and on earth were created by him—all things, whether visible or invisible, whether thrones or dominions, whether principalities or powers—all things were created through him and for him. He himself is before all things and all things are held together in him. He is the head of the body, the church, as well as the beginning, the firstborn from among the dead, so that he himself may become first in all things. For God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in the Son and through him to reconcile all things to himself by making peace through the blood of his cross—through him, whether things on earth or things in heaven.” (Colossians 1:15-20)

In both of these letters the point is not merely to reveal interesting theological ideas. Paul goes on to say, “And you were at one time strangers and enemies in your minds as expressed through your evil deeds, but now he has reconciled you by his physical body through death to present you holy, without blemish, and blameless before him...” (Colossians 1:21-22) In Ephesians we see the same theme of being reconciled to God and to one another. To a church made up of Jews and Gentiles, Paul says, “For he is our peace, the one who made both groups into one and who destroyed the middle wall of partition, the hostility, when he nullified in his flesh the law of commandments in decrees. He did this to create in himself one new man out of two, thus making peace and to reconcile them both in one body to God through the cross, by which the hostility has been killed.” (Ephesians 2:14-16)

In his prayer before his arrest, Jesus prayed for the church, saying “Holy Father, keep them safe in your name that you have given me, so that they may be one just as we are one....I am not praying only on their behalf, but also on the behalf of those who believe in me through their testimony, that they will all be one, just as you, Father, are in me and I am in you....” (John 17:11, 20-21) Just earlier that evening he said, “I give you a new commandment—to love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another. Everyone will know by this that you are my disciples—if you have love for one another.” (John 13:34-35)

There aren't a bunch of gods but one God, who is love. And there aren't a bunch of human species but one human race. But how are people to know that if we don't act that way? How are people to know the good news of God's love revealed in Jesus Christ if those who say they are his followers don't show that love? Jesus didn't say we had to agree on absolutely everything. We just need to agree on the essentials of who he is, what he has done for us, what he is doing in us and how we should respond. As for that response, he said we have to love one another the way he loved us—self-sacrificially. He took up his cross for us and we need to take up our crosses daily for him. He came to reconcile us with God and with each other. The church needs to demonstrate that unity, that coming together of people of every tribe, nation and language into one body, the body of Christ on earth, carrying on his mission until the day when God's plan to bring everything back together will be fully realized and “Christ is all in all.” (Colossians 3:11)

Sunday, December 28, 2025

Balance

The scriptures referred to are Isaiah 63:7-9, Hebrews 2:10-18 and Matthew 2:13-23.

I am not a fan of sports in general but I love gymnastics. I love to watch people do things gracefully, perhaps because I am not graceful. I am especially amazed by people on the balance beam, doing back flips and landing on the beam and yet not swaying back and forth because they have such an exquisite sense of balance.

We all need balance simply to stand and to walk. One of the things I evaluated on patients I visited as a home health nurse was their gait, that is, how they walked. Falls are the leading cause of death among the elderly. Every second of every day at least one person aged 65 or older falls. 36 million of such falls are reported every year, resulting in 3 million ER visits and 30,000 deaths. One out of five falls causes an injury like a fracture or a head injury. More than 95% of hip fractures are caused by falls, usually by falling sideways. (Stats from nellis.tricare.mil) Sometimes older people trip but sometimes it is a matter of the person simply losing their sense of balance.

If you think of it, much of our life is about balance. We need to eat. Eat too little and you're malnourished. Eat too much and you get obese. And what you eat must be balanced between fats, carbohydrates, proteins and fiber. In addition to the starches and meat you love, you need to eat fruits and vegetables, just like your mom said.

In the same way your life needs to be balanced between activity and rest. We are more sedentary these days and sitting too much raises the risk of heart disease, obesity, stroke and even certain cancers.

Your thinking should also be balanced. We are seeing the imbalance in our society due to people who are too extreme in their political thinking, allowing for no nuance and no consideration of other viewpoints. Religious thinking also needs to be balanced. Jesus criticized his critics for having their priorities out of balance. He said, “Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees! You give a tenth of your spices—mint, dill and cummin. But you have neglected the more important matters of the law—justice, mercy and faithfulness. You should have practiced the latter, without neglecting the former. You blind guides! You strain out a gnat but swallow a camel.” (Matthew 23:23-24) And you see this today: supposedly religious people who make a big fuss about relatively trivial things—like saying “Merry Christmas” instead of “Happy holidays”—but ignore more important matters like being just in their dealings with others, being merciful to those who need it and being faithful in following Jesus. In the parallel passage in Luke, Jesus adds “the love of God” as something badly neglected. (Luke 11:42) As it says in 1 John, “Dear friends, let us love one another, for love comes from God. Everyone who loves has been born of God and knows God. Whoever does not love does not know God for God is love. This is how God showed his love among us: He sent his one and only Son into the world that we might live through him.” (1 John 4:7-9)

Famously when asked for the greatest commandment in the Torah, Jesus added a second. We are not only to love God with all we are and all we have but we are also to love our neighbor as ourselves. (Matthew 22:34-40) We must balance our duty to God with our duty to our fellow human beings, who are created in the image of God. Tip the balance too far in one direction or the other and you get either a religion that neglects people and their needs or a philosophy that has no firm moral grounding and entertains any and all human desires as valid. As it says in Deuteronomy, “So be careful to do what the Lord your God has commanded you; do not turn aside to the right or to the left. Walk in all the way that the Lord your God has commanded you...” (Deuteronomy 5:32-33) It's like driving on US-1. Veer too far to the right and you end up in the mangroves or the water. Veer too far to the left and you run into oncoming traffic. As someone who passed out and did exactly that, I do not recommend it.

Our center of balance should be Jesus. He is both fully God and fully human. As our passage from Hebrews reminds us, he knows what our life is like. He was not born in a palace. He was not born rich and privileged. He was not born into an empire that recognized that all humans are created equal or had rights. He was not born invulnerable to pain or death. He followed God even when it meant running into opposition from religious leaders who should have been his allies. He followed God even when it meant he would be misunderstood and literally demonized. He followed God even when it put him in the crosshairs of officials who ignored justice and used their power to punish and eliminate their enemies. And yet he kept his balance. He rebuked a follower who tried to defend him with violence and healed the wounded member of the arresting party. He prayed for the people who were in the process of executing him. He made provision for his mother's care as he was dying. He assured the condemned man on the cross next to his that he would welcome him into paradise. He showed grace under fire.

For God so loved the world that, as we read in our passage from Isaiah, he didn't send a messenger or an angel to save us. It was “his presence that saved them; in his love and pity it was he who redeemed them; he lifted them up and carried them all the days of old.” As it says, “he became their savior in all their distress.” And as Hebrews tells us, “Because he himself was tested by what he suffered, he is able to help those who are being tested.”

That is comforting. When this world tests our strength, our character, our resolve to follow Jesus, we know that we are not alone. Jesus has been tried and tested by this world and he will stand with us. As Paul writes, “No trial has taken hold of you except what is common to humanity. Now God is faithful and will not allow you to be tested beyond what you are able to bear. But with the test, he will provide the way to escape so you will be able to endure it.” (1 Corinthians 10:13) The Greek word for “test” can also mean “temptation.” Sometimes the way to escape temptation is just to say no. When the Nazis lined up innocent villagers to shoot, some of the soldiers refused to. They would not follow orders to kill civilians and noncombatants. And sometimes they were lined up with the villagers and shot. Which is why it is part of US military code that soldiers not only may but must refuse to follow illegal orders. And it is part of the general orders for Sheriff's deputies as well. Killing innocents is the mark of folks like Hitler and Herod.

We often forget that when tempted we can say no and walk away. But here again we can rely on Jesus. As Hebrews 4:15 says, “For we do not have a high priest incapable of sympathizing with our weaknesses, but one who has been tempted in every way just as we are, yet without sin.” You may say, “Well, of course he didn't sin; he was God.” But he was also human. That means that when Jesus was hit, slapped and beaten, he was tempted to strike back but didn't. That means when he was preaching to prostitutes, he was tempted to use their services but didn't. That means when a rich young man wanted to become his follower, he was tempted to tell him to give him all his money but instead told him to give all he had to the poor. That means that when he was offered all the kingdoms in this world if he just worshiped God's adversary, he was tempted but didn't. Being tempted is not sin; giving in to it is. It is deliberately deciding to throw off your balance and fall.

Through Jesus we can regain our balance. We can have restored to us a sense of what is too little, what is too much and what is just right in each situation. Jesus knew when to go along with the ceremonial laws of his Jewish culture and faith and when not to, like when people needed to be healed even on the Sabbath. He knew when to pay to Caesar what is Caesar's and when to give to God what is God's. He knew when to use his powers to heal and help and when to refuse people who just wanted to see something miraculous. He knew when people needed physical nourishment and when they needed spiritual nourishment.

In medicine, the body's ability to maintain a healthy balance is called homeostasis. We have internal systems that try to keep our internal temperature from being too low or too high. Our body tries to keep our internal chemistry from being too acid or too alkaline. It keeps our blood sugar from being too high or too low. There is a healthy range for everything, as you see whenever you get the results of a blood test.

Just so, to stay healthy spiritually, we need to keep a balance. We need to maintain a good relationship with God and a healthy relationship with other people. We need to study the Bible and we need to put what we learn into practice. We need to pray for things we need to serve God properly and we need to do what we should to obtain them. We need to serve God in the world and we need a day to rest and simply enjoy God and his gifts. We need to be in the world but not of the world, in the same way that to get somewhere in a boat it needs to be in the water but you don't want water getting into the boat.

We live in a fine-tuned universe. Like homeostasis in the body, the elements in the universe exist within parameters that make life possible. If the strength of gravity, electromagnetism, the mass of the electron, and the rate of cosmic expansion, among other things, were greater or smaller than they are, then stars, elements and stable matter would be unable to form. The fact that all of these basics are just right is considered highly improbable to have occurred by accident. God made a stable and balanced universe in which we could exist.

But our world is unbalanced and it is obviously our fault. We have tried to use the gifts God gave us to remake the world without regard to what God has said about how we are to take care of his creation and each other. Some people use their gifts to make more money than they can possibly spend in a lifetime but don't use it to help those who have too little to live on. Some people use their gifts to gain lots of power and then indulge their desires and passions rather than use it to make society more just and merciful. Some people who don't have money or power will use their brains or brawn to gain more for themselves by exploiting others as bad off or worse than they are. Some folks withdraw from the world, neither helping nor actively harming others with their gifts, but just letting things get gradually worse. There are no physical restraints that are keeping us from remedying these problems, just our spiritual and moral neglect. We don't want to make the effort or the sacrifices necessary to do what's right.

So God has made that effort and that sacrifice. He has entered the world himself to show us who he is and what we can become if we change our minds and our lives and follow him. As Paul wrote, “You should have the same attitude toward one another that Christ Jesus had, who though he existed in the form of God did not regard equality with God as something to be clung to, but emptied himself by taking on the form of a slave, by looking like other men, and by sharing in human nature. He humbled himself, by becoming obedient to the point of death—even death on a cross!” (Philippians 2:5-8) You may say, “Isn't that going a bit far in one direction?” Yes, but he did it to counterbalance a world that has been going full-tilt toward destruction. We have way too many people pursuing only their own good. Jesus came to tip the world back to one in which people seek the good of all. Every person who follows him helps restore the balance.

Jesus is the fulcrum of history. He is the pivot point, the center of gravity, the perfect balance between humanity and divinity, the person in whom heaven and earth meet. He restores our spiritual equilibrium and keeps us upright and moving in the right direction, neither veering to the left or to the right. Through his Holy Spirit, he helps us walk with him on the straight and narrow path as we journey towards our goal: to be with him and to be like him, children of our heavenly Father, becoming perfect images of the God who is love.

Sunday, December 21, 2025

Foreshadowing

The scriptures referred to are Isaiah 7:10-16, Romans 1-1-7 and Matthew 1:18-25.

Often a writer will drop clues or hints for what will happen later in a story. It's called foreshadowing and you've seen it in many great stories and movies. I hate to spoil films but one that came out more than a quarter of a century ago has one of the best examples of foreshadowing you can find. In The Sixth Sense young Cole tells the psychiatrist Dr. Crowe that he sees dead people. But what he adds foreshadows the movie's startling plot twist: “They don't know they're dead.” My wife was one of the few people who figured out the ending by the midpoint in the film.

Another example of foreshadowing is found in the movie The Incredibles. When Mr. Incredible goes to Edna Mode for a new costume she vehemently refuses to add a cape, citing how many disasters have come to superheroes who had capes. And in the climax of the movie, the villain finds out for himself why having a cape is a bad idea.

Agatha Christie must hold the record for the earliest possible example of foreshadowing. Usually as people are murdered in her novels, it narrows the possibilities as to which of the survivors is the killer. But in one of her books, just as in the nursery rhyme that predicts how each will be killed, everyone ends up dead. We only learn who did it in a letter left by the murderer, who is also dead. But the title foreshadows the surprising finale. It's called And Then There Were None. (Unfortunately the ending had to be changed when the novel was made into a play and then a film, so that someone could survive to figure out who was responsible.)

The Bible also has foreshadowing. Sometimes it's subtle. Humankind's fall involves a tree, as we see in Genesis chapter 3. But so does humanity's redemption. In defying the Sanhedrin's command that they stop preaching about Jesus, Peter and the apostles say, “The God of our fathers raised Jesus from the dead—whom you had killed by hanging him on a tree.” (Acts 5:30) The Greek word xulon could mean tree or anything made of wood. It's used here and in 4 other passages in the New Testament to refer to the cross. Paul says, “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us. For it is written: 'Cursed is everyone who is hung on a tree.'” (Galatians 3:13, cf. Deuteronomy 21:22-23) And this usage could be literal because the Romans experimented with different methods of making crosses, including by stripping a tree of branches and using it as the upright to which a crossbar was affixed. So in a sense the cross on which Christ died becomes the tree of life which is also mentioned in Genesis.

Sometimes the foreshadowing in the Bible is explicit, as in prophecy. In today's passage from Isaiah, God is assuring King Ahaz of Judah that he need not worry about the military coalition of Israelites and Arameans threatening him. As a sign, a maiden will have a son named Immanuel. By the time the child knows good from evil, the threat will be gone. And that's what happened then.

This however is an example of a prophecy that has more than one fulfillment. Matthew picks up on this in his account of Jesus' birth. In this case the child is not merely named Emmanuel, but actually embodies the meaning of the name: “God is with us.” And it is often true with these double-barrelled prophecies that the second fulfillment is deeper and more significant. Originally this was a sign that God would remove a military power that threatens everyone in Ahaz's kingdom. But when Jesus was born, it signals the beginning of the Son of Man's mission to remove the power of sin and death from those who voluntarily become citizens of God's kingdom.

By the way, if you are disturbed by the fact that the Hebrew mentions a young woman but Matthew quotes it as referring to a virgin, you needn't be. The Hebrew word almah does basically mean a young woman, which includes virgins. Matthew is quoting the Septuagint, the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible most Jews read at that time. It used parthenos, the Greek word for virgin, which reveals the deeper fulfillment this time around. As Mark Twain pointed out, history does not literally repeat itself but it does rhyme.

It is important to realize that in the first century, the only scriptures were what we call the Old Testament. The New Testament was in the process of being written beginning with the letters of Paul. When Jesus taught the disciples what was written about him he was using the Torah, the prophets and the Psalms. And there was plenty there about him.

This one in Isaiah is significant but there are others that are even more so. Later in Isaiah, we are told that “in the future he will honor Galilee of the Gentiles...” (Isaiah 9:1) Who will do this? Is it God or perhaps a future king of David's line? Maybe both. About this king, we read, “For a child has been born to us, a son has been given to us; and the government will be on his shoulder; and his name shall be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. Of the increase of his dominion and peace there will be no end. He will reign upon David's throne and over his kingdom to order and establish it with justice and righteous acts from that time forward and forever.” (Isaiah 9:6-7) Those are some pretty spectacular names and claims for a human king.

Some scholars argue that this refers to a traditional Davidic king, perhaps Hezekiah, Ahaz's son, and that these are simply royal titles. But there is nowhere in scripture any king given these titles. Hezekiah's name means “God gives strength.” It does not use the same words translated “Mighty God.” Elsewhere in Isaiah we are told “This also comes from the Lord of hosts, who is wonderful in counsel, and excellent in wisdom.” (Isaiah 28:29) God is the Wonderful Counselor, not any man. Also it is more typical to call God our father, and no mortal is everlasting. And while Judah was not conquered by the Assyrians, Hezekiah did pay them tribute by stripping the gold off the doors of God's temple. And he did fight against the Philistines, so the peace he brought was bought with the temple's gold and the blood of his enemies. Would that be appropriate for someone called the Prince of Peace?

Though Hezekiah was one of the best of the kings of Judah, the titles in Isaiah 9 seem excessive even for him. And despite all the good he did, getting rid of pagan shrines and reopening and cleansing God's temple, Hezekiah was arrogant. (2 Chronicles 32:25) When he showed off his treasures to the Babylonians, he essentially invited them to come back and conquer Judah. He didn't mind, though, because there would be peace in his lifetime. (2 Kings 20:12-19) That was neither humble nor wise.

This prophecy begs a greater fulfillment and Jesus, who is the everlasting God, is one with the Father, never fought a war but brings peace to his followers, and is a wonderfully wise counselor and thinker, is a better fit.

Then of course there are the prophecies of God's suffering servant, whom we read about in Isaiah chapters 49-53. It is difficult to read these passages and not think of Jesus, who was despised and rejected (Isaiah 53:3), was beaten, mocked and spit upon (Isaiah 50:6), was killed among transgressors (Isaiah 53:12), was buried in a rich man's tomb (Isaiah 53:9) and suffered for the sins of others (Isaiah 53:5, 8). To whom, other than Jesus, could these prophecies possibly refer?

Altogether scholars have counted more than 100 prophecies scattered throughout the Old Testament that were fulfilled by Jesus. That's too many to be a coincidence. Some think the gospel writers invented things about Jesus to make them fit. But those referring to his death are so weirdly specific. And we know his crucifixion wasn't invented. Non-Christian historians like Josephus and Tacitus confirm his execution under Pontius Pilate. A Greek satirist mocks Christians for following a crucified leader. An early example of graffiti shows a man worshiping a crucified God. And why would anyone make up the idea that their leader died an humiliating death just to fit some old prophecies? It was not a good selling point. Paul said that the cross was a stumbling block to the Jews and seemed like nonsense to the Greeks. (1 Corinthians 1:23) Jesus' death was in the earliest Christian writings because it did happen, just as foreshadowed in the Hebrew Bible.

Scholar N.T. Wright points out one interesting fact about the gospels: all of the references to the Old Testament prophecies about Jesus' first coming end with his burial. The gospel writers did not quote any eerily specific passages that foreshadowed his resurrection. Yes, there were a few references to a general resurrection of the dead at the end of the present evil era. (Job 19:25-27; Psalm 49:15 and 71:20; Daniel 12:2; Isaiah 26:19) But you have to look hard to see those that apply specifically to the Messiah. (Psalm 16:9-10 and 49:15) The reason we don't see this as easily in the Old Testament is that this is God doing something new. Christ's resurrection is not clearly predicted by anyone but Jesus himself. The disciples could not anticipate it because it made no sense to them. They knew that the dead stayed dead. And they were not quick to believe in it even after his tomb was found to be empty. Just as you and I would in that situation, they had to see and touch and eat with their risen friend before they could accept it to be true. After they were convinced, they could not stop talking about it, even when facing death.

There are prophecies about Jesus that have not been fulfilled. They are the ones about Jesus' second coming. One key passage in Daniel says, “In my vision at night I looked, and there was before me one like a son of man, coming with the clouds of heaven. He approached the Ancient of Days and was led into his presence. He was given authority, glory and sovereign power; all peoples, nations and men of every language worshiped him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion that will not pass away, and his kingdom is one that will never be destroyed.” (Daniel 7:13-14) That has not yet been fully realized. Jesus compared the kingdom of God to a seed, something which starts small and grows. (Matthew 13) Jesus also said to his followers that the “kingdom of God is within you” or “in your midst.” (Luke 17:21) The church, as N.T. Wright puts it, is to be a small-scale, working model of the new creation. So God's kingdom is something that exists today but not yet in its final form. It's like a butterfly which starts as a caterpillar and ends up as a creature whose beautiful wings let it fly.

When we say that God has a plan, we are not making it up. It is laid out in the Bible, including the long portion that was written hundreds of years before Jesus was born. But like a lot of foreshadowing, we only see it after it has happened. Only after the plot twist has taken place, do we say, “Oh, yeah! Remember what we were told earlier!” Only after Jesus was crucified, died, was buried and then rose again were the disciples able to see that this was God's plan all along. It came as a surprise at first but later they realized it was inevitable. They just didn't see how God was going to bring it about.

But what does that have to do with us? We are all part of God's plan. We all have our roles to play. When I acted in plays in high school, college and community theater, I and my fellow actors were the most visible, of course, because people saw us on stage. But behind the scenes were the people who made the costumes, who built the sets, who created and collected the props, who did the sound, who did the lights, who sold the tickets, who did the publicity, and who ushered people to their seats. All of those people were necessary. Without them we would be stumbling around in the dark, unable to see or be seen, with no audience to even hear us.

Or think of it this way: We are God's Mission Impossible team. Tom Cruise's Ethan Hunt could not save the day without the help of Luther, the computer guy, and Benji, the techie, and Ilsa, the spy, and even Grace, the pickpocket. Not to mention superiors who trust him and who provide the finances and equipment for him to carry out his mission.

God could do it all by himself but he loves us and lets us be part of it, the way Mom gives the kids things to do to get ready for Christmas dinner. Because there is another foreshadowing right in the first chapter of the Bible. In Genesis we read “Then God said, “Let us make humankind in our image, after our likeness, so they may rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air, over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over all the creatures that move on the earth.” (Genesis 1:26) God intended for us to be his vice-regents, ruling under him. But we decided to ignore his command and do things our way. Yet through Jesus, who is both fully human and fully divine, he has set it up so that “they will be priests of God and of Christ, and they will reign with him for a thousand years.” (Revelation 20:6) And all we have to do is say “Yes” to his offer. And “Thanks!”