Jonathots Daily Blog
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Today I’m doing something a little different. I’m sitting here with the Good Book open, peering down at John the 7th Chapter.
I have no intention of trying to impress you with my Bible knowledge nor attempt to turn some passage into a magical expression of salvation.
What I want to share with you is a pattern.
I would like to find an adjective to describe this pattern. Foolish comes to mind. Perhaps dangerous. But certainly repetitive.
The pattern is the ongoing belief in every generation that you can evaluate something by the numbers–“the bottom line.”
Ironically, it was verbalized perfectly over two thousand years ago by the brothers and sisters of Jesus of Nazareth when they critiqued him on his approach to promoting the message he had chosen to share.
Their insights are frightening to read because they are so current to today’s ignorance. They spoke the following to Jesus:
“For there is no man that does anything in secret but instead, wants to be known.”
Have you ever heard that philosophy?
“Promote yourself.”
“Get it out there.”
“Showcase it.”
“Use your tools.”
“Adjust your intensity to the present flow of thinking.”
Amazingly, through the whole 7th Chapter of John, this repeats over and over again. For later on in that same passage, the audiences that come to Jesus muse whether he could be the Messiah, because they’re concerned about where he was born.
Added pressure.
Not only do you need to promote yourself well, but you need a certain look–maybe even a color. How about a culture to back you up?
We have the mistaken idea that Jesus always had great multitudes following him. There were times that people hung around for a while–after all, if you turn water into wine and can take a Happy Meal and make a buffet, you will gain some attention.
But the truth of the matter is, as soon as Jesus started teaching, the crowd thinned, and on one occasion totally disappeared.
For after all, what concerned the average Jew was whether God would send a military man to destroy the Romans and establish the Kingdom of Israel.
On the other hand, Jesus came to bring the Kingdom of God, which was within us, and would enable us to get along with everyone, including the Romans.
Conflict.
Yet it is best capsulized in that same chapter in a meeting among the Jewish leaders.
When they sat discussing the phenomenon of Jesus of Nazareth, what finally made them decide he was a joke, a hoax or at least a light-weight was the fact that none of the hierarchy of their religion–those considered intelligent, educated and astute–believed in him.
The premise was, “If you really are somebody, all the “somebodies” will recognize and promote you.”
“If you really are talented, you will be discovered.”
“If you really are bringing a possibility of hope and salvation, eventually you’ll be offered a platform instead of a cross.”
It didn’t work out that way.
Nowadays, I often sit around with my children, explaining to them that success is meaningless. In my lifetime, notorious people, who appeared to be powerful and everlasting, bit the dust and became cautionary tales of stupidity.
You can’t look at the numbers.
If you had lived in 1st century Palestine and looked at the numbers, the popularity, the acceptance, the blending and the support of the people in the know, you would never have found Jesus.
If you want to find out what is going to last, be helpful, truthful and carry the touch of God, do one thing–simply watch and learn.
How resourcefully does he, she or they use the resources?
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