Acts 11.15-19
This week, something has been quite heavy
on my heart. It means a big change for my family, especially for my boys. They
have met several friends, and now all of that is changing. It is one of the
hardest decisions that I will have to make as a parent, because in doing so, I
know I will be making the decisions that will affect their lives. No one likes
to have routine interrupted or discarded.
Yet at the same time, no one wants to make
waves either. What I am talking about is the membership policy for the Boy
Scouts of America. Soon, they will allow homosexual leaders and boys in the
troops, yet they leave it up to the individual charters to make the decision
themselves. Jamborees, work days and summer camps will no longer be a safe
place to leave my boys unattended. I’ve had around the campfire as a teen, “I
don’t think girls will ever like me.” Now instead of offering encouragement,
“Girls are probably more interested in you than you give yourself credit”, to
being something like, “You might be intended for a girl.”
But that’s not my biggest concern. My
biggest concern is that the homosexual movement has promised not to stop there.
They will go after the charter organizations themselves. Since it’s not a
national policy, the national office doesn’t have to support the charter
organization in any filed lawsuits. And there will be. I see this as a way to
attack the smaller, rural churches, because not only will the troop be sued,
but the sponsoring church as well. And I shared that on my wall on Facebook.
Normally I get quite a bit of feedback on
my posts. But this one comment, “The BSA is a private
organization; what they do within their own walls is none of my business, so
long as no one is being harmed.” “When they came for the Communists, I remained
silent because I was not a Communist. When they came for the trade unionists, I
was silent for I was not a trade unionist. When they came for the Jews, I
remained silent, for I was not a Jew. When they came for the Catholics, I
remained silent because I was not a Catholic. When they came for me, no one
spoke up, because there was no one left to defend me.” That was a poem, part of
a sermon by a German pastor named Friedrich Niemoller. That poem came to my
mind when I read my friend’s comment, and saw few, very few follow.
This
morning, as well look at Acts 11.15-18, Peter is taking a stand. We saw last
week where he was directed by God to go to the Centurion’s home, where he
taught Jesus, saw God pour out the gift of the Holy Spirit and then baptized
them.
Then
chapter 11 opens up with Peter returning to Jerusalem where some of the Jewish
Christians were protesting that Peter would defile himself. They were missing
the bigger picture of what was going on. They hooked up on one detail. Peter
was at Cornelius’ house, a Gentile. So here is his response: (Read the text)
Peter
realized that at his fork in the road, he could fight God, or go with God. He
chose to fight with God. But those who were opposed to his actions, they chose
the other road. They chose to fight God. Who was Peter to oppose God? That’s
what he asked. And that is something we need to ask ourselves. Do we fight God
in our life?
We fight God when we don’t take a stand. As Christians, we will find more and more of the
testing of our resolve. People will push and push because as Christians, we are
supposed to be nice, and let people take advantage of us. To some, what help
they can get isn’t seen as help, but something they are entitled to because
they came and asked. Sometimes they don’t even bother asking. Here’s my bill. I
need it paid by 5 pm this evening. Ah nice, it’s 4.15. I’ll get right on this!
But that’s not really the type of stand we
need to focus. Sure, we need to be wise stewards of what God has given us. The
stand we need to make is sometimes for something like the BSA. I was a bit
crushed in that two friends commented on my sharing of the BSA pending actions.
Normally I get quite a bit of feedback. Not this time. One friend said what I
shared. It’s not his business. But as a Christian it is. It is the backdoor of
putting this issue in all of our faces. Niemoller was correct as he penned that
poem.
We also need to make a stand in other areas
too. The other two main issues are the Abortion movement and the gun ban
movement. By redefining the 2nd Amendment, and thus nullify it, then
it would be quite easy for the rest of our rights to come crumbling down. It is
also a reason that I don’t like the idea of foreigners being tried for war
crimes in the American judicial system. If you can try them and then because
they are not Americans who attacked America, then we can nullify their rights,
which mean that somewhere down the road, we might find ourselves without our
legal rights for whatever reason.
As far as abortion goes, I do believe that
how we take a stand is critical. I believe the children are heaven bound. I wish they had a chance at life. Yet how do
we reach the mom who a year later slips into depression because she knows she
should be celebrating a 1 yo’s b-day? Where will she find comfort and Gods
grace for her pain? We need to be able to reach her.
Now, is it wrong? Yes. Should we pay for
it? No. But that might be the problem, that we are trying to legislate
morality. Morality is above legislation, regardless what the dunderheads in DC
believe. Abortion fight has become something more than pro-life. It is now a
freedom of religion issue. Hobby Lobby is trying to fight to keep from having
to offer benefits that go contrary to their Christian life. They are being told
by the courts as well as by the president that it’s ok to be a Christian, until
we enter the public sector. They mean that once you leave your home, stop
behaving like a Christian.
But let’s put the national issues aside for
the moment. There is another area in which we must take a stand that is far
more critical than the national issues. It is taking a stand for Jesus now. It
is telling your neighbor about Jesus. It is about telling your friends, your
coworkers about Jesus. If they go to church, then ask them how you might encourage
them in their walk. I don’t know that apart from one neighbor at a time, will
we be able to quickly turn the national views on religious freedom, the Bill of
rights, etc. But we can see how one person at a time can change everything.
South Korea. Not there yet, but closer than we are to being a Christian nation.
We fight God when we try by our own hand. Now this is an area where we tend to do things
ourselves without consulting God. Peter could have done this. It is certainly
what Judas was doing when he agreed to betray Jesus. See, I wonder if he wanted
the Kingdom to come on his terms. Instead, he saw a good friend murdered. No
kingdom. Just sorrow. He didn’t stay around long enough to see what happened on
Sunday morning.
We tend to fight God when we living our
lives our way. One pet peeve I have on facebook is the blatant hypocrisy that I
see. One moment, there is a beautiful verse and picture, a pledge of following
Jesus no matter what. Then the same person in the next moment posts jokes, stories
or pictures of a questionable nature.
That is perhaps why we are where we are.
Rather than seeing what and how God may want something done, we do it our way. For
example, we make our music as loud and upbeat as the music that people hear on
the radios. We preach sermons that make people feel good, but not motivated to
be good. We confuse large numbers with intimacy, closeness with God.
Peter says we are a royal people, a
peculiar people. It means that we stand out from the rest of the world. We do not
have the same desires and ambitions that those who don’t know Jesus has. We
cling to what we know, what we are comfortable with, just like the Jews when
they heard that the Gentiles were accepting Jesus as their savior.
We fight God when we try to understand. This one is a bit more veiled than the other two
points. I’ve drawn this point more from other places than from our text. For
example, James says, do not merely listen to the word, but do what it says. Too
often when we are told to do something, we want to know the why. Paul says that
is the mystery that people were stumbling over: Jews were God’s chosen people.
Why are the Gentiles coming in? Because God intended to save ALL peoples, not
just a few.
My messages try to convey reasoning and
understanding, but more times than not, we may not need to know why until
later. Philip didn’t know why he had to go to a certain road. He went. The
disciples didn’t try to understand Jesus when he said, come follow me. They
followed. Then there is Elisha. He was appointed to carry Elijah’s mantle, or
continue with Elijah’s ministry. He didn’t ask why. Instead, he held a bbq for
all the area, using his farm equipment as both fuel and food. There are times,
as a parent, I will need to bark something at my boy to obey immediately. Only
after obeying, such as when I called him back in a parking lot, was he then
able to see the car that he didn’t see the first time, and that the car didn’t
see him either. God tells us to go, to share the message. The word tells us
quite a bit about what we are to do. It is up to us to not question.
Understanding the why comes with maturity. Now mind you, God will sometimes
give us the reasoning as He leads us. He did with Ananias being sent to Saul.
He did when he had Paul and Barnabas set aside to go on the first missionary
journey. But don’t worry if you don’t understand at first.
So this leaves us with the final, how? How
do we stop fighting God? It’s simple. Two words: (ready?) Stop it. That’s it.
Too often we do things because we feel like doing them. We have come to believe
that we are ruled by our feelings, our emotions. Because I feel like it, I must
do it. Instead, we again listen to James’ words. Do what the Scripture says.
Love your enemies, and bless them. Tell others about Christ. When you are
loving God with all your fiber and loving your neighbor, you won’t have time to
fight God. Spend time in the word. See how else he might have you do.
The best blessing of all comes from just
stopping our fight. We are able to rejoice together, for I see a time of
worship there as it dawned on them what Peter was telling them. And after all,
isn’t that what we’ve come to do together, to worship the Father and encourage
each other?
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