One day a pastor walked
with a soap manufacturer down the busy streets of New York. Noticing all the
advertisements, stores, and clothing promoting a life of ungodliness, the soap
manufacturer remarked to the pastor, “The gospel you preach hasn’t done much
good, has it? Look. There’s a lot of filth in this world.”
The
pastor said nothing. The two men walked a few more blocks, taking in the sights
and sounds of the crowded city. After some time of silence, the pastor casually
pointed to a homeless man covered in grime, huddled in a boarded-up entryway.
“The soap you sell hasn’t done much good, has it?” he reflected. “Look. There’s
a lot of filth in this world.”
The
soap manufacturer simply chuckled and said, “Ah, but you are wrong. Soap is
only useful when it is applied.”
The
pastor smiled and said, “Exactly. And so it is with the gospel.”
Jesus
Christ came so that we could have life and experience it more abundantly. Yet
so many people are simply trying to make it—to get by from day to day. They
aren’t living in the power and strength that He came to supply. The gospel
gives life, but they have not applied it.
A
lot of the defeat, fear, and worry that many believers face has to do with a
misunderstanding of Christ. They misunderstand what He came to give … and how
He came to give it. They don’t see how He wants us to model our lives after
Him. This misunderstanding can arise because, when they look at the life of
Jesus, they see things they’d rather not see: pain, rejection, endurance,
obscurity, and humility.
Jesus
didn’t come as a pop star or as a reality-TV king. Isaiah 53:2-3 shows us He
had no stately form or majesty. He wasn’t handsome. Instead, He was despised.
He knew grief and hung out with sorrow.
This
view of Jesus flies in the face of how our culture defines “the perfect man,”
but as Saint Augustine said, “If you believe what you like in the gospels and
reject what you don’t like, it is not the gospel you believe, but yourself.”
Too often we try to tweak God’s Word to our own taste. We take what we want,
leave out the rest, add a bit here, sprinkle some Jesus on top, and apply some
revisionist history just for good measure. But God was clear; the promise He
gave was that our Savior would be rejected by His own people. We see this in
the gospels:
· “He came to His own, and His own people did
not receive Him” (John 1:11).
· “Then they all cried out together, ‘Take this
man away!’” (Luke 23:18).
I
wonder what Jesus felt as He stood there and heard those words. Have you ever
felt rejection? It cuts deep. It’s a pain we can’t even adequately put into
words. It takes your breath away, knocks the wind out of you. It’s a pain that
lingers, causing you to doubt your own worth. So when it happens, you might try
to ignore it. Eat, shop or entertain your way out of it.
But
Jesus didn’t run from rejection. He knew God always has a purpose for the pain,
and He willingly embraced it.
By Tony Evans
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