Day 365 "Getting at the Truth"
Passage:
Acts 21:33-35
The
commander came up and arrested him and ordered him to be bound with two chains.
Then he asked who he was and what he had done. Some in the crowd shouted one
thing and some another, and since the commander could not get at the truth
because of the uproar, he ordered that Paul be taken into the barracks. When
Paul reached the steps, the violence of the mob was so great he had to be
carried by the soldiers.
Devotion:
My
wife and I were watching a movie the other night and like so often these days, Hollywood portrayed Christians as a bunch of unintelligent, narrow-minded, socially
illiterate, angry, self-righteous miscreants. In the movie Christians had come
out in protest of gay marriage and were accompanied by all the fist shaking,
verbal abuse, shouts of condemnation, and posters that the writers could
creatively imagine. It was an ugly scene, although unfortunately not too far
from the truth.
So
often when I see Christian's protest, I wonder what they hope to accomplish by
doing so. Sometimes I think we've forgotten the example of our Lord Jesus
Christ. Jesus didn't come out in protest of prostitutes (tax collectors or
lepers); he didn't organize marches; paint posters; or coin hateful phrases.
Rather, He was friend to the dregs of society. His ministry was change--not
from the outside in--but from the inside out. One person at a time.
In
our passage today, the commander had come and arrested Paul, placed him in
chains, then took him away from the mob of the crowd into the barracks, because
he could not "get at the truth because of the uproar."
I wonder if our young people today (and those who have not made up their minds
on a particular topic) are swayed positively by our angry protests. Perhaps
they go to their rooms symbolically as well--closing their ears. Think about
it, what is more compelling to you--the calm voice of peace and acceptance of
all ("Come to me all who are heavy laden and I will give you peace");
or the hateful, accusatory shouts of the mob? Unfortunately in the United States, Christians have lost their voice of peace and acceptance and exchanged it
for an angry demand for governmental protection against sin. Does that sound as
ridiculous to you as it does to me?
Questions
to Ponder:
For
the last two hundred plus years Christians have had the majority in this
country. I don't know about you, but I'm feeling this majority slip somewhat.
The legislative and legal changes we've experienced over the last forty years
are indicative of this change. The solution however is not to ask government to
legislate Christian values. Every time I see the gay agenda (for example) gaining
greater and greater momentum and support from mainstream America, I am not
motivated to come out in protest, rather I am encouraged to evangelize--not
against gays but for Jesus. When you watch the network news or read a newspaper
feeling shock and outrage because sin is rampant and universally accepted as
normal behavior in America, what is your response? Call your congressman or
invite your next door neighbor to church? ?