If, as Mark Twain said, man is the only animal that blushes – or needs to, what can we infer when certain ones among us stop blushing altogether? Is a man still a man when nothing he considers, says, or does make him blush anymore? It’s gone beyond the inability to blush, though, and nowadays, the things that ought to make men blush and slink away in shame are considered virtues to be proud of and celebrated.
It’s not a new thing. Since the beginning, sin has robbed men
of sense and shame; likewise, there is always a tipping point where God says
enough! That moment came when the men of Sodom surrounded Lot’s house and
demanded he bring out the angels that were in his home so that they may know
them carnally.
Genesis 19:4-5, “Now before they lay down, the men of the
city, the men of Sodom, both old and young, all the people from every quarter,
surrounded the house. And they called to Lot and said to him, “Where are the
men who came to you tonight? Bring them out to us that we may know them
carnally.’”
It wasn’t just a handful of misguided souls that came to
Lot’s house and surrounded it; it was all the people from every quarter, young
and old. They made their intentions clear, and they weren’t to sit down to a
cup of tea and some lamb kebobs. When sin consumes a life, there no longer
remains any shame, no matter how distasteful or unnatural the depravity is. Sin
has no limits. There is no innocence it will not attempt to corrupt; there are
no depths to which it will not descend. This is the preeminent reason sin
cannot be reasoned or negotiated with.
Within hours, the entire city had mobilized itself and came
to Lot’s house, attempting to defile the newcomers. Men will mobilize in
service to evil in a heartbeat, but in doing good, even those who claim to be
of the household of faith drag their feet. If there’s an audience and the
cameras are rolling, they’ll do just enough to seem magnanimous, but when the
lights stop flashing, and the cameras stop recording, their enthusiasm wanes.
The men of Sodom saw nothing wrong in their actions. They saw
nothing depraved or immoral in demanding that two strangers who had just
entered their city be brought out that they might be defiled. When considering
that much of the contemporary church doesn’t have the discernment to call sin
by name anymore and has put its hand in helping to normalize the most debased
of practices, one begins to understand why the judgment of God is no longer a
matter of if, but a matter of when.
At least Lot recognized it for what it was and called it
wickedness. Today’s spiritual leaders are bending over backward to convince
their followers that the attempted gang rape of two angels wasn’t that wicked
after all when compared to being inhospitable. If only they’d brought a muffin
basket along, the entire matter could have been avoided—first, some finger
foods and tea sandwiches, then the gang rape.
When we fail to confront sin and call it what it is, given
enough time, sin will come to dictate terms, and it will not be as permissive
toward the righteous as the righteous were toward sin. Lot’s soul was vexed,
but he said nothing. He did not call the men of Sodom to repentance, nor did he
insist that what they were doing was wicked until they were at his door, trying
to force themselves into his home to get at the two angels inside.
What have you been permissive of that is now demanding
deference? What is it that you turned a blind eye to that is now insisting you
bow before it? What sins has your church coddled and swept under the rug to the
point that if you don’t show up draped in a rainbow telling Bob that he’s brave
and beautiful for calling himself Betty, you’re shunned and ostracized?
Most people don’t like broaching uncomfortable topics; the
devil knows it too. We would rather kick the can down the road than confront
obvious wickedness because we don’t want to be that guy or gal. Ever so slowly,
we are beginning to understand that if we do not confront it, the wickedness
will just continue to grow and metastasize into something ever more horrific
until it’s on our doorstep, trying to force itself into our homes, attempting
to corrupt all semblance of innocence.
Lot was fortunate enough to have two angels in his home, who
pulled him back into the house and blinded the men who were at the doorway. If
they’d been just a regular human visiting Lot, the story would likely have a
different ending.
Don’t wait until the depraved are surrounding your house
before you stand up. Don’t wait until they are kicking in your door to say
something. By then, it will be too late. We choose what we accept and validate
in our lives. We choose what we allow to pass as normal and what we call out as
sinful, debauched, or depraved.
The one hard and fast rule is that if you claim to be a child of God and He is against something, you should be against it as well. If you accept what God rejects, then you are His in name only, but your heart belongs to another master.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
1 comment:
Hey my brother; I appreciate what you are and do. Wish you were my neighbor as I have alot to say and ask you.
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