It’s astounding how much fat you can trim when you really try. When you don’t have a minimum word count set by your publisher or aren’t trying to seem overly pedantic, you can cut to the chase, get to the point, and say the hard things that need saying quickly and unapologetically.
Because we are living in the days when coffee cups need a
‘HOT’ label, and cardboard pizza boxes have ‘Do Not Eat This Box’ stenciled
across their front, certain metaphors, parables, and instructions found within
the pages of Scripture require a more finite explanation than just calling
someone a cloud without water, or a late autumn tree without fruit.
The more I look around nowadays, the more I understand what
Paul was trying to say to Timothy. Even though I’ll never be mistaken for a
glad-hander or a people person, I study people and have been for the better
part of four decades. Ever since I could remember, I have been fascinated by
what made people tick, by what animated them, by what made them smile, and cry,
and laugh and scream, and most of all, by the need to understand why they did
what they did.
Being that I’ve seen enough of the dark side of humanity to
make me perpetually skittish and situationally aware, one thing I’ve noticed
over the last few years is that everyone is busy doing nothing and doing their
best to live in a bubble of their own making with as little human interaction
as possible.
If you ever have the chance to use public transport, just
look around and see how many people are wearing headphones, earbuds, or some
sort of contraption to block out the noise or the words of others. Chances are
you’d hit close to 90%, and those that still like to hear the sounds of the
world around them are usually most of the way through the twilight of their
lives.
All those people with the wireless buds likely to cause brain
cancer in a decade or two are listening to something. Sure, most of them are
listening to music, you know, the good stuff like Hillsong, Alabama, the
Gaithers, or REO Speedwagon, but some of them are learning. Podcasts,
audiobooks, courses on everything from how to find a wife to how to turn your
passion for doggy pompadours into a business, self-help seminars, the
unabridged version of Ulysses, everyone’s learning all the time yet getting
dumber by the day.
We’ve become dependent on gadgets to tell us where to go, how
to get there, how far to walk, and how much to eat. There’s even an app that
reminds people to drink water. That used to be a natural byproduct of thirst,
but who can trust their bodies to tell them they need fluids anymore?
Everyone knows everything about everything, and everyone has
an opinion of how it could have been done differently, faster, better, or more
streamlined. The Y-shaped hot dot never took off because the Hebrew National
people killed the tech before it could get off the ground. It couldn’t be
because it was a dumb idea.
Jude dispenses with the hand-holding and, within the span of
two verses, identifies the rogues' gallery of those within the household of
faith that would seek to do it harm. Yes, there is more than one type of
individual trying to do harm, and each has its vested interest in why they are
doing it.
The worst by far are the devil’s agents who have infiltrated
the church, hoping to corrupt, defile, and turn God's grace into lewdness. Ones
such as these are not acting out of ignorance or some misplaced sense of
nobility; they are ungodly men who were long ago marked out for condemnation.
Besides these, you have the clouds without water, which are
the unstable and easily swayed among God’s people, those carried about by the
winds and believing whatever the heresy du jour happens to be that particular
week. They go from ‘Jesus is the only way’ to ‘Is Jesus the only way?’ in the
blink of an eye simply because a middle-aged woman with a perpetual weight
problem brought it up on television.
Clouds without water will love you one day and hate you the
next because they are not anchored in the truth, so everything is situational
to them. They tend to gravitate to where the cool kids are, only to be dismayed
by the vapid emptiness of their ministrations. That’s the thing. Even clouds
without water carried about by the winds are bothered by other clouds without
water who insist that they are the vehicle by which the latter rain will
descend upon the earth.
Can we dial back the pomposity a smidgeon? Can we just be
about the Father’s business without declaring that we’re neck in neck with
Jesus for the most important person ever spot? It’s getting tiresome. It’s like
seeing a movie where the hero is on a quest to save humanity for the hundredth
time. Nowadays, it’s not even humanity anymore; that’s not big enough. It must
be universes and the existence of all life anywhere in the cosmos!
You’re a dude filming himself in his basement with his iPhone
6. A little perspective goes a long way, Bishop, Apostle, Prophet, Seer of all
the unseen realms that you are. Maybe spare the mirror a look, and do as the
good Book instructs and wash yourself and make yourself clean once in a blue
moon.
If you insist that you have the most critical job in the Kingdom and spend your days trying to convince everyone else of it, chances are the kingdom is your own, and you are its only inhabitant.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
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