Back in the day, they called it being religious. Today, they call it being spiritual. Anytime I hear someone say they are spiritual, usually a thirty-something with one too many tattoos and a blank, lifeless stare, I throw up a little bit in my mouth because the spirituality of which they speak is something of their own creation that has no resemblance to the pure and undefiled religion that James speaks of further in his epistle. Yet, somehow, the people who drone on about being spiritual have convinced themselves that they will end up in some version of a paradise, not necessarily the Christian heaven, but maybe Valhalla, Sutala, Jannah, or perhaps even Svarga, which is a blending of two heavens into one that silly people came up with to appease a larger percentage of the populace.
There is only one heaven, the place that Jesus went to
prepare for His faithful. At the risk of sounding repetitive, there is also
only one way to His heaven, and that is through Him.
James 1:26, “If anyone among you thinks he is religious, and
does not bridle his tongue but deceives his own heart, that one’s religion is
useless.”
I don’t mean to rile up the Beth Moore fans anew, but just
because you think it you don’t become it, whatever that it might be. You can
have vision boards and manifest, speak into existence, bind, loose, and stand
on the promise of your astrological sign, but all of that is useless and
nothing more than self-deception if you are not being transformed into the
image of Jesus.
I’ve been accused of picking on the female false prophetesses
and teachers. In my defense, I haven’t yet heard a man say he was teleported to
heaven in a porta-potty or that you would have pet dinosaurs in heaven or that
they went back in time to have a confab with Eve, yes, that Eve. When I run
across a man who is so brazen in his lies, then I will speak about him as heartily
as I do their female counterparts.
I’m equally offended by false prophets as I am by false
prophetesses; one does not offend me more than the other because of their
gender.
If anyone thinks they are religious but don’t have the fruit
to back it up, they are deceiving themselves. Some will stand before the throne
of judgment fully convinced in their self-deception until they will be told to
depart from before His all-knowing eyes. Jesus echoes the same sentiment,
warning of the same consequences.
Why can’t you let people be? Why do you have to make people
feel uncomfortable by insisting that they judge themselves and their lives
before they stand before the throne of judgment? Because once you’re before the
throne, it’s too late to do anything about it.
Jesus loved you enough to warn you; Paul, Peter, James, Jude,
John, Luke, and all the other writers of the Bible loved you enough to warn you;
why would I love you any less?
There are a lot of people headed to hell thinking they’re
going to heaven, and that breaks my heart.
The shock of it will be doubly worse for ones such as these
because evil men who lived evil lives had no expectation of ending up in
heaven, but lukewarm people who were justified by false shepherds kind of do.
It’s expecting one thing and getting the opposite that really
crushes you. I failed my first driver’s test at the age of sixteen. Up until
the mustachioed man with the guayabera shirt and the pit stains told me I’d
failed, I was wholly confident that I’d passed with flying colors. I’d kept my
hands at the ten and two positions, signaled, and nailed the parallel parking,
and the only thing I was thinking about was whether or not I was going to smile
or strike a serious pose in my license photo.
Then he informed me that I hadn’t passed. The reasons were
twofold, but I’d stopped listening by then. It had something to do with turning
into the second lane rather than the first when I turned left, and not turning
my head to check for cars when I changed lanes. I was numb. I didn’t care about
his reasoning; I’d failed when every expectation was that I’d be walking away
with a license in my pocket.
It crushed me, and it took me a few days to get back in the
right headspace and reschedule another test. I passed the second one, but it
was a different instructor, so maybe that had something to do with it.
When it comes to eternity, there are no second chances. You
don’t get a redo; you can’t ask for a different judge, and you can’t reschedule
life, hoping to learn from the mistakes of your first go-round. We’re not
Buddhists, and we don’t believe the mosquito we just mushed into a glob was a
reincarnated in-law.
One life is all you get, so make sure you don’t waste it or
live with the impression that you can defy the Word of God and still end up
walking the halls of heaven someday. Live each day as though it were the
beginning of your forever, being ever aware of the difference between thinking
about being saved and being saved. One is an unrealized hope or plan; the other
is being a child of God with all the afferent benefits and protections. The day
is almost upon us when those benefits and protections will mean all the
difference between walking through the fire or being consumed by it.
Hacky as it may sound, since it’s so often repeated, everyone gets eternity. It’s just a matter of where you spend yours that has yet to be decided. Location is everything; just ask a real estate agent.
With love in Christ,
MIchael Boldea, Jr.
Location is everything 👏
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