Everybody wants to be somebody until they come to realize that being somebody comes at a price. There are no free rides in life; even something as mesmerizing as fame has a price tag that the introspective aren’t so eager or willing to pay. We watch people clamor over each other, trying to get a sliver of the spotlight, and once they do, it seems as though their lives implode in such spectacular fashions that one wonders if it was all worth it.
You spent ten years trying to make a name for yourself and
ended up spending everything you earned once you made it on rehab facilities
and therapy just to get back to where you started. Just so you could be whole
again, feel again, and be in a mental space stable enough wherein your friends
and family don’t pretend as though they need a place to crash every night just
to make sure you don’t hurt yourself.
Vegas wasn’t built off the backs of winners, and rehab
facilities costing thirty grand a week weren’t built on the backs of the poor
and impoverished.
One would think that egos wouldn’t play a part within
Christendom. One would think that the notion of being one body, each tasked
with performing its own function, was something elementary enough that even new
believers understood it. As I said, one would think. The reality is that if you
took a minute to look into the inner workings of ministries, you’d realize many
have such colorful histories that a daytime soap opera based on their existence
wouldn’t be a stretch at all. You’ve got intrigue, betrayal, underhanded
dealings, hostile takeovers, blackmail, and the list goes on, all coming from
individuals and ministries that purport to be ambassadors of Christ and
soldiers of the cross.
Nowadays, people want to become teachers for the potential
benefits they might accrue in doing so. Their desire isn’t simply to teach but
to make themselves the center of attention and somehow monetize the result. Because
their desire is impure, and their purpose is numbers rather than glorifying
God, what they teach is shallow, flawed, and lacking substantive truth. It
doesn’t take a rocket surgeon to figure out that the more permissive you are
regarding certain proclivities, the wider an audience you will amass.
Those who desire to become teachers have forgotten that in
doing so, the focus shouldn’t be on the individual teaching but on the subject
matter being taught. When a teacher attempts to hijack the subject matter and
make it about themselves instead, they’ve already strayed from their calling.
James 3:1, “My brethren, let not many of you become teachers,
knowing that we shall receive a stricter judgment.”
As always, James is being pragmatic. He is reminding those
with stars in their eyes and dreams of adoring fans that when you become a
teacher, you are held accountable both for what you teach others and whether or
not you lived up to those teachings. The stricter judgment James speaks of is
not just one thing; it’s many things because a teacher is responsible for
presenting the curriculum as prescribed by the author and not as they would
like to have it worded.
If you show up for a class on Christianity 101, and the
teacher starts teaching on the equanimity of all religions, using tired
metaphors like multiple streams leading to one big river that spills into the
ocean, get your money back if you can, but stop attending the class even if you
can’t.
Many who claim to be teachers of the Word today are teaching
anything but, and no one is holding their feet to the fire. No one is holding
them to task because the things they teach are more libertine and permissive
than the curriculum allows, and the students love the notion that they can goof
off in class and get a passing grade regardless.
Everybody loved the cool teacher with the aviator shades and
the half-empty bottle of Fireball in his desk who just rolled the TV VHS combo
into the class and let you watch Commando because he thought it was a fitting
metaphor for conflict resolution.
It’s only in hindsight that you realize the only thing you
learned in World History class was that Arnold Schwarzenegger can carry a tree
trunk down the side of a mountain on one shoulder and conclude that the history
teacher with the drinking problem wasn’t that cool after all. You could even go
so far as to surmise that he was derelict in his duties and did not perform the
tasks for which he was duly compensated.
Those who can’t do teach might fly with those of the world,
but it does not cut it with God. Those who teach His word, must also do. They
must practice what they preach and be diligent in doing so. They must likewise make
certain that what they teach is the whole counsel of God and not some
aberration that has been run through the acceptable to all potential hearers
mill to ensure there’s nothing controversial or mildly offensive in any of it.
Truth offends the sensibilities of the deceived. Light offends the
sensibilities of those in the dark. Righteousness offends the sensibilities of
hedonism, if hedonism had any sensibilities, to begin with.
When your doctor informs you that you are terminal and guaranteed
to die within a certain amount of time if you don’t follow his instructions,
he’s not being mean-spirited; he’s not trying to upset you; he is presenting
the facts to you in the hope that you will take his advice and live.
Believers are motivated by the desire to see others live. They go out on a limb and risk being rejected, mocked, ridiculed, and ostracized, all to tell strangers with whom they have no connection other than their humanity that they don’t have to die in their sins, separated and alienated from the source of life, but that they can be freed and reconciled unto God.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
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