Even though things seemed to be going swimmingly, and they had favor with all the people, as far as the core group was concerned, they did not forget the words of Jesus, nor did they forget His warnings about the world hating them because they hated Him. We can know this based on their reaction to the persecution they had to endure once it commenced because they didn’t shrink back in fear, nor were they looking for ways out of the situation, but rather they welcomed it and reveled in it knowing that the words of Christ were coming to pass before their eyes.
It didn’t take long for the established religion and the
forces of darkness to catch on to what was happening, and since the adage that
my enemy’s enemy is my friend held true even in those days, they joined forces
and aimed all of their considerable power at a now growing movement of people
who didn’t play by the rules of avarice they were so accustomed to, who weren’t
swayed by the promises of wealth or influence, because they’d already sold
everything they had, divided up amongst the brethren, and ate their food with
gladness and simplicity of heart.
These upstarts, these people who didn’t have coffers or
influence with the Roman overlords, these simple men and women were cutting
into their bottom line, and that was something they could not abide. They
needed an excuse to be rid of them; they needed something they could go before
the high magistrates with, and the resurrection of the dead in Christ was what
they landed on.
They were willy enough to intuit that people tend to fear
what they don’t understand, and the resurrection of the dead was one of those
things.
Acts 4:1-3, “Now as they spoke to the people, the priests,
the captain of the temple, and the Sadducees came upon them, being greatly
disturbed that they taught the people and preached in Jesus the resurrection
from the dead. And they laid hands on them and put them in custody until the
next day, for it was already evening.”
When you have the muscle and numbers on your side, it’s far
easier to manhandle the opposition than to come up with a cogent argument
against them. Having seen the character of the priests, Sadducees, and captain
of the temple throughout the gospels, one could readily conclude that their
teaching on the resurrection of the dead in Christ was the excuse they were
looking for rather than something that genuinely disconcerted and disturbed
them. These were the same people who offered Judas thirty pieces of silver to
betray Jesus, the same salt of the earth folks who pulled the strings necessary
for the people to pick Barabbas over Christ.
All the enemy ever needs to persecute the children of God is
an excuse. It doesn’t need to be a good excuse, a viable excuse, or a genuine
excuse, just a passable one for the time being.
When they began going after Christians during Communism, the
excuse was that Christians were an impediment to the general good because their
teachings confused people and caused them to become resistant to the system. It
didn’t matter that they were generous, open-handed, or big-hearted; it didn’t
matter that they kept to themselves, were non-political, and helped their
neighbors; they were competition. They were another source of hope, independent
of the system, and that just couldn’t be.
It wasn’t that the brutes who ran the Communist party back in
the day hated Jesus as a person; they didn’t know Him, and most of them could
barely spell their own names, but they understood that Jesus meant hope, and
they couldn’t have the peasant class hope in anything else except for the
motherland. Hope is a dangerous thing, especially to tyrants, especially to
those who would rule with a fist of iron and allow for zero dissent.
We’re beginning to see the hate foment against Christianity
here in the West, and it’s not because the masses suddenly decided Jesus wasn’t
alright with them. It’s because Jesus stands in the way of their utopia, and
the followers of Jesus refuse to go along with the hedonism that’s being
foisted upon the masses with such glee. History might not always repeat, but it
often rhymes, and whatever excuse will be used to persecute the church anew, be
sure that it is being poll-tested even now.
The one dramatic difference between now and then is that the
early church heeded Christ’s warnings and was prepared to endure persecution;
the modern-day church seems to ignore His warnings altogether and only sees
calm seas and soft winds for as far as the eye can see. Even if some are seeing
troubled seas ahead, they soothe their worried conscience with the ever-present
mantra that though the storm may be coming, they won’t be here to go through
it.
I am already aware that this series of teachings will not be
popular. I know that it will not garner me new friends, and I will likely lose
some friends along the way, but I’m the one that will one day have to stand
before my Maker, and I would gladly lose every friend to the last than stand
before Him with blood on my hands.
I can only tell you what I see coming, how to prepare for
what is coming, and not of my own machinations, but using the prototype of the
early church, those men and women who stood even when it meant their lives.
Of all the people one could have a conversation with when
they get to heaven, many choose Abraham, Paul, Joseph, or David, but few choose
someone like Stephen, widely known as the first martyr of the early church, a
man who was not known for being a king, someone who wrote a quarter of the New
Testament, or a man of means, but one of seven appointed by the Apostles to
care for elderly, the widows, and the orphans.
Greatness in God’s eyes is different than greatness in men’s
eyes. May we aspire to be great in His eyes and indifferent to the opinions of
men.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
5 comments:
Ps 25:2-3
"O my God, I trust in thee; let me not be ashamed, let not mine enemies triumph over me.
Yea let none that wait on thee be ashamed: let them be ashamed which transgress without cause."
I would like to come hear you preach. Please let us know if that becomes possible. Blessings
Amen brother Mike.
That would be amazing. I would be there as well if the Lord allowed it. God willing maybe one day.
Amen
Post a Comment