Wednesday, May 8, 2024

Preparing For Persecution XXIX

 With the advent of the participation trophy, we’ve been taught to believe that half-measures are perfectly reasonable and acceptable. You don’t really have to try; you just have to show up, and someone will hand you a prize for something you never did and make you feel accomplished when, in truth, you accomplished nothing. We need to spare feelings because feelings have become the new currency. If you’ve got a winning smile and learn how to praise people who’ve done nothing praiseworthy, stroke their egos just so, and feed them spiritual scraps, leavings, and cast-offs, you’ll be living in high cotton with not a care in the world.

Whatever you do, however much your conscience hammers away at you, however often that doom-fraught sense that you are leading people into Sheol overwhelms you, if you want to retain the lifestyle to which you’ve become accustomed, you must resist the urge to preach the truth or rightly divide the Word. That way lies poverty and the vitriol of the godless. That way lies invitations to gladhand with Oprah, sip champagne on some rapper’s yacht, or attend a nonbinary wedding between two famous men drying up.

Clout chasing and the gospel are like oil and water. They don’t mix, never have, never will, and if you want to be well-received by the world, you must compromise the Word of God. Turning your face toward one necessitates turning your back on the other. You can have either the world or Jesus. You can’t have both. You must choose one.

Rather than being humbled by Stephen’s faithfulness unto death, as is the correct response, most Christians today tend to roll their eyes and find reasons why they think it was wrong for him to antagonize the ruling class and that, perhaps, he had it coming since he wasn’t willing to compromise, meet in the middle, give a little to get a little, and so on.

We have stripped the modern-day gospel of the Gospel, then wonder why there is so much confusion, division, and acrimony. Everyone’s a theologian, and they’ll make sure you know it given half the chance. Whenever anyone dares to point out that their theology isn’t Biblical, they’ll call you unenlightened and resistant to the spirit. If it’s unbiblical, it’s wrong. Yes, I am resistant to that spirit, as everyone who seeks the truth ought to be because great monsters have been birthed from within the household of faith who went on to persecute the saints because they placed their dogma above the Word of God and deemed it to be the final arbiter.

When someone’s counterargument to Biblical truth is to stone you to death or call for your demise, they have no counterargument and are lashing out in rage and vitriol. It’s to be expected. It’s something we were told to prepare for throughout the New Testament, but we’d rather listen to fairy tales about pet dinosaurs in heaven. Giving our last full measure, enduring to the end, and suffering for the sake of righteousness have become so anathema in the modern-day church that if anyone dares to mention it, they are looked upon as strange and out of touch.

It’s eye-opening to see how some churchgoers react to reading a Bible passage from the pulpit, as though they were hearing it for the first time or had never encountered something so controversial before.

Revelation 2:8-11, “And to the angel of the church of Smyrna write, ‘These things say the First and the Last, who was dead, and came to life: “I know your works, tribulation, and poverty (but you are rich); and I know the blasphemy of those who say they are Jews and are not, but are a synagogue of Satan. Do not fear any of those things which you are about to suffer. Indeed, the devil is about to throw some of you into prison, that you may be tested, and you will have tribulation ten days. Be faithful until death, and I will give you the crown of life. He who has an ear let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. He who overcomes shall not be hurt by the second death.’”

Yes, I’ve heard the snarky theories of pampered boys in grown men’s bodies wearing horn-rimmed glasses and skinny jeans about how you don’t beat up your bride on her wedding night, and so because our ways must necessarily be His ways and our thoughts His thoughts, that childish anecdote should be enough for us to dismiss the words Jesus spoke through John the revelator.

We’re faithful; just take our word for it. We are committed and steadfast, resolute, and purposed to follow You to the end, but please don’t call our bluff.

In case anyone missed it, the First and the Last, the one who was dead and came to life, is none other than Jesus. It is He who gives the message to the church of Smyrna, encouraging them, but not in the way one might define encouragement where hurt feelings are compared to the worst of tortures and disagreement of any kind to the pains of death itself.

Jesus didn’t say he knew their tribulation and poverty but that soon they would prosper beyond their wildest dreams. Nor did Jesus say that they would be spared suffering, but rather that they should not fear the things they were about to suffer.

The image of a magic genie Jesus who’s there to serve at your pleasure and pamper you however you see fit, giving you everything, requiring nothing, and denying you nothing is a fabrication of the modern-day church, dare I say the Western church. It’s the only image that would have the mass market appeal they needed to push out enough product to keep them in the lifestyle after which they lusted and to which they’ve become accustomed.

It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that between a book on holiness unto the Lord and one on unlocking the keys to endless prosperity, the one about getting stuff will outsell the one on being holy a thousand to one. It’s market dynamics dictating what the shepherds feed the sheep, and if the demand is there for sin-affirming doctrine, the supply will manifest.

It’s not as though the church of Smyrna had not endured persecution up to that point. Jesus knew of their persecution and was preparing them for more persecution still. They had not shied away from it, but the foreknowledge of what was to come served as an encouragement to them to persevere and be faithful to the end. It’s not what we want to hear, though. Lord, don’t tell us that we’ll be persecuted; tell us that we’ll be spared persecution. In that case, we’re asking for Jesus to lie to us, and if He does as we will, then when persecution comes, we’ll shake our fists at the sky and call Him a liar.

If the Word of God tells us to prepare for persecution, and if Jesus insists that being hated by the world is a certainty and not a possibility, then it doesn’t matter how many degrees those speaking to the contrary might possess; they’re still wrong. One is a declaration by the omniscient Creator of all that is; the other is the opinions of men who see the world through the prism of having never had their faith tested nor ever having endured hardship for the sake of Christ.

With love in Christ,

Michael Boldea, Jr.  

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