When did we relegate God to the cheerleader position in our lives? Was it when we realized that Him being Lord of all meant we needed to crucify the flesh? Was it when what He required of His own interfered with what the flesh wanted? Or was it when we realized that His being on the throne meant we couldn’t be?
It’s a good question to ponder since that’s the duty many
modern-day Christians have assigned to Him. When you think about it, the
cheerleader’s role is irrelevant save for the fact that once in a while, they
scream, ‘you can do it!’ but as far as having the ability to affect the
outcome, there is none.
A cheerleader’s function is to cheer. Whether you’re doing
horribly or marginally well, their sole purpose is to infuse you with a sense
of exuberance, regardless of whether or not you have the requisite skill to
defeat your opponent. Once you’re on the ground choking on your own teeth and
wondering where you are, the cheerleader stops cheering, her purpose having
reached its rightful end. The cheerleader did the job; the cheerleader cheered.
What good did it do you in the heat of battle? None!
It should be evident that when we relegate God to the cheerleader
role in our lives, we are diminishing Him, cheapening who He is, and
underplaying what He can do. It’s like having the best coach in the history of
coaching in your corner, and you confine him to janitorial duty, maybe clearing
some messes you made when it gets too messy for you to contend with. You know
what I’m talking about. There’s always one or two every other morning that
insists they need a miracle because they managed to annihilate their lives so
thoroughly by the choices they’ve made that only God could fix it.
Cheer me on even when I’m doing wrong, and when the wrong I’m
doing gets to the point that it’s choking out everything in my life, lend a
hand, and pull me out.
As I thought more about this, I realized that when you
relegate God to the position of cheerleader, you also cut off His ability to
command you, tell you what you must do, and give you instructions as to how you
should proceed. He is no longer God at that point, at least not over your life,
and you can do as you please. At that point, your only expectation is that He
stands on the sideline and jumps up and down, giddy at the prospect of you
finishing what you started even if you come in dead last.
I know; your god doesn’t judge. Coincidentally neither does
the devil. Don’t get it twisted. He’ll shame you to the ends of the earth, and
you’ll never go anywhere in public again without strangers whispering your
name, shaking their heads, and pointing at you, but he doesn’t judge.
All those people clamoring to sell you an impotent god who’s
good at nothing more than cheering you on excitedly as you first flirt with
darkness and eventually get swallowed whole by it aren’t doing you any favors.
They’re selling you a Yugo, knowing it’s Yugo, but trying to pass it off as a
Ferrari, hoping your offering check clears before you tell the difference. The
thing you thought would be the answer turned out to be cancer, and it’s eating
away methodically until nothing but some skin and bones remain.
You did this one thing, and your god remained silent, then
this other, and still more silence, then again, and again, and the silence
stretched into the abyss you descended into.
Psalm 50:15, “Call upon me in your day of trouble; I will
deliver you, and you shall glorify Me.”
The God of the Bible is not a cheerleader. He is a present
help in times of trouble. Call on Him, and He will deliver you, but for you to
call on Him, you must first know Him. Not as contemporary Christianity has made
Him out to be, but as He is, as He self-identifies in the Book, as He is known
from generation to generation, from the beginning of all things to the end.
If you know Him, the real Him, when you call upon Him in your
day of trouble, He will deliver you. He doesn’t say He’ll try or do His best;
it is a certainty as immutable as the sun in the sky. He will deliver you, and
you will glorify Him, but He can only be glorified in spirit and truth from a
pure heart and a contrite spirit.
He is glorified and will be forevermore not for what men hope
He’ll do for them but for what He has already done and what He has promised to
do.
God doesn’t deal in half-measures. Anyone who insists He does is lying to your face. Any day now, the fence sitters will run out of fence, and they will have to choose between serving their flesh or the One True God.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
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