Friday, August 18, 2023

Bullet Points II

 Although, for the most part, the clouds without water are a danger only to themselves, they tend to try and influence other clouds without water once the winds shift and they are carried about.

They’re the ones that always start a conversation with, ‘Did you hear about what’s happening in such and such a place? Did you hear about the new move, the new outpouring, the new thing God is doing, having replaced the old thing that worked perfectly well for two thousand years?’

That’s the thing about the new thing; it’s never better than the old thing. It’s never as Scriptural as the old thing, and it doesn’t have the staying power of the old thing. Why would I want the new thing again? Just because it’s new? So was Myspace once upon a time. Just because something is new, it doesn’t make it better. It just makes it new.

Granted, most people today have the maturity level of a teething toddler, so shiny new things are akin to catnip, but the argument is valid, and it stands the test of objective logic.

A lot of new things have come and gone while the old thing has remained. The one difference between the old thing and the new things is that the old thing is anchored in the truth. It is anchored in the Word and remains steadfast throughout the shifting winds, the roiling seas, and the battering storms.

The late autumn trees without fruit are more nefarious than the clouds without water because they pretend to be something they are not. They’re hoping no one notices they haven’t produced any fruit, that they’ll get a pass due to their leafy branches or flowery words, but alas, no fruit means no fruit, or worse still, bad fruit means bad fruit.

You can mask the taste of bad fruit only for so long. No matter how often you insist it’s a strawberry, a lemon is still a lemon. A lie is still a lie, no matter how often they insist it’s the truth.

The tragedy is that many who don’t know any better look at the late autumn trees without fruit and attempt to mimic them, thinking that’s what a fruitful tree should look like. It’s a self-perpetuating cycle, wherein one fruitless tree convinces another that being fruitless is the natural way of things, and so they go about their existence contentedly and without the desire to be fruitful.

The raging waves of the sea foaming up their own shame are the immoral among God’s people who have no desire to shed their immorality but attempt to convince everyone else that their fallen state is acceptable unto God.

You may be able to fool some of the people some of the time, but you can’t fool God any of the time. God knows what He said, how He said it, and when He said it, and for anyone to insist otherwise is foolishness itself. God isn’t some aging politician that barely remembers his own name. He’s not suffering from dementia, Alzheimer’s, short-term memory loss, long-term memory loss, or any other malady.

The sad reality is that the raging waves Jude speaks of, who foam up their own shame, love their sin more than they love God and, because of this, will not repent of it. They would rather pretend at loving God and indulging in their sin than break ties with their sin so that they might truly know the love of God.

For the most part, these are very angry people because of their unending inner struggles. They know they should leave sin behind. They know they should deny themselves and pick up their crosses, but their flesh will not allow it, for to allow such a thing would be to lose control, and that’s something the flesh is very keen on not doing.

The last thing the flesh wants is for you to know life, to know freedom, to know light, and joy and peace and fulfillment outside of its purview. This is why Jesus must set us free, for whom the Son sets free is free indeed, and once He steps into the frame, the flesh can no longer exert control.

One cry for help, one hand raised out of the muck and mire is all it takes, and He will pull you to shore, clean you up, make you new, make you whole, give you purpose and meaning and hope beyond this life into the next for all eternity.

Last on the list are the wandering stars, for whom the blackness of darkness is reserved forever. The danger of the wandering stars is that most expect them to be in fixed positions, in perpetuity. During the time Jude penned his letter, men throughout used the stars to navigate and make their way through the world, whether by land or sea. If the stars by which you set your course wander to and fro, if you are perpetually uncertain of your path, then you can never be surefooted or confident about where you’re headed.

It is because these wandering stars provoke uncertainty that leads to doubt that their judgment is so final and absolute. There’s no nice way of interpreting having the blackness of darkness reserved for you forever; there just isn’t.

As John Newton once wrote, through many dangers, toils, and snares, I have already come; ‘Tis grace that brought me safe thus far, and grace will lead me home.

Jude wrote of the dangers not to scare or terrify us but to make us aware of their existence and compel us to be watchful. We know that He will lead us home. All we need to do is humbly follow after Him.

With love in Christ,

Michael Boldea, Jr.  

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