Monday, May 27, 2019

654 - What Jesus Did


Spirituality Column #654
May 28, 2019
Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

What Jesus Did
By Bob Walters

“You will grieve, but your grief will turn to joy.” – Jesus to the disciples, John 16:20

Most of the trick of being a joyful Christian is in trusting, rather than second-guessing, God’s righteousness.

Don’t we love to tell God who He ought to be, what He ought to do, whom He ought to help or harm, and when He ought to do it … usually, “Right now”?  In church we make a big deal about “forgiveness,” but live-fire prayer out in the fallen world often amounts to, “God, fix this now!  We’ll discuss sin later.”

In these modern times we have the benefit of knowing the “whole story,” at least, as much of it as God lets on in the Bible.  We have two millennia of the truth of Christ being told, retold, studied, preached, and put into action.  But the majority of the world still doesn’t “get” the Word, whether they’ve heard it or not.

Here in America, God’s Word is actively, aggressively, and angrily being pushed out of government, civil society, and civil discourse daily.  Can you imagine how surprised certain people will be when they discover that the unique and trusting “civility” our republic traditionally enjoys is a function of Christian truth and righteousness, not social science and “woke” social fashion?  It’s not like we haven’t been instructed.  No wonder Godly joy is so rare.

But I digress.  Over the last 300-or-so years intellectuals – first with the Enlightenment and then with Darwinism and then with Technology – have given truth a proudly-human secular makeover while generally scoffing at God’s righteousness.  Churches often counter the empirical world’s cock-sureness by preaching sin and forgiveness, controlling their flocks with the behavioral levers of guilt, shame, and fear.

I prefer – and much recommend – the love, grace, and freedom-in-Christ model in which the joy of knowing Jesus changes our hearts.  We desire relationship with God and trust His – not our – righteousness infinitely and eternally.  Joy feeds on joy.

As we read Jesus’s words to the disciples in John 16 (above) the night before His crucifixion, He told them of hatred, grief, suffering, persecution, and disenfranchisement they would surely endure, but that their “joy will be made complete.”  That could not possibly have made any sense to them, just like it doesn’t make sense to much of the world today.  God plays the endgame, and we all should know better than to doubt.

The difference, of course, is that the disciples already knew and trusted Yahweh, the righteous God of the Hebrews.  Today much of the world thinks they/we are God.

Slowly, the disciples caught on to Who this divine Jesus was.  The gifts of God promised through Christ were His own resurrection, their salvation, the comfort and peace of the Holy Spirit, eternal life in heaven, their restoration and rebirth in God’s glory, forgiveness and justification before God, and being called heirs in the Kingdom of God.  They hadn’t seen it, couldn’t fathom it, and even Jesus couldn’t explain it.  All He could say was – and it was a promise – “Your grief will turn to joy.”

Joy resides not in second-guessing God or even in knowledge of the Bible, but in trusting God’s righteousness.  Live in that trust and you’ll find that your joy is complete.

To paraphrase the old WWJD wristbands, that is what Jesus did.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) figures “happy” is a symptom but “joy” is a condition.


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