I like
Peter, a lot. Through the power of Jesus this man is healed, and he begins to
make a scene. Everybody starts looking at them and rejoicing in what happened
and a crowd begins to form. My personality would have been to stand in the
background and let this guy go around and tell everyone what God had done. As
people would have come to me and praised me for what I did, I definitely would
have given the glory to God but also backed off a little bit. I would attribute
it to humility, but I think the better description of that is a lack of
boldness. A crowd was gathering, an audience was captured, and rather than
reveling in the incredible miracle that God had performed Peter took the
opportunity to let God speak even more. He didn’t back down or take the foot
off the gas pedal, he pushed even harder. Peter stood up and reminded them, he
didn’t tell them something they didn’t already know, he reminded them of what
happened to Christ and what their role in that process was. Peter seized the
moment to preach the gospel, and he made no apologies for it. Verse 15 contains
fighting words and Peter let them have it. Am I willing to stand up and
proclaim the gospel of Christ the way Peter did? Am I willing to risk saying
some things I shouldn’t (Peter was accused of this a time or two) in an effort
to say the things I should? You can’t get into as much trouble if you keep your
mouth shut, but God didn’t put me on this Earth to keep my mouth shut.
This concept
reminds me of a verse from James chapter 4 that flipped my whole perspective on
how I should be living my life. Several years ago I was reading through James
chapter 4 and came to verse 17, and it stopped me dead in my tracks. “So it is a sin for the person who knows to
do what is good and doesn’t do it.” All my life I had grown up hearing
about the sins that were listed in the Bible and I tried to avoid them, well
most of the time. The Bible, my relationship with God, was pretty black and
white. You live by the book, don’t do the things the Bible tells you not to do,
and you will be good with God. And, for the most part, I was all right with
that. I could keep track and watch my step and do pretty well not murdering or
stealing or things like that, so I felt pretty good. Then, I come to this
passage, which I had read and blown by many times before, and everything
changes. Now, not only do I have to worry about not doing the things that the Bible told me not to do; now I’ve got to start paying attention to the good things
I know I should do and do those as
well. How in the world could I possibly check things off that list when the
list doesn’t even exist? That moment is when I first really began to come to
grips with the fact that my faith and my relationship with God and my
righteousness before God could not be dependent on me. If it was up to me, I’d
fail, I’d fall short, every time. That’s when I began to understand that I
needed something, someone, much greater than myself to not only stop doing the
sins listed out that I shouldn’t be doing but also to identify and carry out in
doing the good that I knew I needed to do. That is a moment I can now look back
to and identify as the start of my journey of figuring out what it means to
walk with and live by the Holy Spirit of God. Knowing that I don’t have to be
dependent on me is incredibly freeing. Knowing that the Spirit helps me, guides
me, intercedes for me, gives me power, gives me words to speak, gives me energy
when I don’t have it, and most of all binds me with Christ, is incredibly
freeing, satisfying, and overwhelming.
The final
thought I feel like God wants me to pull out of chapter 3 is from the last
verse. God sent Jesus to bless us by turning us from our evil ways. He blesses
us. So often in our world becoming a follower of Christ is synonymous with
giving up all the fun things you like to do. It’s almost as if God wants us to
be miserable so if we want to be on His side we have to give up everything that
makes us happy and live a boring life, following all the rules, until the day
we die. That doesn’t sound like blessing to me, that sounds like torture. Jesus
came to give us a blessing, and that blessing is at least two-fold. First of
all, evil behavior leads to evil consequences which leads to a tough life with
a lot of suffering, and not the kind of suffering Jesus praises people for in
the Bible. Jesus wants to free us from the desires and consequences of sin, and
that is an incredible blessing. Looking back at my life from this vantage
point, I definitely went through a time where I viewed “living the Christian
life” as a burden and even as torture, but now I can see the benefit and the
blessing it has been to allow Christ to turn me from my evil ways. Secondly,
Jesus blesses us in a way we can’t and won’t understand until we take our last
breath. By turning us from our evil ways, aka becoming a follower of Jesus, He
blesses us by taking our sins and nailing them to the cross, allowing God’s
wrath, of which we are fully deserving, to be absorbed by His perfection,
making up for our gross imperfection. He blesses us by ushering us into His
Kingdom forever, to be in the presence of God forever. That blessing is far
greater than any cost that might be associated with it. Even if you approach
the idea of following Jesus on this Earth as a burden or as torture (which its
not), that burden is well worth the eternity of blessing you will receive.
Jesus is a blessing, let us not ever forget that.
Peter takes
every opportunity to have eternal conversations with people, just like Jesus
did in the gospels. There was no small talk, no talking about the weather or
the local sports team or anything like that, they didn’t mess around, but I do.
Why?
Why do I hesitate to talk about Heaven, to talk about Jesus, to talk about redemption from sin? Why do I wait and see if the perfect opportunity arises to mention God rather than guiding and directing every conversation that way?
Lord you are a blessing to me and to the millions of others that follow you. You are a blessing-in-waiting to the millions that haven’t yet chosen to follow you. May more and more people accept that blessing, and may more and more people appreciate that blessing. Lord if I appreciated the blessing you are and have been more than I do right now, I would more readily have eternal conversations with those around me like Peter did, like Jesus did. If I truly want to utilize the Holy Spirit like I say I do, I need to submit when He tells me to speak, to push when He tells me to push, and to step on that gas pedal when He tells me to step. Lord help me in that because I’m a chicken sometimes, a lot of times.
Ryan, I love the eloquence of your words..I saw myself in many of your insights. The one that made me chuckle is the James 4:17 "Therefore, to one who knows the right thing to do and does not do it, to him it is sin". I can't walk down an aisle of a store or walk by a person I see needs assistance without that verse being whispered to me. This chapter also showed me the depravity of the "strength" of my faith and only by God's grace did He allow me to see it. I am so enjoying your words..they are words of wisdom filled to overflowing with love and that comes out so loud and clear. Thank you for the memories you brought back to me in this reading; another reason for being thankful today.
ReplyDeleteI appreciated the reminder to read Scriptures carefully, attending to each word and phrase. It struck me that Peter and John were going to the temple...to pray. Makes me think that while we're pursuing God in our daily walk, He gives us the incredible privilege of witnessing His power in transforming the lives He touches! WOW! Also the necessity of repentance jumps out in both Chapters 2 & 3. Leads to soul searching of personal repentance and the realization that I also need to speak more on the importance of pursuing clean hearts with God!
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