05

Jump Start # 2237

Jump Start # 2237

Proverbs 11:29 “He who troubles his own house will inherit wind, and the foolish will be servant to the wisehearted.”

Sometimes in Scriptures, as in life, we run across things that’s hard to understand. It’s not the words that are hard to grasp, but the concepts and why people do what they do. Our verse today is one example of this.

 

It begins with the idea of one who troubles his own house. I read that and wonder why? Why would someone trouble his own house? Maybe it’s easier to understand if someone who would trouble a neighbor’s house, or better still, someone who trouble’s an enemies house. Now, that makes more sense. Why would anyone mess with their own family? Why would they upset and hurt those in their own family?

 

That doesn’t make sense to sensible people. But we don’t need the Scriptures to show us this. We see this on the nightly news. Domestic violence—takes place among one’s family. It’s domestic. It also doesn’t make sense.

 

In describing the Gentiles in Romans one, Paul characterized them as being “unloving.” Some turn on their own families and are against their own families. Throughout the Bible we find multiple examples of troubling one’s own household.

 

  • The list begins early with Cain and Able
  • Joseph’s family are textbook examples of troubling your own household
  • David’s sons well illustrate the point of troubling their own household
  • Throughout the period of the kings, jealous rulers killed their own family members to eliminate possible threats to the throne
  • The prodigal son caused a lot of heartache and trouble at home

 

Why would someone trouble their own household? Here’s a few thoughts:

 

First, they don’t love their family. That must be the baseline. If you truly love your family you will defend, support, sacrifice and do all you can for them. Love runs deep in healthy families. When it’s missing, trouble comes. Jealousy, favoritism, hatred will drive wedges within the family and keep people apart. Words are said. Feelings are hurt. People are tired of being bossed around. The family splinters. Too often, they come together at a funeral, often of a parent. But even at the funeral, it’s tense. Little jabs are exchanged. And, as soon as the parent is buried there is a mad dash to get to the house to take whatever is valuable.

 

Second, they cannot forgive. Families represent relationships. We can bump and bruise each other. We can say things that we shouldn’t. Some will never let those hurts heal. They will never forgive. And, as long as they keep picking those scabs, trouble remains in the household. Forgiveness is a quality that takes Christ to show us how to do it properly. We can forgive, because we have been forgiven. But sometimes, we expect and even demand perfection from family members. We will give others a pass now and then, and we will especially give ourselves some slack, but when it comes to family, no way, no how. When there is no grace and forgiveness, trouble follows.

 

Third, some take advantage of family situations, knowing that they can get away with things in the family that they couldn’t anywhere else. Borrowing money but never repaying it back, breaking promises, taking things that do not belong to them, pushing the limits of what is acceptable—these all strain and trouble families. Some just feel that it is owed to them. Some feel as if the trouble that they have caused is justified and even right. In extreme situations, some realize that their own family is not likely to call the police on them. The number one source for addicts to find money to supply their habits is by stealing from family members. Identity theft is highest among family members. Where many addicts find prescription drugs to abuse is right there at home, among family members. Trouble at home.

 

Having run through this list, it makes sense why “home for the holidays” is not such a warm and welcoming thought for some. Being around family is trouble. Tension, suspicion, and ill feelings fill the air. The outlook doesn’t look good because those causing trouble do not want to stop. They continue to abuse, neglect and destroy the family that tries to love them. When the parents are Christians, and the grown children are causing trouble in the home, it makes things very difficult. Sometimes those godly parents must draw the line and declare that certain ones are no longer welcome in their home. It breaks their hearts to do that. It ages them and pushes them to an early grave, but it’s the last and only thing that these godly people can do. The troublers don’t care. They don’t realize the tears and prayers that have been offered for years for the ones who are indifferent to everything and everyone except themselves.

 

Our passage continues. It says those who trouble his own house will inherit the wind. Inheriting the wind is not a welcome thought. It’s not a blessing from above. It’s not a calm breeze that brings relief. It’s the whirlwind of punishment. It’s a house coming apart and coming down. It’s God’s wrath being flexed upon those who cause trouble. Inheriting the wind means doom for those who cause trouble. It’s not going to end well for those who hurt their own family.

 

What a blessing family can be. When love, grace and trust flow through hearts, there is nothing like it. The little ones and the big ones enjoy each others company. It’s more than family, it’s friendship. That’s how God intended things to be. Be careful with your tongue and think before you speak. Be patient with each other. Let love abound. Don’t be so critical and judgmental. Guide with love. Leave the preaching to Sunday. Have conversations that are helpful and constructive. Listen. Be kind. Practice the golden rule. These simple principles are understood when we talk about dealing with the world. Sometimes, when we get home we forget these things. We can be kinder to a stranger at a store than we can be to our own family.

 

The opposite of troubling your own household, is helping your household. That’s what we need to do. We need to be helping and not hurting.

 

Roger

 

04

Jump Start # 2236

Jump Start # 2236

Romans 15:2 “Let each of us please his neighbor for his good, to his edification.”

Putting the other guy first, seems more than just a nice thing that our moms would tell us, it has a Biblical ring to it. Earlier in Romans Paul said, “give preference to one another in honor.” In Philippians, “Do nothing from selfishness or empty conceit, but with humility of mind let each of you regard one another as more important than himself.”

Years ago, I heard a comedian outline this journey society has taken to be so absorbed with self. It was illustrated through the titles of magazines. First, there was LIFE magazine. Life includes all living things. Then there was PEOPLE magazine. That focus was not on all life, but just people. Then there was a magazine called US. Us is just us, not everybody. Then there was SELF magazine. It’s about self. I heard that there was a short lived magazine that was called, ME. From Life to Me—that’s the path that culture has taken.

And, this obsession with self, has gotten to a point that Christmas songs and holiday classics, such as Rudolph, are being shelved because someone felt that they were offensive. The pressure to please everyone will lead to the elimination of much of our language. Just think about something simple such as vanilla ice cream. The very word “vanilla” offends some. Then call it “white” ice cream, because that’s the color of it. Can’t do that, because that will offend some. Then call it “Plain” because it has nothing else in it. But the word “plain” will offend some. What are we left to call it?

I grew up as a red headed, glasses wearing boy. Yeah I got teased and called all kinds of names, but that didn’t lead me to shooting up schools, taking drugs and dropping out of life. Was it offensive? It’s what kids did. Was it nice? Probably not. Did it make me want to switch schools or run-a-way? No. That wasn’t going to happen. You might disagree, but I feel like I turned out to be fairly normal.

This self-centered thinking, you have to change because I don’t like what you are doing, misses the direction of these opening verses. God wants us to be thinking of others and not ourselves. The first step in discipleship is to “deny yourself.” The world doesn’t follow Christ, and selfishness and the worship of self is where a life without Christ leads to. Hurt feelings forces others to have to walk on egg shells, so fearful of offending others that nothing gets accomplished.

This eventually will trickle into the church. All things in life seem to do that, after a while. There will be some who want to rip out songs from the song books because they find a line that seems offensive to them. There will be topics that preachers will be scolded for preaching, because some will feel offended by that. There will be some who carry a red card, like in soccer, in their pocket and they will pull it out at every opportunity to let the eldership and the church know that they have been offended. And, if enough were to get their way, they’d certainly try to change the message because it will offend them.

Here are some things from all of this:

First, we must teach discipleship, and not baptism and getting into the church. Discipleship means putting Christ first and denying yourself. That will be hard for some. It will be a major change for some. In a selfie world that loves itself, putting others and especially Christ, before yourself is something radically different and new. It means not always having my way. It means being a team player. It means learning to subject myself to others. It means not pouting because I did not get my way. All of this leads to the principle and concept of crucifying yourself. When Paul said in Galatians, “It is no longer I who live…” what did that mean? The word “I” no longer existed for Paul. He no longer would say, “I want to do this?” Nor, “I want to have things this way.” I, no longer existed. It became Christ and it became we. Until we get this principle taught and understood, folks will continually drop out and run to churches that love to worship self. They will laugh. They will have a good time. They will dance, sing and bow down to the image of self. Deny yourself and crucify yourself are foundational elements of our faith.

Second, being pricked in the heart or cut to the quick, as stated in Acts, stings and hurts. Getting your toes stepped on hurts. If the message of God doesn’t afflict me, then I will never change. There will be sermons, classes and even songs, that remind me that I need to change. I need to step it up for the Lord. I need to do what is right. The words that young Timothy was to follow in his preaching was to reprove, rebuke and exhort. Boy, that wouldn’t fly in many circles today. That offends. Yep, it sure does. That makes me sad. Well, do right and you won’t be sad. That makes me look bad. Well, you are. Get to Christ, and you’ll be holy. Great attempts are being made by the community that has just enough knowledge to be dangerous, to change the gospel message. Bold statements such as, “Jesus never condemned homosexuality,” shows ignorance of Scriptures, inspiration and an understanding of holiness and righteousness. Because things are legal doesn’t mean that they are right and it especially doesn’t mean that they are Biblically true. God’s message hurts. If we were doing everything right, there wouldn’t be a need for the Gospel message. The message isn’t about social injustice, but about sinful people becoming righteous through Jesus Christ.

Third, we must be kind but there comes a time when lines must be drawn. Someone says, “that offends me.” Don’t immediately think, we have to change everything to make that person happy and to keep them around. Selfish people don’t stay around. They float from this fad to that fad, always looking for what self wants. That offends me, someone says. Sorry, but that’s just the way it is. Maybe you need to look at why you are offended. Maybe, just maybe, rather than forcing others to change to please you, you need to change yourself. Maybe you are just a bit sensitive. Maybe you have an agenda. Maybe you just need to take a chill pill. Maybe you just need to breath. Maybe, just maybe, it’s time to stop thinking so much about yourself and learn to be a team player in life.

I read the headlines of a report that said Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer was homophobic. What? I didn’t read anymore. This obviously comes from someone who feels like they are on the island of misfits toys. The toys malfunctioned. Implying that they were gay and excluded from society is reading way too much into the story. People like to do that. I had a sixth grade teacher like that. She missed the hippie movement and I believe was waiting for it to start up again. We listened to the song, “Bridge over trouble waters,” a zillion times. I hate that song today. We were to write an essay about it. I wrote about a thunderstorm and rapid waters flowing underneath a bridge. She didn’t like my essay. I didn’t explore the writers intentions and feelings. A person can read too much into all kinds of things. I read a story where the author claimed that Abraham Lincoln was gay because he slept in the same bed with another man. He failed to tell his readers that was common back then because most folks were poor and not everyone had their own beds. Many grew up having to sleep with a brother or sister in the same bed. That was a common practice. When you add the element of traveling and stopping at an inn and it’s all filled for the night except for one bed and two people, you share a bed. The author never mentioned those things. He read into the story just what he wanted to. Selfish people will do that. They will paint things just to look the way that they want them to look. They are not interested in truth, but in self. Unless the writer tells you, you don’t know what his feelings are. The Beatles faced this with their critics. Every line of every song was studied and all kinds of ideas were assumed. Some were making wild conclusions. They produced the song, “I am the Walrus.” It was a song that was ridiculous. It meant nothing. That was their point.

Christians are not selfish. Put others first. Care about others. Serve others. Crucify self. Stop using the word “I” so much. Be like Christ.

It’s tough out there, but God expects us to be His people!

Roger

03

Jump Start # 2235

Jump Start # 2235

Job 42:5 “My ears had heard of you but now my eyes have seen you.”

Monday with Job. We continue this Monday morning series based upon the book of Job. Our verse today comes from the final chapter. God has asked Job a series of questions about nature. Job has been unable to answer them. Twice as this chapter begins, Job quotes God and instead of answering God, he apologizes. He says that he has spoken things that he did not understand. What follows is Job retracting his words and repenting. The suffering and this journey has allowed him to see God in a way that he never has before. It also allowed Job to see himself in ways he never has before. His suffering not only changed him on the outside, but it changed him on the inside.

 

And, here in the final chapter, God still never explains why He allowed Job to suffer. He never mentions Satan, faith or apologizes for putting Job through all this pain. Job may have never understood what you and I know about his story.

 

One sad take away from this final chapter is the conclusions that some seem to reach that are not supported by the text and are not characteristic of Job. Popular writers, such as Philip Yancey, has used the Job events to declare that we can say anything to God when we are hurting. Throw your anger, your grief, your disappointment, your bitterness at Him. He can take it, we are told. Such false conclusions would allow a person to blame God. It would allow someone to scream at God. It would allow someone to even cuss at God. You feel this way, these authors tell us, you might as well express it to God.

 

And with such conclusions, it seems that they missed the point of this book. It’s not about Job’s suffering, but rather, Job’s faith. Satan was proven wrong. Job never cursed God to His face.

 

Consider these thoughts:

 

  • Right after the deaths of Aaron’s sons for offering a strange fire to God in worship, the Lord said, “By those who come near Me I will be treated as holy and before all the people I will be honored” (Lev 10:3). The next verse states that Aaron held his peace. He kept his mouth shut. He didn’t explode on God. His two sons just died a sudden, tragic death as a form of punishment. How easily Aaron could have declared, “that’s not fair.” Or, “You didn’t give them a chance.” Aaron held his peace. God will be treated as holy.

 

  • Jesus showed the disciples how to pray by the example, “Our Father, who art in Heaven. Hallowed be Thy name” (Mt 6:9). Hallowed means “holy.” Not only is God’s name holy, but God Himself is holy. He’s not one of us. He’s not on par with us. I may say something to you that I cannot and will not say to God. We might critique, criticize, complain and even offer suggestions on how to do things better. However, we should never, and must never, do that to God. The Lord is the Almighty. His position, His holiness, His eternal nature, His authority demands that we not only respect Him and reverence Him, but that we treat Him differently than we do each other. Among us, we are peers and equals. We are never that way with the Lord.

 

  • All the questions that God asked Job was to get him to see that he was not God and that he didn’t understand the ways of God. Why did God ask all those questions if Job was able to chew God out and say anything to Him? The very fact of these questions was to get Job to see God and to see himself as they should be.

 

  • We can forget that God never answered any of Job’s questions or complaints. He ignored them. God took the issue to a different level. Who are you Job to question God? That applies to us. Who are we to question God? When tragedy happens, and in sorrow someone shouts out, “Why God?” they are not thinking out what they are doing. God does not owe us an explanation. He doesn’t have to run His plans by us first to get our approval. God doesn’t work for us. That’s all backwards.

 

This thinking trickles down to moderns changing worship to please and satisfy an entertainment driven crowd that is thirsty for happiness rather than righteousness. How dare anyone change what God has established? How can anyone change what the Bible says? How can anyone change the organization, the pattern of worship or even the plan of salvation? What right do we have to do these things? The answer to all of these things begins with the idea that I can say anything to God and He will have to listen and answer me. We start thinking that we can improve upon what God has established and we can alter and make changes here and there and there will be no divine consequences to that, off we go.

 

The book of Job reminds us that God is God. There are things that you and I will never understand. There are things that happens and we don’t know if it’s a test, a trial, Satan, bad luck, or misfortune. We want to know the cause of all things, and we can’t. We want to put a label on all things and we can’t. We want to put everything in a nice category but we can’t. There will be days that we sit like Job and we just don’t know. Rather than trying to look backwards and trace the origin of our problems, God is more concerned about what the problems do to us. Will that simple problem crush your faith? Will you look beyond it to see Heaven’s perspective of things? Will you grow stronger because of these things? You and I ask, “Why, why, why?” And, God is looking to see if we are going to still worship Him, follow Him and trust Him.

 

The book of Job ends well for Job. It is as if God has returned the hedges around Job once again. The number of animals doubles from the first chapter. Job has exactly the same number of children and the same combination, seven boys and three girls. Unique to that time period and Biblical history, the names of the girls are listed.

 

But not everyone has a happily ever after endings. Some never recover from their trials and sufferings. Some never get back on their feet again. The book of Job does not promise a happy ending to everyone’s suffering story. That’s not a promise in the book. The restoration of Job’s things were temporary. The true treasure is found in Christ and in Heaven. The conclusion is not about what I get, but what have I become. That’s the message. That’s the story for us.

 

Are our problems greater than God? Is our faith limited to sunny days and health in our bodies? Is God worthy to be followed even when the hedges around our lives are removed?

 

It is a whole lot easier to read, study and teach Job, than it is to walk in the shoes of Job. Troublesome times are here, filling men’s hearts with fear. But our Lord is great. We are more than conquerors through faith in the Lord.

This we must always remember.

Roger