03

Jump Start # 3038

Jump Start # 3038

Genesis 1:27 “God created man in His own image, in the image of God He created him, male and female He created them.”

As I write this, dark clouds fill the skies. Thunder is heard rumbling in the distance. A storm is coming. And, how symbolic this is for our times. “Troublesome times are here,” begins one of our hymns. We don’t need someone to tell us this. All around we see this. Civil unrest. Citizens not happy with the government. Crime escalating. Culture reshaping the thinking of young people.

Recently, one of our Jump Start readers wrote me asking for help with what to do. This person works in the medical field. A female patient came in with her mom. The front desk coordinator instructed the medical staff not to use the words, “she” or “her.” They were to use, “they” or “their.” The patient had declared non-gender. This person was dealing with anxiety and depression issues. The patient was seeing both counselors and psychiatrists. The medical company this questioner works for just added “inclusion” as one of the company core values. “As a Christian,”  she asks,  “how am I to deal with non-gender people?” I would add, how are to love the world when the world puts us in such difficult situations?

I see the storm clouds rolling in. What times we live in. Young. Confused. Depressed. What troublesome times we live in. I will be honest in that I do not know if I have the right answers. Some days, I’m not sure if  I even have any answers.

First, medically, I would tell this person that you may identify with non-gender preference, but your physical body is either male or female. Therefore, as a person in the medical staff, I must treat you as you are biologically. Women’s health and men’s health are not the same. There are hospitals designated as “Women’s Hospital” just because of the unique and special issues that are within a woman’s body. You may want me to call you “They” or “Their,” but I will have to treat you as a man or a woman for which you are.

In some ways, the medical area may be one of the easier ways to deal with this. I know school teachers who must refer to a child as “They” or “Their,” and recognize that they are “non-gender.” The corporate world has embraced this ideology with open arms. It’s hard to navigate through these things as a Christian.

Second, “they” and “their” are plural words and not good English when talking about an individual. In a world that wants “inclusion,” why are words being used that are “exclusive?” If there is a “they,” then there must be an “us.” Us and them. That’s the language of division, separation and isolation. Rather than calling someone, “they,” how about “Us?” Are we not both of the human race? Are we not both sharing this planet? Within this gender crisis discussion are layers of different thoughts and issues. Some will say that biologically, there was a mistake. I am a woman trapped in a man’s body. Some will lean upon the psychological ideology of “If I feel a certain way, then it is that way.” Feelings become the basis of justification. Then there is the philosophical demand that states “I have a right to choose whatever gender I want.” Different issues. Different strands of thought. Different concerns. And, all of them difficult for a Christian to navigate through.

As a Christian, we need to treat all people with fairness. Jesus showed us this. The Pharisees complained “what kind of woman” was washing Jesus’ feet. They fussed at tax collectors and sinners surrounding Jesus. The Pharisees would have built a monastery for only their kind. Not Jesus. In Samaria, talking to a woman who had gone through five marriages and was living with someone. In the home of Zacchaeus, a tax collector. In the temple, with Pharisees. Name calling, those under the breath derogatory comments, rolling the eyes must not be found among us. It’s hard to say we love the world, when we act like we don’t. The golden rule, treat others like you would like to be treated, doesn’t fit only in the church house. It fits in the work place, the school house, the neighborhood and at family reunions. Treat everyone as Jesus would.

If someone wanted me to call him “they,” I think the first thing I would say is “why?” Their response would likely be, “I’m not male or a female. I’m neither.” I believe I would then ask, “Can I call you by your name? You do have a name, don’t you?” Now, this will bother some of us. Call a biological male a female name may sound like you are condoning or approving of this behavior and lifestyle.

Several years ago I conducted a funeral with a Catholic priest. Part of the family was Catholic and part were N.T. Christians. The priest was “Father” Dave. He said, “You call be ‘Father Dave.’” I was uncomfortable with that. I asked, “Can I call you ‘Dave?’ I don’t think he was real pleased with me, but I did what I had to. And, so must you.

The manager of the bank I go to always says, “Do I call you Pastor, or Reverend?” I tell her, ‘Just call me Roger.’ And, I think honesty here is the key. If you tell someone that I understand you want to be identified in a different way, I’m just having trouble with some of this. I don’t want to offend you, but what can we agree upon?

As a Christian, we have the right to tell someone the truth, in love and gentleness. When someone declares that I am a woman trapped in a male body, my response would be, “You know God doesn’t make mistakes. Have you thought about that?” Paul told the Corinthians, “For even if there are so-called gods whether in Heaven or on earth, as indeed there are many gods and many lords, yet for us there is but one God, the Father, from whom are all things, and we exist for Him…” (1 Cor 8:5-6a). Was Paul giving approval, condoning or acknowledging the pagan gods of his world? There are many gods, he said.

Now, according to the company policy, you might say, I will help you the best I can. I will be honest, fair and right with you. I will work hard for you and give it my all. I do that because I am a Christian, and, God loves you. I want you to know that.

There is a very thin tight rope that disciples are forced to walk upon today in the corporate world. We have seen with public broadcasters, saying the wrong thing can get one fired on the spot. The world is trying with all its might to dim our light. Prayers and faith are a necessity in these times. The opponents of faith are quick to point a finger at us and declare that we are guilty of judging because we will not go as far as they want us to go.

Let us pray for our brethren who are faced with these difficult issues and choices. Let us be patient and encouraging. There’s no place for, “Well, I’d tell them that they all going to Hell.” We aren’t in the Hell business. The Gospel is good news and life and hope are in Jesus.

God has defined and solved the gender issue. There is no confusion. The confusion lies with us and not with God.

Roger

02

Jump Start # 3037

Jump Start # 3037

Isaiah 53:3 “He was despised and forsaken of men, a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief; and like one from whom men hide their face He was despised, and we did not esteem Him.” 

Our verse is Isaiah’s Messianic picture of Jesus upon the cross. The language is harsh, raw and uncomplimentary. It ought to make us feel bad. Despised. Forsaken. Men hide their faces from Him. They wouldn’t look at Him. He was not esteemed. He was a man of sorrows and one acquainted with grief.

The word “acquainted,” means accustomed to, familiar with, or something that one is used to doing. When one drives the same roads over and over, nearly every day, he becomes familiar with that route. He is acquainted with it. When one understands a sport, he is familiar with the rules and how the game is to be played. He is acquainted with that sport. One doesn’t have to explain the concept of the game to him.

I golfed with a guy once who was not familiar with the game of golf. In fact, it was his first, and probably only time he ever played. He thought the higher the number on the irons, the farther the ball would go. So, when he needed a 3-iron, he was reaching for his 9-iron. I was trying to help him, but it was a long day that seemed to keep getting longer. He simply was not acquainted with the game of golf.

Back in our verse, Jesus was acquainted with sorrow and grief. He knew sorrow. Sorrow wasn’t something new to Him. He was familiar with sorrow.

Consider some thoughts:

First, even before Jesus left Heaven, He knew the sorrow of sin. The universe was lost. Sin had wrecked lives. The relationship between God and His creation was severed. Jesus was sent to be the salvation and the hope for all of us. He came, Luke’s Gospel says, “to seek and save that which is lost.” This wasn’t to be a vacation from Heaven. This wasn’t a pleasure trip. No souvenirs or postcards from earth. He came to suffer sorrow for the sorrow that we caused.

Second, the world Jesus came into was filled with sorrow. Soon after His birth, Herod ordered the slaughter of boys around the age of two. How many homes grieved that night when the henchmen of Herod came to do their evil deeds? Tears flowed. Little, innocent babies died. Sorrow filled the streets.

Third, Jesus saw the sorrow of wicked hearts that wagged their tongues at the things He did. The bent over woman was told to come another day to get healed, not on the Sabbath. Which day? And, just who would do this healing? The synagogue official was unable to help her all those years. A young ruler came to Jesus wanting eternal life. When Jesus told him what was necessary, he left. He walked away sorrowfully. He did not hear what Jesus was saying.

Fourth, as Jesus stood at the tomb of Lazarus, knowing what He was about to do, He still cried. We know it as the shortest verse in the Bible, ‘Jesus wept.’ Sorrow because of broken hearts and the tears that come with the death of one that was loved. Not only did Jesus understand sorrow, He experienced it Himself. He wept.

Fifth, as Jesus looked over the mighty city of Jerusalem, on the eve of His arrest and coming death, He said, “Jerusalem, Jerusalem, who kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to her! How often I wanted to gather your children together, the way a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, and you are unwilling” (Mt 23:27). How sad this made Jesus. Help was there. The answer they needed was there. The best example. The best words. The best sacrifice. Forgiveness. Freedom. Reconciliation. All of that was awaiting them, but they were unwilling. You can’t help people who do not want to be helped. An addiction can be overcome if a person is willing to get help. Bad habits can be stopped and changed if a person is willing to do that. But, for Jerusalem, they were “unwilling.” Christ was there, but they didn’t want His help.

From all of this, a few thoughts:

First, I may not understand the depth of your sorrow or grief, but Jesus does. He was familiar with sorrow. He knew sorrow from several different standpoints. So, the one who can help you the most is Jesus. Jesus has tasted sorrow so often that He was acquainted or familiar with it. Sorrow was not some new experience for Jesus. He knew it all too well.

Second, you and I may go through something once, but that doesn’t necessarily make us familiar with it. For Jesus, He had become familiar with pain, grief and sorrow. The sorrow that Jesus experienced wasn’t just one kind nor from just one source. Mental strain. Emotional sorrow. Physical loss. And the pure, raw sensation of actual pain. Jesus knew all of these. And, on top of that, He traveled down those long, dark valleys not because of the things He did wrong, but because of the things He did right.

Third, you and I do all that we can to avoid sorrow and pain. The shelves are filled at the drug store of “Pain-Relief” medicines. We don’t do pain. And, we don’t like sorrow. Give us joy. Give us laughter. Give us comedy. We sign up for those things. We have our medicines. We have our support dogs. We have our network of friends. We have a fellowship. All of these serve as buffers to keep the sorrow and pain away from us. Not Jesus. He was familiar with it. The Isaiah passage, our verse today, was written 700 years before Jesus came. Jesus came, knowing what He was coming to. He came knowing what He was signing up for. He came knowing that pain, sorrow and grief would be so abundant, that He would become acquainted with them. I find that it is amazing that He still came. It’s one thing to have a day filled with trouble, but you didn’t know what the day would be like. But for Jesus, He knew. He came anyway. He came because He loved. He came because it was the only way to bring joy, peace and forgiveness to our lives.

Familiar with sorrow. Recently, a friend asked for some advice about a funeral he was to conduct. He was wanting some verses and ideas. You have done a lot of funerals, he said to me. That’s true. I have. But I am still not acquainted with sorrow. I don’t do sorrow well. Jesus is.

What a friend we have in Jesus…

Roger

01

Jump Start # 3036

Jump Start # 3036

Proverbs 21:1 “The king’s heart is like channels of water in the hand of the Lord; He turns it wherever He wishes.”

This is a special Jump Start. I have never written anything like this. My heart compels me to not be silent. As I write these words, the city of Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, is being assaulted by powerful Russian forces. Most did not think we would ever see a nation invading another nation in our modern times. It is scenes of Germany in 1939. The citizens of Ukraine are digging in and preparing to fight to their death. Images have appeared of whole families holding weapons, preparing to fight and fathers kissing their children goodbye at train stations, knowing there is a good chance that they will not live to see them again. And, the world watches.  A tyrant and a bully is literally killing innocent people. There are beloved brethren within Ukraine. Indeed, troublesome times are here.

Our verse today is powerful. God dealt with Pharaoh. God took care of the Philistines. God defeated the Assyrians. Babylon. Greeks. Romans. Biblical history has shown that our God cannot be defeated. We do not know His purpose in all of this. But our passage reminds us that God can turn hearts. He can turn the hearts of kings then, and He can turn the hearts of world leaders today.

I ask you this day to take just a moment and do some serious praying for our world.

  • Pray for our brethren in Ukraine that they will be safe.
  • Pray for the courage of those fighting for their countries freedom.
  • Pray that God will change the heart of Russian Putin.
  • Pray that God will change the heart of the world’s leaders as they watch all of this.
  • Pray for our own hearts that they will be governed by the will of God.

There is a very strong chance that things could become much worse before they get better. Hardships in our economy and the difficulty in assembling together may be a reality. Let’s take care of each other. Let’s be there. This is not a time to trash talk politics but a time to pray.

Let’s remember our dear beloved like Antipas in Revelation 2, Stephen in Acts 7, or Daniel in the lion’s den. More important than money in our accounts, is the salvation of souls. Our children and grandchildren are seeing the evidence of a world that is broken and in need of Jesus.

The Bible ends with these words, “Come, Lord Jesus.”

Will you pray?

Roger