In a contest, there is usually only one winner. Where it comes to sports, we are fine with that. Where it happens inside the church doors, we are divided by it. On the playing field it is a contest of wills, who wants to win, how far can they push themselves to achieve it. Inside the church doors, it is also a contest of wills, usually founded in the cement of ego, and rarely in consideration of “who” wins, and how many lose because of it. Questions over doctrine, or rather over the interpretation of doctrines have divided bodies of Christ for centuries. This has always been a sad thing, where the enemies of Christ appear the only “winners”. But when disagreements over style and preference are elevated to questions of faith, because the ego of those in hardened positions will see no other reason; the enemies of Christ not only have the “win”, they have all the trimmings of the parades that go with it. In these cases, division becomes the doctrine we exemplify, and tolerance and patience are put on the shelf like species of birds long since extinct.
While the membership joins in this phenomenon, and sometimes even form the catalyst for starting it, it is the leadership who bears the responsibility for quelling it and restoring order to the body. It is our leaders who carry the burden of so patient a love, they are able to reason with members who may have long since abandoned it. This is no easy feat. It requires a close connection with our God, a complete trust and reliance upon Him. And it requires a willingness to let the words of the Holy Spirit proceed from your mouth, even when you had other thoughts and feelings on the matter. Make no mistake, there is only one entity that sows division, and would prefer a church “split” than come to resolution or tolerance to maintain the body united. That entity is supernatural but not aligned to God, or His Kingdom, it is Satan. The devil’s hoard may appear as angels of light, trying to persuade the believer that a certain level of fanaticism is required over some text in order to keep the “world” away from the saints. These demons-under-mask then proceed to convince the believer that other members of the body, are in fact the “world” and must be cast out. And before long the body of Christ is at war with itself. While laughter in Satanic places thunders under our feet.
Division leads to isolation, and isolation of the believer like Eve who wandered from the side of her husband so long ago, leads to a vulnerability against demonic forces who themselves are aligned with a singular purpose – to inflict pain upon the heart of God, by the torture and death of His children on planet earth. The kingdom of Satan has but one mantra, to cause man to self-destruct, to cause man to reject the love of God, and embrace the ideas of self-reliance, and power, even if the power is only self-control. While our focus and vision remain inward, or upon ourselves, we look away from Jesus, and in so doing, sink into the sea as Peter did when asked to exit the boat and walk on water like His Lord. Peter did the impossible while his gaze was fixed on Jesus, the minute he turned to look back at his friends, he sunk like a brick. So when we look inward to fix ourselves, and improve ourselves, and save ourselves – we look away from Jesus to do it, and follow a plan long conceived in the dark places where only hatred of God exists as the binding agent.
In our previous study, there was a war brewing over “how” the Sabbath must be kept. Ironically, and perhaps to the greatest Satanic glee, the war would place the leadership of the church of God, against the God they purported to serve. It would be the grandest of all divisions. It had already reached the point where the leadership of God’s church met formally to plan how they might destroy, that is kill, Jesus. They were furious over Jesus choosing to heal a single man’s deformed hand on the Sabbath day, in their mind choosing to work on Sabbath, and declaring it was ok to do good on Sabbath (that is good for others). The Pharisees, and Sadducees, and Sanhedrin were having no part in this. This new way to interpret the law was not going to happen on their watch. The heretic named Jesus must die, before too many of the people adopted His position of love and mercy being the most important thing. The law was to be the most important thing, not love or mercy, or any kind of squishy stuff like that.
But unbeknownst to them, Jesus read their thoughts and intentions after their last failure to find fault with Him. Matthew in his gospel to the Hebrews, continues the story in chapter twelve picking up in verse 15 saying … “But when Jesus knew it, he withdrew himself from thence: and great multitudes followed him, and he healed them all; [verse 16] And charged them that they should not make him known:” Jesus leaves their grasp, but He does not run and hide. Nor does Jesus change His behavior to accommodate the feelings of the leadership. For Jesus cannot change who He is, nor will He reveal anything other than the TRUE will of God to us. And what is that will? As the great crowds follow Him out of the synagogue, they bring to Him their sick and ill, and “HE HEALED THEM ALL”. Not only has Jesus healed one man on Sabbath, He has healed hundreds or thousands on this day. This is not meant to be a poke-in-the-eye of the Pharisees, in fact He tells all those He healed to keep it on the down low. To have hundreds or thousands of people declaring Jesus to be the Son of God would in fact be a poke-in-the-eye of the Pharisees, and that is not what He wants.
But Jesus heals these people because Jesus MUST heal these people as that kind of love and mercy IS THE WILL of God. Not just for one man with a withered hand who happened to meet His gaze in the back of a synagogue, but for every single man, woman, or child, who came to Him, turning their eyes upon His, and finding a love of God, that does not ever will us to live like we live. Jesus is not just interested in healing the physical infirmities that we have, but in taking from us the desire to sin that causes us infinitely more pain. The reconstruction of who we are from the inside, is equally upon the mind and will of our God. And our God is bent on performing this action on any who would come to Him to find it. He does not discriminate in any way. While the Jews believed this might only happen to them, because of their birthright, and because Jesus was one of them. Jesus does this for literally everyone.
Matthew continues in verse 17 saying … “That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the prophet, saying, [verse 18] Behold my servant, whom I have chosen; my beloved, in whom my soul is well pleased: I will put my spirit upon him, and he shall shew judgment to the Gentiles. [verse 19] He shall not strive, nor cry; neither shall any man hear his voice in the streets. [verse 20] A bruised reed shall he not break, and smoking flax shall he not quench, till he send forth judgment unto victory. [verse 21] And in his name shall the Gentiles trust.” Consider what Matthew and Isaiah before him say of the judgment of God, of what judgment looks like to God. Jesus heals and restores, and offers salvation to all. That is what judgment of Gentiles looks like in real life. Judgment that leads unto victory is the “judgment” that God reveals even to people who are outside of the deserving Jewish bloodline. Gentiles, meaning us, will trust in His name, in the name of Jesus.
Notice what Judgment does not look like from Jesus and His Father God, there is not a single reference to “or else”. There is not a single reference to “fire”, let alone “eternal fire”. There is not a single reference to the keeping of the law. This is not because the law is moot. This is because you can ONLY keep the law through the recreation of how your heart thinks and feels, in essence how you love. When you love others like Jesus loves others, you become in harmony with the law, such that debating how you keep it is unnecessary. You keep it, because it is part of who you are. And the clear will of our God is revealed. He is not interested in dealing out punishment we deserve, He is interested in dealing out healing from the disease we embrace. The clear will of God is the redemption of mankind, of all of mankind, to the worst of us. That is what the judgment of God looks like to the prophet, and through the eyes of Matthew as he bears witness to it in real life.
But where the healing of one inflamed the passion of the Pharisees, the healing of so many, and of Gentiles, is more than their vanity can bear. Any reason that might have led to tolerance, or unity with Jesus is gone. They must destroy Him on every level. So they begin with His credibility. They introduce the idea that Jesus (who must be evil), is able to heal through the power of Satan rather than through God. It only takes a quick look to compare the reaction of those who find joy in the relief of suffering, and those who accuse God of being Satan for having relieved that suffering. Matthew continues in verse 22 saying … “Then was brought unto him one possessed with a devil, blind, and dumb: and he healed him, insomuch that the blind and dumb both spake and saw. [verse 23] And all the people were amazed, and said, Is not this the son of David?” The people see the miraculous reformation of one gone so far he was possessed of Satan, who has now been freed of Satan. The people declare Jesus to be “the son of David” which is to say the long-awaited Messiah.
Matthew continues in verse 24 saying … “But when the Pharisees heard it, they said, This fellow doth not cast out devils, but by Beelzebub the prince of the devils.” This is an attempt by the leadership to destroy the credibility of any who would dare to oppose them. And the technique follows us down through the ages right into the churches of Jesus today. When Luther dares to oppose Rome, dares to ask the leadership of the church in his day, to reform its practices and realign closer to the ideals of Jesus. The first attack is to label him a heretic. When the youth of our day, examine our hypocrisy and rigid expectations, and attempt to call us to realign how we treat those in need, and how we attempt to reach those who today do not hear – what is the first response, to label them as under the influence of Satan, attempting to bring the world into the church. Division reigns today. Division that would lead to isolation, and isolation to excommunication of those with different ideas. What they do to Christ, we do to each other under the same motive and banner as the true leader of darker origins.
Jesus responds with the truth of it, for He can offer nothing else picking up in verse 25 saying … “And Jesus knew their thoughts, and said unto them, Every kingdom divided against itself is brought to desolation; and every city or house divided against itself shall not stand:” The destination of division is destruction. The destination of isolation is destruction. Our churches cannot withstand the tearing of each other, and call that any kind of success, it is failure nothing more. Those members who would engage in it, engage in the destroying the very fabric of the body of Christ. Those leaders who would promote it, no matter what line of reasoning, or perceived fanaticism that is required, do nothing more than the devils bidding. Division can lead ultimately only to destruction.
Jesus continues in verse 26 saying … “And if Satan cast out Satan, he is divided against himself; how shall then his kingdom stand? [verse 27] And if I by Beelzebub cast out devils, by whom do your children cast them out? therefore they shall be your judges. [verse 28] But if I cast out devils by the Spirit of God, then the kingdom of God is come unto you. [verse 29] Or else how can one enter into a strong man's house, and spoil his goods, except he first bind the strong man? and then he will spoil his house. [verse 30] He that is not with me is against me; and he that gathereth not with me scattereth abroad.” Jesus points out that if Satan loses his unity, his kingdom would fall just like any other. The leading of people to Jesus therefore cannot be of Satan, and so must be of God. Otherwise Satan’s kingdom loses the very thing it wants. The goal of Satan’s kingdom is to lead people away from Jesus not towards Him.
Then comes the most stinging rebuke to church leadership offered down through the ages. He that is not with Me, is against Me. The leadership of the church in the days of Christ was not with Him, and therefore decidedly against Him. Those who value the law over love and mercy that underlie the law have found a way to be against Christ. The rebuke continues; and he that gathers not with me, scatters abroad. Those leaders who do not war to maintain unity, war to sow division. Sabbath observance was never meant to be confined to a list of do’s and don’ts – it was meant to be about a relationship with Jesus, that values our time with Jesus, and puts away anything else we can avoid so as not to be distracted from that time and association for a day. Every seventh day we are afforded the presence of our God in a special way like no other. Are we so bent on squandering that because we have “important” things to do like work, or shop, or entertain ourselves with themes the world enjoys? Are we ready to be so selfish with our time with God, that we would cause others to serve us during this day, and therefore miss what God may have to offer them?
Or for a change, can we rethink about how we spend our time. Can we enjoy music that calls the mind to Jesus, no matter what that music sounds like. Can we observe visual stimuli that is rooted in the stories of the Bible or of modern Christianity, that calls the mind to Christ and inspires us to share with others. Can we relook and open our eyes to those in need, be they in pews next door, or in street corners of need, or in families and missions we have heard need our time as much as our money – and in so doing, go attempt to meet that need. Can we redirect our conversations to the testimonies of what God does for us, and how, and how often. And finally, can we change the perception of what the clear will of God is, and begin NOT to accept the condition of how we live; asking God to heal what medicine has long been unable to do, or asking God to heal within us what sins we have long been bound up in a cycle of commit and forgive. To do well upon the Sabbath, to keep it holy, is not just the absence of work, of the following of lists, it is to reflect such love and such mercy that we become the conduits of our Lord Jesus Christ and reflect His light instead of our own blighted perceptions of a God more interested in punishment than redemption – particularly on the day He set aside for us to demonstrate what being close to God might really look like.
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