Showing posts with label the Lord Jesus Christ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the Lord Jesus Christ. Show all posts

Sunday, December 29, 2024

The Inconvenient Christ

 

The Inconvenient Christ

By Adah Hutchcraft (Daughter of Given O. Blakely)
The Inconvenient Christ (Mark 5:1-20)
Christ’s grace changes the believing, yet it does not necessarily produce outcomes valued by all who profess peace with him. When worldly allegiances are maintained in the heart, the perception of Christ is warped to accommodate them. Such contortions do not appear far from the truth when wrapped in terms of love and acceptance. Subtly emerges the portrayal of a merciful teacher of a non-judgmental gospel. Such a christ meets us where we are and does not impose fundamental change. This soft savior is a gentleman who makes few (if any) demands on our lives. He conveniently respects the restricted territories one designates as impassable. Indeed, all seems manageable to the flesh until the true Savior arrives, bringing the Kingdom of Heaven.
Jesus was often thronged by eager multitudes seeking respite and healing from serious ailments and spiritual oppression. On one such occasion, Jesus sends the multitudes away and departs by ship to the country of the Gadarenes, a town east of the Jordan. It was occupied predominantly by gentiles, and farming swine was a known trade among them. For these reasons, Gadara was an unlikely place for a Jewish Messiah to visit. No one was expecting him, so it would seem. Perhaps this is one reason Jesus is not met with crowds upon his arrival. He is, however, promptly met by a local man who could not ignore Jesus’ holy presence in his territory.
This man did not appear to be a tradesman, scholar, or a soldier, and his name is unmentioned. Yet, he is well known in Gadara for a most appalling and frightening condition. Day and night his anguished screams are heard resonating amidst the tombs where he tortures himself by cutting. He is a wild man, and although his countryman have attempted to bind him with chains, he breaks their bonds into bits. One can neither socialize with him nor reason with him. No band of men can restrain his violent behaviors. Incantations, medication, nor ligatures can begin relieve his pain or prevent his self-harm. He is a prisoner in his own body, oppressed by an unclean spirit. The host is mercilessly abused, unchallenged. Yet when Jesus steps foot on Gadara’s shore, the oppressor knows a greater authority has arrived.
God incarnate comes to an unprepared Gadara. With no place to hide, the unclean spirit sends its host running to Jesus, casting him at his feet. This is not a demonstration of willing adoration, but the mandatory response for hopeless rebelliousness. Jesus’ authority marks Satan’s condemnation, and a set time has been appointed for his confinement and judgment (Revelation 20:10). The unclean spirit pleads for more time, not to repent, but to express itself. Jesus does not receive the tainted worship, and commands the unclean spirit to come out of the man. This Jesus, the true Jesus, does not come to passively observe his creation, but to “heal the brokenhearted, to preach deliverance to the captives, and... to set at liberty them that are bruised” (Luke 4:18). This One who created the world demands the name of the pernicious perpetrator. “Legion,” it replies.
Legion must have had a leading spokesman, for at one point it speaks in the first person and at another time in the third person. The name, however, represents them all​. One spirit had made room for another and another. The nature of Satan’s oppression belies the intent of his temptations. One sin makes room for another as it gains stronger hold. We do not know how this man came into such a state because that is not the Spirit’s focus. Standing before the vexed is one greater than his vexor or vexation. Jesus comes to bind up the strong man and plunder his house, far from a passive role​ (Mark 3:27). Preparing for eviction, Legion pleads for another holding place. It begs to be sent into into a herd of swine feeding near the mountains.
The same personalities which inhabited one man now enter two thousand swine and send them into madness. Unclean enters unclean, and the herd immediately leaves grazing in the field, violently stampeding down the steep ledge, and drowning in the waters below. The capacity of the human spirit is expansive, for it is created as a spiritual habitation. We were created to be filled with the fullness of God, and Jesus takes back what is rightfully his by liberating the demoniac (Ephesians 3:19). What had once torn this man from the inside out was now removed by the authority of holiness. The captive is delivered from his oppressor, his torment, and his stolen years of shame.
What an emancipation, not just for one man, but for a whole city. No more would his tortured cries echo from the graveyard where people wished to mourn their loved ones in peace. All would be freed from the sights and sounds of his nakedness and agony, his terrible strength no longer threatening. Yet it was not the cessation of screams which captured the attention of the town. In fact, the only people who seemed to notice were those who fed the swine which had since plummeted to their death. The herdsman announced to their fellow countrymen what they perceived to be a disturbing occurrence​.
The response to this man’s freedom was fear. The Gadarenes made their living on animals that were ritually unclean according to Jewish Law, and it was a stable source of income until Jesus the Jew arrived. Inconveniences such as a man’s demon-possed state had become normalized in Gadara, for he had been possessed a long time (Luke 8:27). At least he did not pose any threat to their livelihoods, because his devils had driven him into the wilderness (Luke 8:29). Suddenly the herdsmen are thrown into disarray. The countrymen unite to investigate their tragic loss. Upon finding Jesus, the formerly possessed is observed sitting clothed and in his right mind. The witnesses are struck by such amazement that they are alarmed​.
Not everyone is glad when they witness the effects of Christ’s authority. His power over what we cannot control conforms his authority over us, too. He brings change whether or not we like it or ask for it, and at times regardless of our preparedness. In this case, one man’s release was considered by others to be a personal loss. One man was delivered from his uncleanness while others were clinging to theirs. If our landscape was so drastically changed with the casting out of one man's demons, what if this Jesus performs more exorcisms among us? What could such superior power do?​ When Jesus delivers people from sin, it often poses threat to the cherished and convenient sins of those around them. As the Holy transforms souls, accommodated transgressions are brought to light and given no place to openly flourish. The flesh considers what it has to lose of higher value than what Jesus gives. The Gadarenes were of this mind and thus pleaded with Jesus to leave. ​ Love and peace on human terms is acceptable, but impositions on livelihoods and lifestyles are unwelcomed by unrepentant hearts, even when it is the outcome of mercy. Jesus is not a convenient Christ, but therein lies his mercy. He is not willing that any should perish, which assuredly would be our end apart from his gracious imposition. Instead, at great cost to himself, he affords eternal life to all who believe on him.
Christ places limits on unrepentant influences, by gives freedom to hearts which fellowship in the advancement of God’s Kingdom. Jesus is not a gentleman, and He will unapologetically prove the foolishness of displaced worship and idolatrous reliance. He is not about making the world a better place for us, but making us a holy place for himself. The Gadarenes rejected Divinity’s presence because Jesus’ authority threatened them and their priorities. Meanwhile, the man who sat clothed and in his right mind​ requested to go with Jesus from Gadara. He wanted to be with this​ one​ who delivered him.
Since the Gadarenes desired the Savior to leave, it seemed reasonable for all of his followers to go with him, including his new convert. A fresh start in a new town would be preferable, and certainly more comfortable given his recent past. Proximity to Jesus could reassure the disciple that he would not become demonically possessed again, and wherever they went other Christ-followers would surely be nearby. Yet the Savior has a different calling for him. Jesus tells this delivered one to stay and “tell his friends the great things the Lord had done for him, how he had compassion on him​.” He had friends-- acquaintances established prior to his possession. ​ Now he will follow Jesus by going to those friends. The man’s life had taken a frightening turn in the direction of shame, isolation and destruction. His friends likely grieved his long season of torment. Now without having sought it, he knew the power and mercy of God like never before, and stood as a living testimony to who Jesus was: the Son of God. Jesus reached into this man’s life and retrieved him from Satan’s clutches, leaving neither bruise nor scar upon him. It was power manifested in anticipation of an even greater deliverance to come, “when he...disarmed the rulers and authorities, [making] a public spectacle of them, having triumphed over them through the cross” (Colossians 2:15). This delivered one’s testimony would prepare souls to receive the risen Lord after he laid down his life as the atoning sacrifice for the sins of the whole world (1 John 2:2).
Welcomed or not, the Savior’s presence will not be convenient for the flesh. He will ultimately remove what unholy even if it is unwillingly relinquished, and he will send us where we do not anticipate going, though not without his power. The gift of salvation and came at a high price to himself, and we too must humble ourselves to receive our Lord. Once infamously renown for his madness, it was not convenient for the former demoniac to remain in Gadara, but it was his calling. Like all disciples of Christ, he had to forsake all to follow Jesus, a sacrifice rewarded with greater joy than sorrow (Luke 14:33). So while Jesus calls us to die to sin and self, it is a death which liberates us from the slavery of sin (Romans 6:6). The life we lose makes place for that eternal life which can never die, and the desires of which will be satisfied without exception (Matthew 16:25; John 11:25-26; Ps 37:4).

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Melchizedek, a Type of Christ


 

Melchizedek, a Type of Christ

By Dean E. Boelt
“The Lord hath sworn, and will not repent, Thou art a priest for ever after the order of Melchizedek” (Ps. 110:4).
The Apostle Paul would use Melchizedek in his development of the Priesthood of Christ, and its implications. That he was a type of the Priesthood of the Lord Jesus is made clear by both David in Psalm 110:4 and Paul's use in Hebrews 5:10 and chapter 7 of that text, along with the historical account of Melchizedek in Genesis 14:18-20. 

The Eternity of Christ. The eternity of our Lord's nature and Priesthood, as distinguished from the temporality of the Aaronic priests, was the first point established from the type. That was literarily typified in Melchizedek by the way he appeared and disappeared in the Genesis record. When Paul declares that the ancient king/priest had "neither beginning of days nor end of life" (Heb. 7:3), he is not to be understood as asserting the literal eternality of Melchizedek, as some suppose. He is simply referring to the situation as it appears in the historical account. 
 
In this circumstance occurs a striking example of how God ordered the writing of Scripture to serve His predetermined objective. He wanted to foreshadow the endless life and Priesthood of His beloved Son; so He chose that way of doing it. He had Melchizedek appear on the scene and disappear there from with nothing told of his beginning or end. For other instances of Paul's like use of scriptural language, see First Corinthians 9:7-14; Galatians 3:7-9 and 4:21-31.
His Priesthood's Superiority. The superiority of Christ's Priesthood over that of Aaron was also demonstrated by appeal to the Melchizedek incident of Genesis. In that Abraham paid tithes to Melchizedek is depicted the inferiority of Levi's house to Christ, "since he [Levi] was yet in the loins of his father Abraham" at the time of the payment (vv. 9-10). In that Melchizedek, who prefigured Christ, received the tithes from Abraham demonstrated Christ's superiority to the Levitical order of priests (vv. 6-7). 

Following the pattern of Paul's logic, we may also say that it demonstrated that, contrary to much Restoration teaching, Christ now, in heaven, receives tithes from His people, as is categorically declared in verse 8. 
The eternal nature of our Lord's Priesthood was further portrayed by the way in which He obtained it, the Apostle points out (vv. 15-19). While the Levitical priests were constituted such "according to a legal requirement concerning bodily descent," Christ was made a Priest "by the power of an indestructible life" (v. 16, rsv)."For He testifieth, Thou art a Priest forever after the order of Melchizedek" (v. 17). Jesus' superior Priesthood is also evidenced by His being constituted a Priest "with an oath" by God—recorded in Psalm 110:4. Contrariwise, the Levitical priests were made such "without an oath" (v. 21).
The Law's Temporality. Another application of his type by Paul was the witness of the referenced episode to the necessity of "the law" being changed (vv. 11-19). The law's ineffectiveness was shown, it is declared, by the rise of "another Priest" not "after the order of Aaron" (v. 11). And the change of priesthood, Christ being of the tribe of Judah, not Levi, mandated that change of dispensations (v. 12). 
 
Good reasoning, Paul, we must say! We commend the procedure to all who have the Spirit of wisdom and understanding in kingdom matters. The removal of the law, and its replacement by the new covenant in Christ's blood, is additionally witnessed by the oath which constituted Him a Priest, Paul points out, the oath having been "since the law" (v. 28). Another piece of suberb reasoning and application of Scripture.
The Demonstration of Reasoning. The fact that the Apostle could deduce so much of vital effect to the kingdom from the scant three verses of Genesis 14 and the single one from Psalm 110 is an inspired demonstration of the value and utility of reasoning upon Divine revelation. His example is a challenge to those today who possess the Divine Spirit to make similar use of Him, as they are able. It is a grossly-mistaken idea that Christ and the Apostles spelled out in the New Testament all the implications and applications of kingdom matters. 
 
Paul's example of reasoning upon Scripture is also a resounding rebuke to some in our time. We refer to those theologs who heavily frown upon such practice, preferring ostrichlike to continue in the mist and darkness of human tradition, without inquiry into the things of God.
The Greatness of Melchizedek. Paul's call in verse 4, Hebrews 7, is for us to consider the greatness of Melchizedek.. His greatness is attested by the fact that "even the Patriarch Abraham," who "had the promises" (v. 6), and was "the friend of God" (Jas. 2:23), paid tithes to him, and was blessed by Melchizedek. "It is beyond dispute that the inferior is blessed by the superior" (v. 7, rsv).

The Surpassing Greatness of Christ. "If Melchizedek be thus shown to be great, how much greater, indeed, is the Lord Jesus, whom he typified!” So the Apostle's summons clearly is to consider the surpassing greatness of Christ and His Priesthood over Aaron and his ministry, as he had before issued the summons (chapter 3:1-6). 
Melchizedek, as was the case with the Levitical priests, when he had served his own generation, like David also (Acts 13:36), died (v. 23). But not so with Christ. "Because He continueth ever," He "hath an unchanging Priesthood" (v. 24). "Consequently, He is able to save for all time those who draw near to God through Him, since He ever lives to make intercession for them" (v. 25, rsv).In other words, our Lord's Priesthood, because of His endless life, extends to all generations. In typology, the antitype, or substance, is always greater and more meaningful than the type, or shadow. 
"We would say to all today, Consider how great Jesus, our Savior and High Priest, is.” "What think ye of Christ?" (Mt. 22:41-42). "That is the eternally-decisive question, the answer to which will fix every person's destiny. Proper consideration of our Lord will result in full submission to Him. And that will save the soul and preserve it unto glorification with Christ in the world to come”. 
The Father's acknowledgment and evaluation of Jesus should serve as our example. "This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased," He declared (Mt. 3:17; 17:5). We are fully convinced of His Sonship, and gladly confess it, and cleave to Him as our life and hope of eternal salvation. Truly, He is "the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth" (Jn. 1:14). And we are certainly "well pleased" with Him, and anticipate with "joy unspeakable and full of glory" being forever with and serving Him both now and in the world to come (I Pet. 1:8-9).


L'Éternel l'a juré, et il ne s'en repentira point: Tu es sacrificateur pour toujours, A la manière de Melchisédek.

Der HERR hat geschworen, und es wird ihn nicht gereuen: "Du ist ein Priester ewiglich nach der Weise Melchisedeks.

Клялся Господь и не раскается: Ты священник вовек по чину Мелхиседека.

Herren har svoret, og han skal ikke angre det: Du er prest evindelig efter Melkisedeks vis.

Megesküdt az Úr és meg nem másítja: Pap vagy te örökké Melkhisedek rendje szerint.

Drottinn hefir svarið, og hann iðrar þess eigi: "Þú ert prestur að eilífu, að hætti Melkísedeks."

Przysiągł Pan, a nie będzie tego żałował, mówiąc: Tyś jest kapłanem na wieki według porządku Melchisedechowego.

主は誓いを立てて、み心を変えられることはない、「あなたはメルキゼデクの位にしたがってとこしえに祭司である」。


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