Our nation grieves again this week, as deranged hatred was
put on display. In an act most believe
is nothing short of demonic, a young man sat for an hour in a bible study group
and then proceeded to execute those who had just opened the Word with him, for
the crime of being born with black skin.
To carry this level of malevolence for anyone requires a commitment to
hate that exceeds most “normal” human boundaries. To carry this level of hate is to be in
league with the kingdom of Satan; to be at the very least, a soldier in his
army. The question that remains is only
… was the young man possessed by a demon; or was he simply this committed to
hate all on his own, after an indoctrination in hate propagated by groups who
at their core espouse the righteousness of God in the hateful actions they take
and language they speak so carelessly.
The response to this man’s actions runs the gamut from full forgiveness
offered to him by the surviving victims of this heinous crime and yet another
appeal to seek Christ … to proposals to arm deacons with guns in order to kill
threats in church if they are perceived to be threats. It is Christians who offer ideas on both of
these spectrums. But this is not the
first time, the question of how Satan and his forces operate.
Early in the ministry of Christ, it was plainly evident that
evil spirits who possessed men in his day, were powerless to resist the love of
Jesus Christ. When confronted with this
love, the evil spirits declared his identity as the literal Son of God publicly. Jesus commanded them to silence, and without
exception, the demons obeyed and left their hosts. It is unknown to us, whether the hosts of these
possessions were willing participants or victims who had refused the protection
of God; only that having been possessed, they were made free in the presence of
Jesus Christ. In all of recorded
history, this had never occurred before.
There had never been a Rabbi, or Prophet, who compelled demons to leave
their hosts without exception, and of his own power. Demons, outside of confronting the power of
Christ, do not seem to need to listen to the will of mankind. They appear to be able to supersede our
desires and take up residence within us, if we refuse the protection of the
power of Jesus Christ. This is unnerving
both then and now. And whether these
victims were even aware of their possession, or whether it was unknown to them
until they were in the presence of Christ, is equally unnerving.
What was and is beyond question, is the Jesus Christ never
so much as had a debate with any of the demons he came in contact with. They were driven from the power of love of Jesus
Christ as being in close proximity to it was too painful for them. It reminded them of the absolute contentment
and joy they had once known in the peace of loving others. It was contrasted by the infinite hunger and
emptiness they now found in the pursuit of loving only self. Demons do not understand balance. “Balance” is a lie the devil preaches to
mankind to attempt to deceive him into thinking we can love both self and
others, it is not an all or nothing choice, but in fact, it is exactly
that. Demons do not love us at all. They have no sympathy. They spare no believers, the heinous crimes
in a Connecticut daycare / school, and recently in Charleston SC are evidence
of that. When once the love of self is
embraced it takes over everything within the consciousness. It represents the death of love for others in
full. There can be no “balance”. So demons have no love for Satan, any more
than they have love for God, or us.
They, like their “leader” love only themselves. So the new question that emerges is, “how do
they remain in league with each other”?
Peter recalled to John Mark in chapter three an incident
where this topic was discussed. It began
in verse 20 with a description of runaway sized crowds attempting to get into
the presence of Jesus Christ. John Mark
transcribes in verse 20 saying … “And the multitude cometh together again, so
that they could not so much as eat bread. [verse 21] And when his friends heard
of it, they went out to lay hold on him: for they said, He is beside himself.” The size of the crowds who pressed in on
Jesus were so enormous there was not room to sit and eat, sleep, or take any
normal human comforts. The response to
being made free from possession, made free from the desire to sin, and restored
to health no matter what the disease was overwhelming. The people saw in Jesus Christ salvation for
their entire being. He restored their
bodies, their minds, their wills, and their thinking. He was more than just a healer of body, he
was a spiritual healer that offered hope in place of condemnation. And the lure of the love of Christ was so
strong it drew all men unto Him.
His disciples feared all the demand on Christ was going to
overcome Him. They worried about His
ability to hold up under this kind of press.
So they sought to get Him away from the crowds and give Him some relief
and quiet time for a while. But this was
not to be. The Sabbath Wars had begun,
the Pharisees and religious leaders of the day had determined that Jesus Christ
was a threat to their traditional way of thinking. This “Upstart” defied their traditions about
the observance of the law, and as a result they determined Jesus was a threat
to the Law, and to the Temple. He must
be stopped at all costs, killed if possible.
Imagine the irony of seeking to kill the author of the Law, because He
did not agree with how “you” thought it should be kept. But none the less, Jesus had to die, and His
words along with Him. However for the
religious leadership, the inconvenient truth of seeing demons flee from the sight
of Jesus, declaring Him to be the literal Son of God, was a tough nut to crack. The people witnessed these events in
startling regularity. So how could the
religious leadership declare Christ to be evil, while at the same time demons
were fleeing His presence declaring Him to be the literal Son of God? This created quite a conundrum for the
Pharisees.
They did however, come up with a strategy to defeat Christ
and humiliate Him in front of the people.
They sent agents down to discredit Him publicly. John Mark recounts in verse 22 saying … “And
the scribes which came down from Jerusalem said, He hath Beelzebub, and by the
prince of the devils casteth he out devils.”
The hatred of the religious leaders for Jesus Christ was so great, they
accused Him of being possessed by Satan himself. The logic being, since Satan was the leader
of the demons, he would have the authority to cast out demons himself. He would also have the cunning to have those
demons declare him to be the Son of God, in order to further deceive the
people. In effect the Pharisees proposed
the first anti-Christ, was actually Christ.
Keep in mind, this entire concocted strategy came into being, because
Jesus Christ kept Sabbath with Himself and us differently than the priests
imagined He should. Jesus had the temerity
to heal and restore a man in need on Sabbath, and this was a bridge too far for
the Pharisees. To show love on Sabbath
was less important to them, than to rigidly adhere to the traditions of keeping
the Law as they had outlined. So their
opinions of Jesus degenerated to the point where they believed Him to be
possessed of Satan, and carrying the authority of Satan over his troops. There is no limit to where hate will carry
your thinking, when once love of others has been rejected.
But the Pharisees did not understand the way a league of
demons really works. It is not built on authoritarian
hierarchies as no one is willing to submit; it is instead built upon common
cause and common purpose. The love of
self unites the league of demons only in an equal desire to see God suffer
because they know they face their own demise and will see no redemption. They cannot hurt God Himself physically as He
is much too powerful for that. They
cannot defeat Him or Jesus in open conflict which is why demons flee from His
presence so quickly and without struggle.
They can however hurt us, the object of the love of Jesus and His Father
God. Through hurting and deceiving us
into hurting each other, they can and do cause pain to the heart of God. It is their only weapon. They have none other in their arsenal. If demons were to stop working to hurt
mankind, God the Father would stop suffering.
This is an outcome that none of them wish to see. So the battle to hurt mankind must rage on,
and the hate they can inspire within us must continue.
Jesus however, was intent on demonstrating to them, the fallacy
in their thinking. Peter recalls to John
Mark in verse 23 saying … “And he called them unto him, and said unto them in
parables, How can Satan cast out Satan? [verse 24] And if a kingdom be divided
against itself, that kingdom cannot stand. [verse 25] And if a house be divided
against itself, that house cannot stand. [verse 26] And if Satan rise up
against himself, and be divided, he cannot stand, but hath an end.” A common cause, and common purposes only
succeeds if all the members continue to pursue it. If Satan were to cause others of his league to
stop their efforts to hurt God, it would offer God relief from the pain of
watching us hurt each other. This would
bring comfort to God, and damage the only weapon Satan has against Him. It makes no sense to see Satan pursue this
strategy, and Jesus Christ is calling attention to it to those who sought to
concoct this strategy to humiliate Him.
He is trying to enlighten them.
But His message has a deeper application for us.
The common cause of the league of demons is founded on
hate. It is the uniting principle behind
the pain that will greet the heart of God who knows only love. When mankind reeks acts of violence and
hatred on each other, it is the heart of God who breaks to see what our free
will allows for when we choose to love self over loving others. The acts of the man in Charleston are
horrific and based on a deep and abiding hatred for others that closely aligns
him in cause with the league of demons.
However, the response to his acts of hatred often elicit hatred in the hearts
of those who hurt, or those who merely observe.
In either case, when hate spreads like a virus, it is only the kingdom
of Satan who gains ground … in common cause to hurt the heart of God.
When religious leaders like the Pharisees of old, or the
modern Christians of today, espouse hatred in response to evil (whether real or
perceived), it spreads hate like a virus and works only to hurt the heart of
God. It is the temptation of Satan to
greet violence with more violence, and hate with more hate. It is the temptation of Satan to assert you
could possibly “prevent evil” if you had weapons and willingness to kill at all
times, even in church, even while worshipping the God of love. To kill those who choose to kill, is at best,
a strategy that promotes killing. It
forces the Christian to murder, and live with the pain of ending a life before
it could be redeemed. It may seem like
the better choice, it may “feel better”, it may be viewed through the lens of
preventing further or greater violence, but in the end, it is only uniting in
common cause with a weapon that brings pain to the heart of God.
What we forget, and Christ remembers, is that the life of
the victims is no less precious than the life of perpetrator. God cares equally for both, as both are His
precious children. He grieves for
both. He wishes for “none” of us to know
the pain of taking life. He wishes for “none”
of us to choose to so love self that we would even entertain the idea of
hurting others. But this wish extends
far beyond matters of life and death.
When Christians choose to espouse hate to others in how we speak, and
what we say, we equally align with the league of demons. “Hate” itself is the disease. Hatred enabled the psychotic killers of our
day to do what they do. When people are
bombarded by the language of hate day after day, because we believe them to be
making bad choices, we only propagate the weapon of the enemy. Redemption and restoration cannot be
accomplished through the means of hatred, only through the means of love. It is not love to spout condemnation and
ridicule; that is the language of hate.
We do not need to excuse sin, or think sin is in any way
permissible. But to focus on sin and be
free with our condemnation of it, does nothing to show the victim a way to see
the pain of sin removed from their lives … instead it only perpetuates their
misery in the very sins we enjoy condemning.
Instead, when we point the erring to Christ, and LOVE them
through their journey to Him, we enable them to find a way of relief. When we hold our tongues of condemnation, and
instead empathize that surrender of who we are is equally difficult for us, as
it must be for “them”, we join them in the journey towards perfection. It is not a race, but a journey. It is a destination all who seek Christ will
find. But it is found in how we love
others along the way. “Hate” must and
should be the enemy of the Christian in any form. We should avoid embracing it, adopting it, or
being perceived as speaking it in any form.
We must be extra vigilant to keep our speech free from it. To love like Christ is to overcome evil, not
embrace it. Christ did not meet the
hatred of the Pharisees, and the very real threat they posed to His life, with
weapons of war. He met them with the
only weapon in the arsenal of God to defeat evil, He met them with love … for
them. Christ genuinely sought to redeem
the lives of those who sought to kill Him, both then and now.
Peter continued relaying the counsel of Christ in verse 27 …
“No man can enter into a strong man's house, and spoil his goods, except he
will first bind the strong man; and then he will spoil his house.” Here Jesus is telling the scribes sent to
discredit Him with a doomed strategy, that Christ is able to bind Satan and
hold him powerless, while He casts out demons who align with Satan in common
cause. Neither Satan nor any demon
aligned in league with him will be able to resist the power of love Jesus
offers. The memory of how perfect life
was in heaven, with how wonderful loving others makes you feel, in comparison with
how painful and empty loving self leaves you, was simply too much for demons
who once knew what it was like to live eternally in the perfection of God’s
love. They do not want to be reminded of
that perfect love. They flee from
it. What they have now is only misery,
and misery is what they seek to spread in revenge to God for crimes they alone
are guilty of. But the method of how
demons are removed and by what power was still a question that required an
answer.
Jesus continued speaking in verse 28 … “Verily I say unto
you, All sins shall be forgiven unto the sons of men, and blasphemies wherewith
soever they shall blaspheme: [verse 29] But he that shall blaspheme against the
Holy Ghost hath never forgiveness, but is in danger of eternal damnation: [verse
30] Because they said, He hath an unclean spirit.” It is the power of the Holy Spirit that frees
us from our sin, and our desire to sin.
It is the power of God made manifest through His love within us. It is the Holy Spirit that changes the
desires of our hearts and brings them into alignment with the Law of God, and
an abiding love of others, not self.
When we cast aside the power of the Holy Spirit, when we accuse Him of
being Satan, we cut ourselves off from the only power capable of removing
sin. In so doing, there is no
repentance, because there is no desire to repent. The still small voice within us goes
silent. We embrace our sin with full
abandon, and want no part of God.
Without the Holy Spirit, our desire for something more goes away, and we
become in league with demons aligned with Satan in the common cause of hurting
the heart of God.
Jesus was careful to point out to his accusers that they
could blaspheme His own name in any way they chose, but to reject the Holy
Spirit, cut them off from the path of repentance and restoration. Nothing has changed today. When we embrace supernatural power for the
purposes of control, we are embracing Satan’s power. When we seek to heal others for the credit we
would get for doing it, for the fame of being known as a great servant of God, we
are attempting to “use” the Holy Spirit for our own selfish purposes. When we reject the existence of God, and of
His power, and deny the God of the Bible in favor of a more nebulous God, who “cannot
be defined” in only one set of scriptures, but exists on a plane of many
writings with many ideas, and paths to God, we are in danger of rejecting our
only path to restoration. God is not
just a concept. He is not just an
abstract. He has been defined, as has
His Spirit, and the work of the Trinity for our redemption outlined in
scriptures. When we reject the work of
the Holy Spirit, we cut ourselves off from the protection of God, the power of
God, and our path towards restoration.
We embrace self in its stead, and wind up looking eerily similar to
demons who league together to seek the common cause of hate.
If the shooters in Charleston, and Connecticut, and around
the world have rejected the Holy Spirit and joined in league with demons, they
will not seek redemption or restoration for themselves. To see them redeemed it is we who must intercede
with prayer on their behalf. God cannot
overcome their will and choice to reject Him, but He can reach out again to them
in love in answer to our prayers on their behalf. I imagine many, including me, will be praying
for comfort for the victims of these shootings.
I wonder how many Christians will pray for the perpetrators of this
hate, to see their hearts reformed and their lives redeemed and restored. To see these shooters find redemption and
restoration so that in the Kingdom of God they can be reconciled to their
victims, and apologize with broken hearts for the evil deeds they did on earth is
what restoration and forgiveness are all about.
When you think about it, how will our responses in heaven be any
different than theirs? We may not have
killed another, but we have inflicted so much pain on others in the actions of
self-love we chose to embrace while in this world of sin. Through the lens of perfect love for others
in heaven, it is our hearts that will be broken as we encounter the victims of
our pain, and beg forgiveness for what we did to them while here in this world
of sin. If our future looks similar, can
our present find common cause to align with the restorative mission of Christ
for us here as well? Can we look to end
evil and hate, by surrendering to God, and allowing the Holy Spirit to put an
end to hate within us? Only in this way,
can evil be truly defeated forever…
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