And speaking of criticism … today it seems all the world is
a critic. We freely dole out “advice” to
others about how they could have done a better job. We feel it our duty, our responsibility,
after all we are only trying to make the world better. And the recipients of our advice clearly need
it. None of us are too receptive to the
advice of others, but it would seem all of us are inclined to share criticism,
often without being asked. And what
happens in the secular arena, being a reflection of character, is dragged right
through the doors of the church into the ministry where it least belongs. Yet our critique is freely shared inside the
church with nearly every ministry offered, and every leader or participant who
dares to stand in front of us long enough to listen. We explain that our motive is only to “help”,
to make the ministry “better”, or to avoid the pitfalls of the world. But the net effect is that criticism flows
freely, and our own participation flows slowly by comparison, if at all.
Knowing the condition of man, and the struggle of men
against sin in all its form, you might just write this off as an “oops” of our
characters that will one day get straightened out by the Lord. This is true if we let it, rather than in
true human form, keep attempting to fix it ourselves. But there is a danger here in this area that
is like none other. As it turns out
there is a much MORE dangerous sin, than homosexuality (which most modern
Christians believe is by far the worst).
There is much more permanent sin than even murder. Hard to imagine that, as life once lost sure
looks permanent from a “this world” perspective. And perhaps worst of all, the sin looks so
innocuous that most of us don’t even consider it a sin. We regularly participate without a second
thought, and venture in to unpardonable zones with glee.
The first response to this is to recoil. Perhaps this is only the opinions of the
author of this Blog, nothing more. I
wish that it were so, for I am as guilty as any of my brothers and sisters in
the faith. But unfortunately for me, I
am unable to argue with the words of my Lord.
Matthew picks up in his gospel in the twelfth chapter in verse 31, not
his own words, but the quoting of the words of Jesus Himself as it reads … “Wherefore
I say unto you, All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men: but
the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men.” Ouch.
There is something that sits on the “shall not be forgiven” unto men
list. Blasphemy against Holy Spirit. So what is Blasphemy then?
For us to claim something is from the Holy Spirit which is
truly not would constitute blasphemy.
Not many of us claim to be prophets of God, so the danger here is low
for most. Not many of us claim to have
direct communication from the Holy Spirit on any matter, we are nearly all too
timid for that. But for those who do,
they better be right, or into this list they march. But a false claim of authentication is not
the only definition or use of this term.
The converse is also true. To
attribute something to Satan that is truly from the Holy Spirit, is also a
blasphemy against God. This is the one
church goers are so quick to offer opinions about, particularly the
conservative branch of our body. How
many times have you heard the opinion offered … “that music is of Satan”. Or, bringing drama into the church in the
form of Christian plays, or short skits, is of the devil? It could be an instrument, a method of
ministry, a manner of dress, or the message offered.
We have all done it.
We do it still. We think it our
Christian responsibility to “call out” things that we believe are of the world,
so as to keep the sacred free from worldly influence. But the key part of that sentence is “we
believe”. It is our belief, stemming
from our opinion and interpretation of scripture, that something is of the
world or not. And those opinions and
interpretations are often heavily influenced by our own preferences and
traditions. In these instances, we
approach scriptures with the conclusions already made, looking only for texts
which will support them, leaving no room to be led, or to find we are
wrong. Yet still we present ourselves
with such a level of certainty in our criticism you would think we were ready
to wrest the role of Judge from our God and carry it on our shoulders without a
care in the world.
Perhaps blasphemy is strong enough as a word in its imagery
to give you comfort that you “never” go that far with your critiques. Perhaps because you associate the word
blasphemy with such a level of sin, you believe yourself to be incapable of
this, making it something you do not need to worry about. So Jesus continues as if reading the notions
of your heart 2,000+ years later. He
continues in verse 32 saying … “And whosoever speaketh a word against the Son
of man, it shall be forgiven him: but whosoever speaketh against the Holy
Ghost, it shall not be forgiven him, neither in this world, neither in the
world to come.” The problem extends
beyond blasphemy. The problem extends to
merely “a word against” category. Now
even the slightest slight falls into the same unpardonable zone as does full
blown blasphemy.
Jesus makes the distinction that all of these same sins
against Himself are forgivable. But NONE
of them are forgivable when offered against the Holy Spirit, to be clear, not
in this world, or in the world to come.
The Holy Spirit is the third part of the Godhead. It is an independent entity of God, that we
understand little about. The Bible is
about Jesus, and His creation of us. It
is about our fall from trust, embrace of sin, and the redemption of man due to
the love and sacrifice of Jesus on our behalf.
Jesus is the main character, and the lens through which we see God the
Father. The Holy Spirit however, while
equally active in the redemption of mankind is not what scriptures are written
about. He like a silent partner who does
not want the spotlight, seemingly content to work in the background, noticed
only when His power moves upon us and we reflect the impossible because of
Him. But He is there. Some of us hypothesize that the Holy Spirit
might be the mom character in the Godhead, but we are as clueless as ants
trying to describe the scientific properties of stars. Perhaps we are only trying to make the Holy
Spirit more human, to be more understandable, and in this we mean no
criticism. Stupidity perhaps, but not
criticism.
On the other hand, we are quick to judge things, and even
results, where the methods are not of our liking. How many Christian musical artists have been
verbally associated with the devil, because we do not like their brand of
music? The phenomenon is not new, organ
music was given this attribution 100 years ago.
Now it is having electric guitars, and drums in the sanctuary that gets
some folks all riled up. For some it is
worship music that is so repetitive and simplistic it strikes more of inane
meditations than music that truly expresses our praise to God. The point is not what we like or do not like. The point is the results. When music points the heart to God, when
through our experience of music, we find ourselves coming to Jesus, longing to
submit our lives to Him. The Holy Spirit
is in that. For the Kingdom of heaven is
bent on bringing people to Jesus, the method of that journey far less
important, than the destination of it.
Our tastes evolve over time.
What we may like as a child expands as an adult. What we once thought so important, becomes
less so as we age. And Jesus, if we have
submitted even our desires to, is the Author behind those changes we do not
even understand. So many Christians are
so quick to judge methods, ministers, and messages they feel are inadequate;
but whose results are leading of people to Jesus, as being “of the devil”. This attribution is unfortunately a venture
into the unpardonable zone which even after the end of all things is still
remembered by the Holy Spirit and not forgiven us. And why should it be? We are saying our opinions matter more than
the ministry of God to lead people to Jesus.
Better we should say nothing and let the Holy Spirit do as the Holy
Spirit wishes.
And do not think this issue is confined only to criticism of
music and its various genre’s and methods in the church. It extends to issues or topics like women’s
ordination as well. This topic is not a
debate over doctrine or tradition. It is
a recognition of the gifts of the Holy Spirit, or a rejection of them based on
the opinions we hold. When the Holy
Spirit gives the gift of ministry to a woman pastor, and we as the body of
Christ reject her because she is a woman, or treat her less because of her sex,
we are effectively saying “no” to the Holy Spirit deciding who does what within
the body of Christ. Who are we to make
that call, particularly against the wisdom and plan of God? It holds true to the gifts of the Holy Spirit
that are given to young child who we reject because of his/her age. We reject the word of the Lord, because it
comes from a mouth far too young to really understand what they are saying. And in so doing, we speak more than just a
mere word against the Holy Spirit, we are rejecting His gifts, intentions, and
plans entirely; based on what, “adult” thinking?
All of these issues boil down to the ego we did not know we
held so dearly. It is the lens of self
we apply to things of a spiritual nature, judging what is good and what is
not. But our judgment was never what was
needed, our love was. Leave judging to
our God, who alone is qualified. It
becomes then an extremely dangerous thing to offer criticism, which in the end,
may well be criticism against the Holy Spirit.
Better we should quell our tongue, and keep our helpful “advice” to
ourselves. Better to uplift, than to
offer critical insights. Better to come
from a motivation of pure love, than from a heart who has yet to experience
that kind of motivation. When we seek
out the positive, instead of constantly focusing our eyes on the negative, our
world suddenly changes around us. It is
this focus on positivity that begins to reflect what Jesus is doing inside of
us. It is a reflection of being someone
different than we were before, of allowing the Holy Spirit to decide what we
say, and even what we think and believe, and trusting in Him, in God, to not
see us follow error to our doom.
Jesus then makes an analogy to help us understand this
change phenomenon in our lives picking up in verse 33 saying … “Either make the
tree good, and his fruit good; or else make the tree corrupt, and his fruit
corrupt: for the tree is known by his fruit.”
Those Christians you know, who never seem to run out of love, who always
have something uplifting to say; they are trees of good fruit. You can just tell they are connected with
Jesus, or how else could they say those things, and be that loving no matter
what circumstances they are in. or they encounter personally. On the other hand, those Christians you know
who always seems to have a critical word on their tongue, and who appear to
love themselves very much, perhaps their families, and very few others; they
are Christians of corrupt fruit, for they have yet to surrender who they are,
and let Jesus through the power of the Holy Spirit begin to truly transform how
their hearts love.
Jesus gets more to the point picking up in verse 34 saying …
“O generation of vipers, how can ye, being evil, speak good things? for out of
the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh. [verse 35] A good man out of the
good treasure of the heart bringeth forth good things: and an evil man out of
the evil treasure bringeth forth evil things.”
This is about words people, your words.
This is not about how well the pastor did last Sabbath, or how well the
missionary was able to convey what is going on in the fields. This is about what you say throughout the
week, and how you say it. Those
critiques you have to offer come from a heart that does not yet truly
understand love. Because when it does,
it has no time for words that do not bring comfort and joy. Those words that tear down, are not found in
the halls of heaven, for the hearts behind voice never feel that way in the
first place. And so many continue to
write this off as unimportant.
Jesus has other views continuing in verse 36 saying … “But I
say unto you, That every idle word that men shall speak, they shall give
account thereof in the day of judgment. [verse 37] For by thy words thou shalt
be justified, and by thy words thou shalt be condemned.” It is the words we utter when we give our
lives to Jesus that see us justified. It
is our words of surrender that see us transformed. It is the idle words we think are still not
important that see us condemned, as they continue to reflect the fact that we
have not yet surrendered, and have not yet seen our hearts truly transformed
into His image. Our words then are a
reflection of who we are. Our words, how
we say them, what we say, are a reflection of the hearts that lie under
them. And so many of us, spend so much
time, in words of critique; fully ignorant of our sins mounting against the
Holy Spirit all because we have opinions we equate to doctrine, and certainty
that surpasses the will of God. All of it
a venture into the unpardonable.
But love is stronger than that. At least the love of God is stronger than
that. That love is strong enough, not to
leave us as we are, but to transform us to what He intends for us to be. Not just what Jesus intends, but what the
Holy Spirit intends, and what God the Father intends. There are three parts to our united God, not
just one, or two. The third part, the
Holy Spirit, has a work and mission, and a personality as well; independent of
the others, as I am independent of my wife, yet bound to her as one flesh. The Holy Spirit is united in purpose with the
Godhead, and gives man gifts, and power that reflect the will of God. When we argue against that will, we venture
in unpardonable zones we dare not go.
For we will not soon forget our own actions that delayed, or dismayed
the ministry of God to redeem man, even though we ourselves are safely in the
Kingdom of heaven. That criticism we
offered that disheartened the soul of a potential believer who was so close to
accepting Jesus, but saw in us a discouragement they could not overcome will
weigh on us forever, a judgment we will not escape, the judgment of our
memories. The treasure of souls who
would have otherwise come to Jesus, is a treasure we should never risk, by
clumsy words, and “helpful” advice. If
it does not reflect the passion of God’s love through a heart that has been
transformed, our silence would be better preferred, coupled only with actions
of love in demonstration.
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