Thursday, August 16, 2018

You Are Not What We See


Judges 6:12 - And the angel of the Lord appeared to him and said to him, “The Lord is with you, O mighty man of valor.” (ESV) 

Gideon was anything but a mighty man of valor. He was grinding wheat hiding in the bowels of winepress instead of the easier, but exposed, threshing floor that was designed for it. His people were oppressed. He was scared, but the angel greeted him with two powerful Hebrew nouns, gibor and hayil, either of which on its own was used for the strongest of heroes.

Gideon did not look like a mighty person of valor. Gideon did not act like a mighty person of valor, but God saw more in him than anyone else could. God saw the real Gideon and called it out of him. Gideon went out to lead an incredible victory that brought freedom and deliverance to the people of Israel.

What was true for Gideon is true for you. You are more than you can see. You are more than any of us can see when the LORD is with you. As Gideon experienced, living out our new identity is not always easy, but the world changes when we choose to live as the mighty people of valor we were created to be.

Wednesday, August 8, 2018

Misreading Motives


Joshua 22:11-12 (ESV) – The people of Israel said, “Behold, the people of Reuben and the people of Gad and the half-tribe of Manasseh have built the altar at the frontier of the land of Canaan, in the region about the Jordan, on the side that belongs to the people of Israel.” And when the people of Israel heard of it, the whole assembly of the people of Israel gathered at Shiloh to make war against them.



Someone has wronged you. Someone has hurt you. What did you think when that happened? Most of us immediately assume that other person intended to cause us to suffer. While that may be the case sometimes, more often than not we misinterpret why others have done what they have.



As Israel made its way from slavery in Egypt to occupying the Promised Land that is the Nation of Israel today, they first came to the other side of the Jordan River, to what is now the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. The Israelites subdued those empires and claimed that land as part of their future territory. The tribes of Reuben and Gad and half of the tribe of Manasseh asked Moses if this could be their land. (See Numbers 32.) Moses agreed if their men would fight to conquer the rest of the Promised Land before they settled there. The two-and-a-half tribes agreed. Many years later in Joshua 22, the Promised Land was conquered, the two-and-a-half tribes returned home across the Jordan River, settled in their homes, started farming their land, and built a large altar right by the river that the Israelites west of the Jordan could see.



Those tribes immediately assumed that the Israelites on the east side of the Jordan had built the altar as a place of worship in direct violation of God’s established law only to worship at the one place God approved (Deuteronomy 12). They were convinced the two-and-a-half tribes wanted to form their own nation with their own system of worship, and they were not about to allow that to happen. They got ready to go to war to make things right.



The problem was their assumptions of the Eastern Tribes’ motives were mistaken. They explained in Joshua 22:22-29 that they did not build the altar to be a place of worship or a symbol of division between the two parts of the Nation of Israel. Instead, their motive was the exact opposite. The altar was to be a witness – a reminder – that they were one nation and that worship was to happen at one place.



Had the two sides not taken time to determine the real motive behind the action, war would have followed with many unnecessary deaths. That probably would have led to the permanent division neither side wanted.



We each will have situations that will lead us to make assumptions about others’ motives. We may be tempted to assume the worst. That can lead to relational destruction and bitterness. Don’t pay that price if you don’t have to. Take time to hear their story before you judge others.

Monday, July 30, 2018

A Servant of All


Mark 9:35 – “If anyone would be first, he must be last of all and servant of all.”



Over the last twelve years, the void the last Monday in July brings has become tough for my wife Keira and me. For twenty-three days, we load coverage of the world’s greatest bike race on the DVR and watch the exciting competition, unreal physical effort, and sometimes-crazy drama that accompanies the Tour de France. 2018’s race had some very touching stories, and this year’s winner is a surprising living embodiment of Jesus’ words. 

Professional bicycle racing looks like an individual sport, but winners truly depend on their teammates. Because, like bird formations, the rider in front of a group of cyclists does far more work than those in the peloton, riders who win grand tours like the Tour de France have several teammates called “domestiques” (the French word for domestic servants) who work as hard as they can so the team captain can go on and win the race.  

Geraint Thomas was born and raised in the County of Wales (part of the United Kingdom). He started bike racing at the age of ten, went pro at eighteen, and got 140th place of 141 riders in his first Tour de France in 2007. He became a domestique extraordinaire. He worked hard to help the first and second British riders in history to win the Tour de France (Bradley Wiggins and Chris Froome). Geraint was set to work hard again in the 2018 Tour to help Chris Froome to win his fifth Tour de France and hopefully go on to be only the second rider in history to win all three grand tours in one year after winning Italy’s Giro d’ Italia in May. Yet, Geraint Thomas won two stages in the second week of the Tour that put him into first place, wearing the famed Yellow Jersey. Even after getting to that lead spot, when asked if Team Sky was now going to work for him, Geraint said, “No, it’s still about Chris. I’m here to help Chris Froome to win.” 

The third week featured three hard days of riding in the Pyrenees Mountains near Spain, but Chris Froome was not as strong as usual. Other teams’ riders threatened to take away the Yellow Jersey, but Geraint would not allow Team Sky to lose. When Chris was not able to keep up with the leaders in Stage 17, it was clear Geraint, who had always ridden to serve others, now had his chance to shine. Four days later, he rode into Paris in yellow and took his place at the top of the podium, as the winner of cycling’s greatest race.  

Geraint Thomas never expected to win Le Tour in his life, but his selfless brutally hard work was key to Team Sky winning seven of the last eight Tours de France. How do you work? Do you serve diligently and selflessly? Do you put in your best effort when someone else will benefit? Remember, even Jesus Himself “did not come to be served but to serve and to give His life a ransom for many.” (Mark 10:41)