Recently at a workshop I heard Danny Simms quote an ancient theologian. The
quote: "If you pick the things out of the gospel that you do not like and
reject them, it is not the gospel you believe in. It is yourself."
What Christian dares make himself or herself bigger than God? than Jesus
Christ? than the Holy Spirit? What Christian declares himself or herself
wiser than divine inspiration or more knowledgeable than divine revelation?
What Christian presumes to correct God, to inform Jesus that He made a
mistake, or to tell the Spirit that He is unnecessary?
What Christian would do that? The Christian who legislates things that God
never legislated. The Christian who stresses things that Jesus never
stressed. The Christian who seeks to be God's temple while he or she
refuses to let the Spirit live in him or her. The Christian who "reasons
away" a teaching from God, an emphasis from Jesus, or a work of the Spirit.
The Christian who uses human logic to rearrange God's priorities. The
Christian who is offended by things that do not offend God. The Christian
who approves of things that insult God.
In short, every Christian does that. Each time we study the Bible to
evaluate God's teachings rather than to understand them, we do that. Each
time we study the Bible to judge others rather than to examine ourselves, we
do that. Each time we reject a clear emphasis from God because it disturbs
us, we do that. In some circumstance and situation, each of us uses our
judgment to ignore God's clearly revealed desire. When we do that, we place
our faith in ourselves instead of God.
"God does not want me to show mercy to people like that!" He will. "God
does not want me to forgive that person!" He will. "God does not want me
to be kind to those people!" He is. "God does not want me to return good
for evil when that happens!" He did and does. "If their repentance sickens
me, heaven surely does not rejoice!" Oh, but it does! Each time a person
repents, the success ratio of the cross increases.
God does not look at anything the way we do. He never has. Our challenge
is to look at everything as God does. We need spiritual glasses. Even when
we wear them, we struggle to have "eyes" of mercy, compassion, and
forgiveness.
I thank God for Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. They show me the good news.
They permit me to see my Savior in human form. They reveal to me what God
accomplished in Jesus' death and resurrection. They inform me of the
assurance of my hope.
We do not need the "gospel according to us." When I rely on the "gospel
according to me," I spiritually fail. When I rely on the gospel according
to Jesus, I spiritually succeed.
Link to other Writings of David Chadwell