RCF is for the convinced and the unconvinced, the lost, the found, the burned, the bored, cynical and the spiritual. We invite you, no matter where you are in the process, to explore, grow with, and experience God.

Thursday, November 14, 2013

John's Beheading

For RCF this week we are discussing the beheading of John the Baptist, Mark 6:14-29

It's an odd thing to consider that some of the most disturbing things that occur in the Bible often happen in the context of what we might consider to be opulent, or even beautiful. I think we so often wish to cast these episodes in dimly light corridors and alley ways because we don't want to feel that tug. The pull on our heart that would draw us into the room, into the party, and ultimately into Herod's very harrowing sin. But, Mark makes the setting of Herod's party very explicit for us doesn't he?


But an opportunity came when Herod on his birthday gave a banquet for his nobles and military commanders and the leading men of Galilee. 22 For when Herodias's daughter came in and danced, she pleased Herod and his guests.

There we have it. Herod's party was quite the spectacle. We actually meet Herod surrounded by the cultural elite of the day. As Mark continues the picture of Herod in the midst of this opulence comes into stark focus. While his step-daughter (also former niece) dances for his entertainment, Herod and the rest of the men are so stirred that Herod promised to give her anything she wanted. But now we see, that for all of his wealth Herod was actually quite out of control.

"And the king said to the girl, “Ask me for whatever you wish, and I will give it to you.” 23 And he vowed to her, “Whatever you ask me, I will give you, up to half of my kingdom.” 24 And she went out and said to her mother, “For what should I ask?” And she said, “The head of John the Baptist.” 25 And she came in immediately with haste to the king and asked, saying, “I want you to give me at once the head of John the Baptist on a platter.” 26 And the king was exceedingly sorry, but because of his oaths and his guests he did not want to break his word to her.27 And immediately the king sent an executioner with orders to bring John's head. He went and beheaded him in the prison."

Interesting....having been made a huge, and quite public vow Herod's stepdaughter ran to ask her mother what to ask for. This is where this passage gets really nasty, notice the literary context preceding Herod's party. Mark goes into detail about why John was in prison, and how Herodias felt about his presence. She was not happy that Herod listened to John, and sought opportunity to be rid of him, and then we see the fatal "but" in v. 21. "BUT an opportunity came when..."There was a plot here! Herodias knew her husband well, and desired John's death so much that she used her own daughter for leverage! 

John was in jail because his conviction of God righteousness angered Herod and his ill-gotten wife. Prior to this we encounter John living simply in the wilderness. John was beheaded because Herod, though mystified by him, couldn't even muster the slightest conviction in lieu of a request that was reprehensible to him. What an odd pairing of characters! Herod shows us that repentance is the only thing that will spare us when judgement arrives. Throughout this passage Herod is portrayed as a man conflicted by diverging desires, what he ought to do, and what he wants to do. His opulent party was fertile soil for his betrayal of John, and likewise, if we live solely according to our whims and desires, will do violence against our conscience, the Lord, and his Kingdom!

Thankfully we have the historical perspective of the cross, and resurrection of Jesus to hold us steady. We are not victims, but reconciled enemies!

To remind us that God used our evil by drawing it upon himself for our salvation. Praise God that his Word, and Holy Spirit whisper truth into our hearts, transforming them. Because, apart from those, none of us are any better than Herod.

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

When Pigs Swim

So, the RCF text tonight is the first several verses of Mark chapter 5. The famous story of Jesus' encounter with the demon-possessed man known as "Legion", and I honestly have to say that every time I come across this passage I scratch my head and ponder "What the heck just happened." Honestly, it's weird. Jesus just made it across the sea, and is apparently traipsing through a graveyard when he encounters this poor guy that is possessed by a whole bunch of demons.

Interesting tidbit #1
The demoniac ran up to Jesus and fell at his feet and this is where the conversation between the demons and Jesus occurs. Jesus apparently doesn't skip a beat about what needs to happen because Mark says in v. 8-9 "For he {Jesus} was saying to him {Legion}" the verb saying is in the present tense, thus indicating Jesus in the midst of casting the demons out.

Interesting tidbit #2
The demons negotiate with Jesus. This just freaks me right the heck out. Former heavenly beings in the presence of the Son of God, while fully recognizing who he is do not repent but desire to be delivered into another vessel to continue their destruction of the area. On that note, Gerasenes (the town outside of which this event occured) might not be the best place to invest in real estate.....or livestock as the story goes. Anywho, of all created things equipped to recognize and submit to the glory of Jesus Christ one would think that those who prior to their rebellion lived in the daily presence of the Trinity might relent from evil....but no. This "Legion" had once existed in God's infinite presence and now occupies their time by inhabiting some poor Gentile, forcing him to live in a graveyard and torture himself. They're frightened by Jesus, but not so much that they stop being jerks. When it was becoming clear that they couldn't resist the authority of Jesus they pull the sour grapes move of possessing a herd of pigs which they promptly drive crazy....making the herd (some 2000) run into the sea and drown.

Say what????

I've been thinking about this a lot today because I'm "teaching" on it tonight....one of the things I've realized is that the oddness of this passage stems a lot from my "post-modern/post-enlightenment" perspective of the world. I admit that the bartering of the demons frankly confounds me, and I'm not too sure what they hoped to achieve. But even more odd than that is the mere existence of these creatures. I go through my life happily ignorant of what is happening around me unless I can see, and quantify what I experience. But Kant was wrong about our situation. The lack of visible evidence of something does not automatically relegate that thing into the realms of abstraction and thought. Western thought tends to move in straight lines, with a linear beginning and end (which is nice to think about). But I wonder if the world is more complex than we think it. I wonder if eternity is pressing in all around us as people. I wonder what is really behind the choices I make. Who is really whispering in my ear.

The age old cartoon image of angels and devils on each shoulder seems childish at first, but upon reading this passage I sit here in my office with the hair on the back of my neck standing up. I find myself wondering what a guy would have to do to become tenement housing for a multitude of demons. My gut instinct is that one would have to be quite the piece of work to attract that kind of attention, but as I think about it more and more the adage "the road to Hell is paved with good intentions" keeps coming to the forefront of my mind.

Interesting tidbit #3
 The demons confess Christ's lordship....with stunning insight and accuracy. Yet they are not saved....at least they aren't if being cast out by Jesus is any indicator. We read in epistles like Romans and Ephesians that we are saved by grace through faith. But as we go about our days our faith sometimes looks more and more like a work we perform rather than an inheritance we've received. The most frightening thing about this passage perhaps is the sheer understanding that there is some veiled entity that only desires to torture and destroy us, and the world around us. I don't know what to do with people not liking me, much less am I comfortable with some invisible force bent on my destruction. Even though the handiwork of such a creature is evident all the time in the worst things we read in the news or see as we travel to work and to our homes. But I would rather see those things as the consequence of people's actions....because I can do something about that. I would rather think of those things as social ills, and consequences of polity....or even sin in the church. Because I vote, and preach. But, if Mark 5 is true, salvation through faith only comes by Jesus' personal intervention in something.....so, I have to sit.....and pray with great vulnerability. Knowing that Christ is far more powerful than this evil that masks itself in our headlines and relationships....this observed, but itself unseen, will bent on destroying all of us.


Maybe I should have taught this last week before Halloween...





Friday, March 29, 2013

Good Friday?


This is going to be difficult to read (it has already proven difficult to write) because in it, I have to acknowledge the presence of sin, and the corresponding displeasure of God. In a culture of moral relativism, and self-reflective justification Good Friday is an inconvenient burst of light. I say light, because of how it illuminates two very important truths. One, that God is so determined to redeem his creation that he would suffer a horribly unjust, insulting, painful, and isolating death to see it's deliverance. Two: that we, as a mass of humanity, were, and are so bent on living in the darkness of our own righteousness that we were willing to kill God himself because the light of his perfection illuminated the thoughts and motives of our hearts. 

You see, what we have at the cross is the Lord taking on the sum of our offenses against him, and turning his own judgment upon himself. Thankfully Jesus righteousness was fully able to preserve him from abject destruction at that moment. Thankfully, God in his goodness had set that plan in motion at the Garden of Eden. Since we have then such a great sacrifice on our behalf, should we not then (since we are free from sin's bondage) take that energy with which we previously pursued sin and pursue Christ's righteousness at our disposal?