Thursday, December 28, 2006

The Mark of the Beast

When the book of Revelation was written, emperor worship was in full swing. The emperor at this time was Domitian.

Domitian demanded that he be addressed as “God” even by his wife.

Ephesus was a very important city during Domitian’s reign. It was a city in which many citizens of that era would do their shopping, and without being able to shop in Ephesus, a person and his or her family would be without many of their basic human needs. Before a person could shop, he or she was required to declare that Domitian is God at the public altar.

Once a person declared the deity of Domitian, he or she was required to participate in festivals, give an incense offering, and make sacrifices in honor of the deified emperor.

Other requirements included recognizing that the emperor was the provider of life before drinking from public water fountains.

By practicing all the requirements of paying homage to the emperor, the person was considered to have taken on the “mark” of the emperor. To accept Domitian as God and to follow his requirements was to take on the “mark of Domitian.”

The Jews of Domitian’s time nicknamed Domitian "the beast."

Domitian also had a 35-foot statue that would be presented by his representatives wherever he went. This statue would be rolled out into the street and all the people present would pay homage to it by saying in loud voices, “Our Lord, our God, you alone are worthy of praise and honor and power." The statue depicted a very muscular version of Domitian who was actually very obese.

Those who accepted Domitian as God were allowed to shop freely in the market place as they were considered to have taken the “Mark of the Beast.”

“And the smoke of their torment ascends forever and ever; and they have no respite day or night—these who pay homage to the beast and to his image and whoever receives the stamp of his name upon him” (Revelation 14:11).

Forever learning,
Johnny

Friday, December 22, 2006

Reflection of Perfection

This morning, most people went into the bathroom, looked at a person who lives in the mirror, and they dressed that person up until he or she was exactly what he or she wanted that person to look like.

They looked as close as they possibly could at that person in the mirror so that if one nose hair was out of place, he or she could see it and pluck it out. Some of them stood, hunched over the sink in an uncomfortable position, holding their breath at times to keep their hand as straight as possible so that they could put makeup on that person as perfectly as possible or so that they could shave away every single whisker. And when they were done, they looked at that person again; looking over every shade and line to make sure it was exactly what they wanted it to be.

They brushed the hair of the person in the mirror and many took dozens of minutes making sure the hair of that person in the mirror was just right.

Many people dressed up the body of that person in the mirror, making sure his or her clothes were without wrinkles and being sure to have every part of that person’s body decorated in clothing that matches, with jewelry that adds to the splendor of the day’s attire.

And many of those people would not leave the mirror until they were absolutely sure that the person in the mirror would add beauty and value to the world.


There were also many who didn’t take any time at all to dress the person in the mirror. Many of these people never even looked at the person in the mirror. The person in the mirror was there, but the person in charge of dressing the person in the mirror had either no ability, time, or interest in dressing that person.

There are many reasons why some never take time to dress up the person in their mirror. Some don’t like the person in the mirror; some are blind and need someone else to dress the person in the mirror. And then there are those who have found themselves so busy that there is no time to spend on the person in the mirror. Finally there are those who have no mirror and don’t have the opportunity.

The person in the mirror is important to us because it is our own exact representation and some of us value what the person in the mirror represents. Some of us care about the gift that the representation of the person in the mirror gives to the world as a person who is cared for and valued, and cares for and values others.

And once we leave the mirror, we take ourselves out into the world where we live in someone else’s mirror. The world then has the opportunity to make us what it wants us to be and look like.

Who am I allowing to dress me up to spend my life representing? If I wonder into the mirrors of the world, I may end up as someone else’s neglected slob.


I am a child of God who is dressed every new day to represent Him. I am to be a reflection of perfection in the world.

Monday, December 18, 2006

I Am God!

In Luke 19:9-10, Jesus says something that we cannot understand unless we have at least a minimal knowledge of Hebrew and the seven exegetical teaching techniques used by first-century Jewish rabbis.

Not only would Jesus have used a play on words at times, but he would also have used the technique known today as remez. A remez is a clue or a hint at a passage of scripture without actually reciting the passage.

As Westerners, we want people to just come out and say what they mean. We even have a phrase that we use—“Say what you mean and mean what you say.” We also say, “Don’t beat around the bush.” But rabbis would always beat around the bush. And if you don’t have a deep and thorough knowledge of the text (God's Word) you will miss the message entirely.

First, Jesus uses a word play. Jesus says to Zacchaeus, “Today salvation has come to this house…” In Hebrew the word for salvation is yeshu' ah (God’s salvation). Jesus is playing on the words “God’s salvation” when he says in Hebrew, “Today yeshu’ ah [which sounds like Jesus' Hebrew name, Yeshua] is coming to your house.” Then he says, “For the son of man has come to seek and to save what was lost.” “Son of Man” is a Hebrew way of saying, “this man” or “I.”

When all the Jews in the crowd and Zacchaeus heard Jesus say that he has come to seek and save the lost, they heard the remez that Jesus used. And what they heard was the 34th chapter of Ezekiel which records the words of God saying, “Because my shepherds have scattered my sheep and have abused them and put them in harms way, I WILL COME AND BE THE SHEPHERD, AND I WILL SEEK AND SAVE MY LOST SHEEP” (My paraphrase).

What this means is that when they heard Jesus say, “I came to seek and to save what was lost,” they heard Jesus say, “’I am God!’ And I have come just as I promised through my prophet, Ezekiel, to bring my sheep out of the trees and the fields and to rescue them from the wild animals and the dangers of the world.”

Often we hear commentators and others say that Jesus never claimed to be God. That seems to be true until we understand the technique of remez that Jesus used often. Zacchaeus and the others Jews on that day heard Jesus say it loud and clear.

Forever learning,
Johnny

Thursday, December 14, 2006

How Do I Live a Godly Life (Inherit Eternal Life)?

"Eternal Life" is one Hebrew idiom that has been severely shredded by the Western theological knife. The very reason a Jew would accept and imitate the yoke or scriptural interpretation of a particular rabbi was because he believed that by doing so he would be able to "inherit eternal life."

Inheriting eternal life is a Hebrew idiom for "living life in the will of God." This meant that those who followed Jesus believed that if they obeyed his teachings and imitated his ways of living out God's will, they would gain the ability to "live their lives in the will of God" (inherit eternal life) because they believed that Jesus’ interpretations of the commands of God in the Torah were the perfect interpretations.

The eschatological reward and punishment system was not as important to Jewish people as it is to us Westerners today. In other words, first century Jews were not as concerned with the "afterlife" nearly as much as they were concerned with the "active" life of being a child of God who lived God's will correctly in the world.

It is not easy for those of us who grew up in the Western world where everything either ends with reward or punishment/ payoff or pay-up to imagine doing something because we should do it and it pleases God. I would even suggest that if it was somehow proven that there was not an afterlife reward for Christians that many who claim to be Christians would choose another religion.

I would challenge all Christians to imaging for just one day doing God's will without even considering a reward in the afterlife. Actually, pretend for one day that you are either going to live according to God's will or not and either way there is no heaven or hell in the end. This is the attitude of the first century Jewish world with regard to obedience to the will and ways of God.

We use the reward and punishment system because it works for most situations to which we are required to get people to do what we want. But what if people did their jobs simply because they were able to do them and the jobs needed to be done? What if there was no pay or loss of pay whether I did my job or not? Would I still do my job or be a life-long couch potato? And how would this impact those in supervisory positions. Would they be more likely to express words of appreciation and encouragement like God or would they use tactics of threats and fear like most religions?

God’s word was always a sweet tasting gift to first century Jews, which allowed them the privilege of obeying God simply because it pleased Him, not because they were mortally afraid of losing their jobs or lives. God’s word was written to encourage His people to follow His will, not to scare them into obedience.

Paul tells us that we are to do everything we do as if we are doing it for God (Col. 3:23). God doesn't say do everything we do as if we will be paid for it. We do God's will for the sole purpose of bringing His Kingdom into the world wherever we are present as His children.

Eternal life is the opportunity to please God by doing His will in the world, not the opportunity to live forever, though that may very well be part of the package. But even if our death brought nothing but the end of life, we should do the will of God and do it gladly.

Grace and peace,
Johnny

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Many Are Called, But Few Are Talmidim

Jesus said many are called, but few are chosen. Jesus chose his disciples, unlike the normal process of a rabbi's disciple gathering, which was to have a teenage student apply to follow him, by asking the rabbi "Can I be like you?" Upon the rabbi accepting the disciple, after testing him with many questions concerning the Torah, prophesies, other scrptures, etc., the disciple would live with the rabbi day and night from the time the disciple is 15 years-old until he is 30 years-old. Thirty years old was the time a disciple would become either a Torah-teacher or a Master-teacher. Master-teachers were rabbis who had the authority to make new interpretations. These rabbis were very rare, and they were the only rabbis who had disciples. Torah-teachers could only teach in the synagogues and schools and they could only teach what was considered orthodox teaching. Jesus was thirty when he began his public ministry in accordance with the common custom of his day. He was also a Master-teacher, recognized by every Jew of his day by the fact that he led disciples and made new interpretations of the Torah.

Torah-teachers taught students. Master-teachers led disciples. Disciples were not students. The difference between a student and a disciple or the Hebrew equivalent “talmid,” was that a student wanted to know what the teacher knows. A talmid wanted to be like the teacher. Jesus was a Master-teacher or 'Rabbi with shmikah (translated 'authority' in the English Bible).

When Jesus called his 12, he did not require them to apply to him and ask if they can follow him or “be like him.” Instead, he went to them and said, “Come. Follow me.” Or more literally, “Come. Be like me.”

The rich young ruler could not follow Jesus, because to be in the Kingdom of Heaven (a member of the group of Jesus' followers) meant living exactly how Jesus lived, icludeing Jesus' lack of wealth. The rich young ruler's refusal to enter the Kingdom of Heaven did not mean that the rich young ruler couldn’t go to “heaven” when he died. It meant that he couldn’t be a disciple. The Kingdom of Heaven was the group of disciples who followed Jesus in order to learn how be like Jesus, emotionally, spiritually, economically and every other way. It would be impossible for a rich man to be like Jesus, without being willing to share his riches.

When Jesus says it’s easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to get into the Kingdom of God (Heaven), he is actually saying that it’s easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a person who's not willing to share his wealth to become a disciple.

Very few people have ever been disciples. Many have been saved, but few have been chosen to be disciples. In fact, if you or I were to say to one of Jesus' disciples, "I'm a disciple of Jesus," even Judas Iscariot woud laugh in our faces. Jesus only chooses as his disciples those who desire more than anything in the world to be like him. Others may be saved, but only those who are willing to mimic him in every way are chosen to be his disciples.

In all truth, I probably don't know a single disciple. Only those believers who live every moment, every occasion, and every situation as an imitator of Jesus who says, "Before I do or say anything, how would Jesus respond, what would Jesus say, what would he do in this situation" are disciples. Everyone else may be saved, but they are not disciples.

Most Christians don't know Jesus well enough to mimic his words, much less his life.

Forever learning,
Johnny

Monday, December 04, 2006

Why Do People Quit Good Jobs?

The statistics listed come directly from the book, First, Break All The Rules: What The World’s Greatest Managers Do Differently.

“Based on in-depth interviews by the Gallup organization of over 80,000 managers in over 400 companies – The Largest Study Of Its Kind Ever Undertaken”

The following questions are those that when answered positively by employees, reflected a higher level of retention in a company or company department.

1. Do I know what is expected of me at work?
2. Do I have the materials and equipment to do my work right?
3. At work, do I have the opportunity to do what I do best every day?
4. In the last 7 days, have I received recognition or praise for good work?
5. Does my supervisor or someone at work seem to care about me as a person?
6. Is there someone at work who encourages my development?
7. At work, do my opinions seem to count?
8. Does the mission or purpose of my company make me feel like my work is important?
9. Are my coworkers committed to doing quality work?
10. Do I have a best friend at work?
11. In the last six months have I talked with someone about my progress?
12. This last year have I had opportunities at work to learn and grow?

"Those who answered positively to these questions also worked in business units with higher levels of productivity, profit, retention, and customer satisfaction. It was also discovered that the answers were different within individual business units, which proved that it’s not the company that creates a workplace where good people stay, but it’s the immediate managers that create retention or turn-over."

If you are a leader in you organization or company and you're having a difficult time keeping your staff, put yourself in their place and find out if you worked for yourself, could you answer yes to all of these questions. Despite the thinking of conventional wisdom, it's not pay and perks that keep good people.

If you, as an employee, would jump at the first good opportunity to leave your job for another, even if your pay and perks are good at your current job, I guarantee you have answered "No" to most of these 12 questions.

Forever learning,
Johnny