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28 April 2016

Before Daybreak:

Before Daybreak:

Reminders are an incredibly powerful thing.  Sometimes it’s an object, sometimes a sound, sometimes a person or a situation.
Simon-Peter is one of the most well-know of Jesus’ disciples. Peter’s authenticity allows us to identify with him still today. After Peter correctly identified Jesus as the Christ (Matthew 16:16) Peter was subsequently corrected by Jesus (16:23) for attempting to disrupt Jesus’ road to the Cross.
The night of their final meal together (Last Supper) Jesus predicted Judas’ betrayal. Soon after Jesus explained that all the disciples would abandon Him, saying “Tonight all of you will run away because of Me…” (Matt 26:31), but Peter objected vehemently, “Even if everyone runs away because of You, I will never run away” (26:33)! To this Jesus responded, “I assure you tonight, before the rooster crows, you (Peter) will deny Me three times” (26:34)!
Before daybreak it happened. Peter denied even knowing Jesus three times. Scripture tells us that after the rooster crowed Peter remembered Jesus’ prediction. Then “he went outside and wept bitterly” (26:75). Imagine how terrible a reminder it would be each and every morning for the rest of Peter’s life being awakened to such a POWERFUL reminder – ‘cock-a-doodle-doo!’ “I denied Jesus.”  Then remembering Jesus’ words, “I assure you tonight, before the rooster crows, you will deny Me three times!”
But Jesus didn’t leave it there. Judas betrayed Jesus and then hung himself. Peter denied Jesus and might have been driven to the same fate apart from God’s gracious intervention. Peter denied Him, the Cross happened, the tomb was found empty and Jesus was seen alive – risen from the grave! But Peter was still left with a perpetually haunting daily reminder of his denial every morning at daybreak – ‘cock-a-doodle-doo!’  “I denied even knowing Jesus.”
Imagine reflecting back on three years of doing ministry alongside Jesus Himself. Imagine how heavy the burden Peter carried for his hubris and ignorance, “Even if I have to die with you, I will never deny you” (Matt 26:35)! So Peter did what any man might do, “’I’m going fishing,’ Simon Peter said to them” (John 21:3). Scripture doesn’t tell us Peter’s motivation for going fishing all night ’til dawn, but I wonder if it might have been because there aren’t any roosters out there on the water. Daybreak came and Jesus called to Peter from the shoreline and Peter immediately plunged into the waters when he recognized Jesus’ voice.

Jesus intervened. Jesus didn’t owe Peter, or any of us for that matter, anything prior to the denial.  Jesus certainly didn’t owe Peter anything after it, but out of His gracious love He intervenes. When we read John 21:15-17 we find that Peter’s former hubris and self-delusions of personal strength and character fortitude are gone. Peter was clearly shocked to discover the harsh reality of who he was as events unfolded the night following the Last Supper: Peter found out that he was a weak-minded, selfish, friend-betraying, Christ-denying chicken. That’s what a genuine relationship with Christ does – it causes us to be faced with the ugliness of who we are independent from Jesus.
During the days since that fateful night Peter had clearly done some serious soul-searching and found that he wasn’t even a shadow of the man he thought he was.  Every dawning day that relenting shrill reminder came a-new, ‘cock-a-doodle-doo!’ “I denied even knowing Jesus.”
So Peter went fishing.  Maybe it was to clear his head or maybe it was to fall-back on something familiar and comforting.  But after spending the whole night out there come daybreak he didn’t have so much as a single fish to show for it.  Maybe Peter was feeling defeated, maybe Peter was feeling lost and alone, maybe the thing that used to bring him comfort and joy (fishing) was a new source of frustration and defeat, but just then Peter heard Jesus and had to be with Him. Maybe he remembered Jesus’ words, “Apart from Me you can do nothing.” Maybe Peter remembered watching Mary bask at Jesus’ feet while Martha was frantic in the kitchen. What we do know is that the arrogant and delusional Peter was gone, so when Jesus asked, “Do you love (agape) me?” All Peter could do was answer honestly, “You know that I admire (phileo) you.”

Before that night Peter really thought he loved Jesus, but it turned out that when it was going to cost him something he couldn’t even admit to knowing Him. Loving Jesus means the same for us as it did for Peter. It’s not about being tough in a moment and drawing a sword. Jesus, God, doesn’t need our protection. Jesus told Peter, “Feed my sheep.” That’s what loving Jesus looks like. None of us are tough enough, none devout enough, and certainly none are holy enough. Jesus said, “Apart from Me you can do nothing.”
Before daybreak each day we all have a new opportunity to either be like Old-Peter: in denial of our inability to do anything of any value apart from Christ –OR– to be like New-Peter: vividly aware of our own flaws and insufficiency. Peter never again said the words “I love (agape) you” to Jesus.  What Peter did was spend the rest of his life walking with Jesus to express that agape-love.
Jesus still intervenes in the lives of those who drop the act and feed His sheep.
Blessings,

-Kevin M. Kelley

27 April 2016

Simple NOT Easy

Simple, NOT Easy:




This morning I told my daughters that they needed to have all their chores done. Like most people, they have a proclivity for the path of least resistance. I made sure that there was no uncertainty regarding the instructions or consequences. Regardless, the oldest chose to be lazy and stayed in bed. After being called out on the glaringly obvious she then upped the ante and decided to lie, haggle, avoid, ignore, plea bargain, and implode. The one thing she never did was obey.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer said, “everywhere it is the same – the deliberate avoidance of simple, literal obedience.”

A pastor friend of mine once said, “When I’m counseling people I always hear them say, ‘I know the Bible says (fill-in-the-blank), but…’”

Bonhoeffer and my friend are making the same point: Everyone always has an excuse regarding why their personal flavor of disobedience is justified, warranted, permissible, or excusable.

When I told a young married man that he needed to give his wife access to all his email accounts, his Facebook page, his cell phone, etc., he began to to tell me why that wouldn’t work…

When I told another young Christian man with two ex’s that he needed to stop chasing women and love affairs and “seek first the kingdom of God…” he looked at me like I was a religious lunatic. Then he said to me, “Kevin, you need to be practical.”

Dietrich Bonhoeffer said, “everywhere it is the same – the deliberate avoidance of simple, literal obedience.”

In 2 Corinthians 10:5 Paul wrote, “...we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.”

Practice that today. Take captive every thought. Why am I texting this person and not my spouse? Why am I going to the break room when I know that person will be there? Why am I parking my car here? Why am I staying late at the office and not working from home? Why did I agree to meet with this person?

Take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.

The exclusive alternative is the deliberate avoidance of simple, literal obedience.

Since you know the Bible has already spoken on that matter, why ignore, justify, or linger?

Our counseling schedules are filled with people who thought, and continue to think, “just this once” it’ll be okay. It’s not. You’re making a willful choice to believe lies, wreck lives, and invite the enemy in so that he can steal, kill, and destroy.

If you’re not seeking Him first in all things (school, career, relationships, finances, health, recreation, relaxation, education…) then you have an idol in your life.

Spend some time today actively monitoring the thoughts which run through your head. Seize them. Analyze them. Find the root motivation. Extrapolate the inevitable outcomes. Make them simply obedient to Christ.

Blessings,
-Kevin M. Kelley

aMostUnlikelyDisciple.com

26 April 2016

SPIRITUAL FITNESS




As redeemed disciples of Christ we will be tempted today. We can be certain of that fact because the Bible says it is true. “Be alert and of sober mind. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour.”


Our adversary, Satan, is not the devil of Hollywood, or of popular or mythical literature. I'm fairly certain he does not have red skin, pointy horns, a pitchfork, hooves, fiery breath, or a barbed tail. That certainly does not mean Satan is fictitious.


The greatest deception Satan perpetuates - even in those who claim to be Christians - is his non-existence. Revelation 12:9 states, “The great dragon was hurled down--that ancient serpent called the devil, or Satan, deceiving the whole world...”


Satan is the original rebel/adversary against God. Satan (which means adversary) uses deception as his primary weapon. Satan is humanity’s greatest adversary – attempting to lead the whole world astray through deception, denial of his existence, and distraction from the reality of God.


One of Satan’s “go to” moves is to pose as something beautiful. As 2 Cor 11:14 Satan poses as an “angel of light.” Satan doesn’t lure us in with dirt and horror. No. He poses as an “angel of light.” Appreciation for the beauty of the human form quickly becomes sensuality. Sensuality leads to perversion, perversion to promiscuity and pornography, addiction, escape, relationship problems... finally the eventual and inevitable blowout.


That was case with both Eve in Eden, and with King Solomon. The desire for wisdom quickly becomes an unquenchable thirst for independence, power, manipulation, hubris and self-worship. Satan’s deception takes something, which God intended for abundant life and goodness, and our adversary twists, perverts, heapens, and spoils it through autonomy, rebellion, and selfishness... to the point it is unrecognizable.


When we recognize Satan as basically a “three-trick pony,” we can begin to break the bondage of sin-cycles in life and allow God to redeem and use us in accordance with His perfect will for His eternal glory. Breaking free is not through self-discipline, but exclusively in laying down one's life and following Jesus. When our lives are rightly aligned with Him and His mission - to be the gospel of light and truth to the ends of the earth - Satan is defeated in and through our new life in Christ!


Let’s look at examples from the Bible - specifically Jesus’ victory over Satan in Matthew 4:1-11.


TRICK #1: Lust of The Flesh – Satan tried to lure Jesus the same way he lured Eve. It seems subtle and innocent enough, so most of us don’t even notice how pervasive it is in our own lives. “Hey, want some fruit Eve? God didn’t really say you couldn’t eat it. Besides this is REALLY good stuff!”


Eve succumb to the temptation because she engaged in dialogue with Satan, the deceiver. Satan pulled the same parlor trick on Jesus. “Hey bro I know you’re hungry and I bet some freshly baked bread sounds REALLY good right now, doesn’t it?  Soooo, since you’re awesome, powerful, and the cat’s meow... Why don’t you just turn some of these stones here into bread? That sounds AMAZING doesn’t it?  I’ll even set a table for two!”


Jesus didn’t debate or argue with Satan. Jesus didn’t even contemplate the argument of the “goodness” of bread in his depleted state of hunger. What Jesus DID was to tell Satan that life is NOT found in bread, but in faithful obedience to His father. Jesus, unlike Esau, understood that it was better to die of starvation than to abandon the promise of blessing and fellowship with God.


Satan tells us that life is in the stuff we’re craving RIGHT NOW, all the stuff we see around us, on the internet, in catalogs, and that our neighbors have. That’s the stuff we obsess about as we hopelessly strive to find life somewhere - anywhere - INDEPENDENT from the true and exclusive Author of Life - God.


The Deceiver tells us that if we fill our bellies, fill our garages, our homes, our iclouds, our attics, our storage units, our walls, our collections... then that next bite,  that next thing is FINALLY going to be the one that REALLY satisfies us.


God tells us that life isn’t in the stuff. He told Adam it wasn’t in the fruit on the trees in the Garden of Eden, but in the fact that they - God and man - were together. Life isn’t defined by stuff, a feeling, a pulse, or even brain activity. Life is defined as perfect relationship – TOTAL DEPENDENCE - upon our perfect, holy, and almighty Creator.


TRICK #2: The Issue of Trust – When our enemy, Satan, saw that Eve was willing to dialogue with him about the “forbidden fruit,” the Deceiver quickly realized she didn’t know what God’s command was. So Satan took it a step further, “Hey Lady, It’s CRAZY to think you could die from eating something our wonderful, good, and holy God made! So grab some of that delicious fruit and become what God always wanted for you.”


Satan did the same thing with Jesus. “Jesus, we both know the Father is awesome, so let’s witness it for ourselves! Why don’t you toss yourself off the top of the temple here and let’s watch His angels rescue you?”


Again, Jesus didn’t debate or dialogue with Satan. Jesus simply rebuked the tempting deceiver with Scripture (Deut 6:16), “Don’t put the Lord God to the test.”  Jesus wasn’t about to play the “Prove it to me” game we all play with God at times. Look to the cross of Jesus Christ and the empty tomb! You’ll realize God has nothing left to prove. It is finished, i.e. PAID IN FULL.


The Apostle Peter wrote “rejoice inasmuch as you participate in the sufferings of Christ, so that you may be overjoyed when his glory is revealed.” The Apostle Paul wrote “I want to know Christ— yes, to know the power of his resurrection and participation in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death…”


Participating in suffering is not something we typically seek out, but it is something we anticipate as genuine followers of Christ.  We cannot resort to demanding that God prove His love for us (again and again and again) in our circumstances. God is more concerned with refining our character (being transformed into the likeness of Christ) than delivering us from our temporary circumstances. In fact, God uses the afflictions of our circumstances to teach us trust. He uses them to stretch, grow, and conform us into the image of Christ - loving obedient service in the context of Christian community.


TRICK #3: The Pride of Life – After luring Eve into dialogue regarding a seemingly harmless topic (fruit), Satan then injected doubt regarding God’s goodness into the conversation. Satan didn’t just have his foot in the door at this point, He was renting space in Eve’s head and heart.  As Eve pondered the Deceiver’s proposition of autonomy, independence, and entitlement under the guise of a harmless debate, Satan had already been given a key, moved in, and made himself right at home in Eve’s heart and mind.


“Eve-baby. You know, since YOU brought this up, and we’re already talking about God, I’m gonna do you a favor and let you in on a little secret: The truth is that the REAL reason He doesn’t want you eating this lovely little piece of fruit is because He knows that it’ll make you His equal. That’s right! You’ll be just as awesome as Him. Hey, maybe even better! He probably told you “Don’t!” because He’s scared you’ll do a better job than Him. Honestly Evie-baby, I’ve been watching you in this garden for a while and quite frankly with your ideas, your motivation, and your unparalleled work ethic... I’m 100% confident you’re the right gal for the job! I even took the liberty of making these ‘Eve for God’ buttons and I’ve handed them out to all our friends.”


Genesis 3:6 reads, “When the woman saw that the fruit of the tree was good for food and pleasing to the eye, and also desirable for gaining wisdom, she took some and ate it.”  Eve decided to exercise a coup d’état against God and to elect herself as the new, rightful, ruler of her own private universe.


When Jesus was presented with the same temptation from Satan it came as an offer to rule. “Jesus, buddy. All this you see - it's all mine. The hills - mine. The fields - mine. Oceans, animals, kingdoms - mine, mine, and mine! But here’s the deal: Unlike the Father, I’m the kind-and-giving sort and I’m gonna let you rule over everything. It’ll be like it’s both of ours. You know, a ‘tag-team-effort’ kinda thing. Is that cool with you?”


I wonder if Jesus laughed inwardly when Satan offered Him, God, the Eternal Son and Creator - authority over all things? Jesus is God and the anticipated Shiloh/Messiah with inherent authority as described in the Genesis 49:10 blessing to the tribe of Judah. Satan’s empty promise would be like us trying to lure Bill Gates with a broken calculator from 1965. Jesus responded, “Away from me, Satan! For it is written: Worship the Lord your God, and serve him only.”


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We will be tempted today, and tomorrow, and every day until God calls us home or Jesus returns. Satan will continually attempt to deceive us, like Eve, in an effort to make us believe we are the rightful ruler of our own universe.

Satan wants us to buy into the lie that we are the CAPTAINS of our OWN destinies. He wants to lure us into thinking that your life is your own, into thinking your decisions don’t affect anyone but you, into thinking “it’s just a little thing,” or “I work hard, therefore I deserve this. I’m entitled.”


It always starts out innocently enough, then, before you know it, sin is camped-out in the middle of our life with titanium roots running through, around, and beneath its foundation - directly to the core of our hearts.


What’s the solution? Christ. His life. His death. His RESURRECTION! His power and authority. Invite Christ to be the Lord of your life – top to bottom - and everything in between. He already knows the sin is there, but He can’t help until we repent and ask.


After Jesus, Paul is the best Spiritual Trainer ever. Paul gave us a spiritual exercise routine for REAL LIFE.


Step 1: Pray. 1 Thess 5:16-18, “Rejoice always, pray continually, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.”


Step 2: Seize. 2 Cor 10:5b, “…we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.”


Step 3: Be Transformed.  Romans 12:2, “Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.” To “be transformed” means we have to allow God to do the transforming according to His perfect standard. Submission, yieldedness, obedience, and service in the context of Christian community.


Step 4: Re-assess. 2 Cor 13:5, “Examine yourselves to see whether you are in the faith; test yourselves. Do you not realize that Christ Jesus is in you—unless, of course, you fail the test?” That’s not self-help garbage. After praying, seizing thoughts, and allowing God to transform us, we have to compare our life with a perfect objective standard, i.e. God’s Word, and Christ truly living in and through us.


Step 5: Repeat.


Sound impossible? It is impossible for us but not God. That’s why we need Christ and not Christian culture. That’s why we need the indwelling presence of the Holy Spirit and not personal piety, self-righteousness, or anything else our adversary sells us as a cheap-and-easy substitute for an authentic and transformative relationship with God.


“For physical training is of some value, but godliness has value for all things, holding promise for both the present life and the life to come.” -1 Tim 4:8

Are you spiritually fit? If so... then as His ambassador you are the vehicle of His gospel in this broken world. You are producing fruit. You are light and salt. You are the instrument fulfilling His Mission!


Blessings,
-Kevin M. Kelley
aMostUnlikelyDisciple.com

25 April 2016

Not The Season?

Not The Season?




Early on in my walk with Christ I found the passage of the cursed fig tree (Mark 11:12-14) most perplexing. "Now the next day, as they went out from Bethany, he (Jesus) was hungry. After noticing in the distance a fig tree with leaves, he went to see if he could find any fruit on it. When he came to it he found nothing but leaves, for it was not the season for figs. He said to it, “May no one ever eat fruit from you again.”

Today’s devotional from Oswald Chambers similarly discusses the topic of “in season” from 1 Timothy 4:2, “Preach the word; be prepared in season and out of season; correct, rebuke and encourage—with great patience and careful instruction.”

Oswald correctly notes that in season “does not refer to time; it refers to us.” He goes on to notes, “This verse says, ‘Preach the Word! Be ready in season and out of season.’ In other words, we should ‘be ready’ whether we feel like it or not. If we do only what we feel inclined to do, some of us would never do anything.”

The corruption of our hearts goes well beyond anything any of us will ever know or imagine. The extent of our depravity is something that God alone knows. If we are even brave enough to look - the occasional glimpses and glances we get into our darkness is readily dismissed, passively justified, or quickly ignored.

Why do our churches split rather than grow in unity in the knowledge and faith of Christ? Because we make church about doctrinal affinity and agreement - not Christ. Because underneath the thin sheen of acceptance and tolerance - we’re ugly and broken.

Why do we help, serve, or volunteer in ministry, but only go “this far?” Because beyond our comfort zone we know ministering to people without limit, hesitation, or reservation is dirty and painful - and we’re not bought into Christ to that extent. Which means we're not bought into Christ at all.

Convenience, excitement, recognition, and appreciation can all become idols of “exceptional moments” in the Christian walk. As Oswald notes, “If you say you will only be at your best for God, as during those exceptional times, you actually become an intolerable burden on Him. You will never do anything unless God keeps you consciously aware of His inspiration to you at all times. If you make a god out of your best moments, you will find that God will fade out of your life, never to return until you are obedient in the work He has placed closest to you..."

Serving Christ means serving His Bride, i.e. the church. Are you serving His Bride in the manner and capacity He gifted and instructed you? If not, what are you waiting for? Are you waiting for someone to make you feel good about obedience? Are you waiting for an altar call with trumpets, ribbons, and trophies?

Jesus is our eternal King. It is always the season for figs. There is no “off-season” for His disciples. We are always to be preparing and going, being equipped and equipping, being refined and refining, listening and obeying, being sharpened and sharpening, being pruned and introducing others to the Gardener.

When the redeemed soul reads John 15:13, “Greater love has no one than this, that one should lay down his life for his friends,” something inexplicable stirs deep within. The question is no longer what that means, but “How?” How can I give Christ all of me? How can I lay it all down? How can I yield every aspect, dimension, nook, and cranny of my life to Him for His eternal praise and glory?

When we ask the "How" question, Jesus smiles and responds, “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves, take up their cross, and follow me.”

So what about you? Are you in season or out? Are you waiting for someone at the church to call you back so you have an excuse for not getting involved? Are you holding off about getting involved because you’re not sure about “those” people? Are you still holding onto that hurt from the past and silently demanding that someone in the church “prove” their worthiness to you?

Peel back the layers, peer into your own heart, albeit briefly, and if you're honest you’ll see and smell the decay of entitlement, control, selfishness, and pride inside.

“He reveals the deep things of darkness and brings utter darkness into the light.” -Job 12:22

We are called to be the relentless and persistent fig tree! The one that produces in spite of the terrible soil, in spite of the arid climate, in spite of the awful circumstances. Through the impossible is how we know the fruit is from Him and not our wit, our charm, our charity - not from us at all.

There is no off-season for the friends of the King! Jesus said, “This is to my Father's glory, that you bear much fruit, showing yourselves to be my disciples.”

We can try to peddle our excuses to Him, but the truth is it’s always the season for producing fruit!

Blessings,
-Kevin M. Kelley
aMostUnlikelyDisciple.com



21 April 2016

LIVING UP TO

LIVING UP TO:



Oswald Chambers said, “We look for God to manifest Himself to His children: God only manifests Himself in his children.” Truly, we are a fickle lot.


Philip had been with Jesus for three years, yet he still had the audacity to say, "Lord, show us the Father and that will be enough for us." Jesus, the Christ, the Incarnate Messiah, the Lamb of God, our Immanuel, King of kings, and LORD or lord’s had cast out demons, calmed the sea, walked on water, healed, resurrected, and ultimately fulfilled every prophecy - yet Philip (just like us) wanted more.


Is there a day that goes by when we don’t repeat with our fickle faith the same sin of unbelief? “Jesus, show me! Then, that will be enough for me.”


The redeemed life is not a half-hearted affair. The Apostle Paul makes us keenly aware that our “old self,” the one full of entitlement, the one of consumer-mindedness, the self that was defined by selfishness, must be buried "with him through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life.”


Many well-intending Christian church leaders and pastors tell people all they have to do is “ask Jesus into your heart,” but that is neither truth nor biblical. Asking is not the road to salvation. Willfully laying down one’s life and yieldedness to Christ is.

Jesus made it unashamedly evident that the old self of autonomy, independence, rebellion, entitlement, consumerism, and selfishness must be willfully surrendered, die, and be buried when He said, “Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven.”

It is not merely a matter of asking or saying, but an honest transaction of the heart, which must be done. This is NOT a works-based salvation because God is the one who invites us to ask and who also completes the transaction. It is the biblical mandate for salvation. Jesus made this clear with Nicodemus when He said, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God.”


The “will of My Father in heaven” is not attending church services, passively listening to sermons, or even having a “quiet time.” The Father’s will is our yielded obedience to God as demonstrated perfectly by Christ and our subsequent personal investment and involvement with the promotion and proclamation of the gospel, i.e. the Mission of God.

Mission isn't something new. It's not something that popped up in the New Testament. It's an expression of the eternal nature and character of God. We see it perfected in the person and work of Jesus Christ: “Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus… he made himself nothing embracing the nature of a servant… he humbled himself by becoming obedient to death— even death on a cross!”


Oswald Chambers encourages us to ask this internal probing question, “Am I living up to my belief?”


If our faith is truly a transcendent transaction from God then the only way we can honestly answer “Yes!” is through the indwelling of Holy Spirit of God. The Spirit is forever urging us forward unto maturity in our walk with Christ and intentionally conforming us into His image and likeness with every circumstance, situation, and opportunity we encounter.


It is only through the power and presence of God that we can LIVE UP TO acceptance and holiness in the eyes of God because we have truly died to self, and now Christ reigns and lives in and through us!


Blessings,

-Kevin M. Kelley
aMostUnlikelyDisciple.com

19 April 2016

The DELIVERY

The DELIVERY:



This isn’t a post about baseball, basketball, or sports of any kind so bear with me for a moment if you’re not a fan.


Doc Rivers was a great player in the NBA (National Basketball Assoc.). Doc scored 9,388 points, had nearly 5,000 assists, over 1,500 steals, played in nearly 900 games, and was an NBA All-Star during his 14 seasons in the NBA. Doc also has a sterling resume’ as a coach.


One of my favorite quotes from Coach Rivers is this, “Good players want to be coached. Great players want to be told the truth.”


In his work, On Christian Doctrine, Augustine of Hippo (place not animal) wrote, “Nay, but let every good and true Christian understand that wherever truth may be found, it belongs to his Master…” (II.18).


That quote has been paraphrased as, “All truth is God’s truth.”


Over the past week Doc Rivers’ quote, “Good players want to be coached. Great players want to be told the truth” has resonated with me more and more.


I realized that Doc’s quote isn’t just true for basketball players or athletes because TRUTH is God’s TRUTH. Doc’s quote is true in-and-across all social, political, gender, and every other class and category of human relationships.


“Hey, I’ve notice that you don’t seem to be hitting the mark on _______.”
As an employee/employer do you want to be left alone, managed, or told the truth?


“Hey, your kids are doing ________ when you’re not home.”
As a neighbor do you want to be left alone, tolerated, or told the truth?


“Hey man, I’ve notice that you seem to be struggling with ________.”
As a Christian brother do you want to be left alone, coddled, or told the truth?


“Honey, it would really mean a lot to me if you would _________.”
As a spouse do you want to be left alone, enabled, or told the truth?


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We were all made in the image and likeness of God by God, which means we all have some capacity, albeit damaged by sin and rapidly diminishing in our culture, for recognizing truth. There are “truth” standards (music, distance, measurements, etc.) we all use everyday that allow us to interact and communicate with others in meaningful and productive ways.


Take a band or choir for example. If a note or chord is to be played then there must be some universal standard. I’m not musically inclined, but from what I understand “G” is universally “G.” If that didn’t communicate anything specific then music would be noisy chaos rather than music.


There is objective truth, and that “authentic truth” is that which corresponds with objective reality. The way we communicate authentic/objective truth, or the DELIVERY we use, is the real key.


As an employer/employee, man/woman, parent/child, neighbor, spouse, friend, or anyone within the classification of “human being,” should be open to the truth, and be ever mindful of our DELIVERY.


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Jesus came to communicate a profound truth, i.e. humanity is hopelessly lost in our sin, and Christ is our exclusive resolution.


Jesus conveys both authentic truth corresponding with objective reality (we’re hopelessly lost and He is our salvation), and His DELIVERY is flawless.


Jesus came and took our place by going to the Cross of Calvary. He asks for nothing in return except our acceptance of Him as Redeemer, Christ/King, LORD, and God. Jesus asks for our acceptance of that reality because it is objectively true.


“Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. And because you belong to him, the power of the Holy Spirit has freed you from the power of sin and death.” Romans 8:1-2


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Jesus’ main issue with the religious leaders of His day was their DELIVERY.


Jesus renounced their approach in saying to His disciples, “They (religious leaders) tie up heavy, cumbersome loads and put them on other people's shoulders, but they themselves are not willing to lift a finger to move them.”


The religious leaders didn’t want people to have a relationship with God. Instead, the religious leaders wanted people to hold them in high esteem, give them places of honor, and worship them as idols. Jesus’ anger and jealousy for God and the temple was a holy and righteous anger because those who claimed to be His priests and followers actually were an obstacle to authentic faith in God.


When we truly understand Ephesians 2:8, “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith--and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God,” it shapes our reality and DELIVERY into that of Jesus. As such, we don’t follow in the footsteps of the Pharisees and teachers of the Law by giving people “cumbersome loads” that are impossible to carry. We simply live out the gospel of Christ and use words when necessary.


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The gospel of Jesus Christ is called the “Good News” for a reason. It is the truth.


Most will reject the gospel of Christ because they want to be left alone.


Some will accept it superficially for a time.


A few want to hear it because they want to hear the truth.


The Church is Jesus’ delivery system. We aren’t tasked with judging who will hear. We are only tasked with the manner of delivery - in love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.


“But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth."


So are you?


Are you His witness? His living, breathing, loving, discipling witness to the ends of the earth?


Or do you simply want to be left alone?


Blessings,
-Kevin M. Kelley

aMostUnlikelyDisciple.com