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Who came to mind while reading?
12 friends have opened a study shared with them.
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12 friends have opened a study shared with them.
When I visited Honduras in 2017, I had an M.Div. degree, years of ministry experience, and a position with a global nonprofit. As the board chair for Creating Jobs, I wanted to meet our beneficiaries. We sat down to coach Joyce, a 17-year-old who runs a hair salon. A few hours later, we all realized we'd been in the presence of unexpected greatness. This teenager had hired three employees, developed a loyal clientele, was paying her way through college, and was supporting eight family members with her income. But we were most impressed with her kindness, humility, and compassion. I showed up to teach. But she gave the lesson.
Read John 7:14-24
The Festival of Booths drew devout Israelites to Jerusalem in late fall, when they could celebrate God's provision at the end of the grape, fruit, and olive harvest. Adding to the festivity, they lit torches across the city at night to remind themselves of the pillar of fire, the means by which God had revealed himself to his people during the Exodus. In Jesus' day, the religious leaders earned honor and influence by demonstrating mastery of their religious tradition. At the "main stage", in the Temple Courts, the most impressive teachers recited meticulous chains of citation to win debates and grow their influence. Though everyone has been searching for Jesus, they can't find him. He simply appears at the Temple and starts to teach. But unlike everyone else, he doesn't cite any authorities. Instead, he speaks on his own authority. More radically, he claims that when he speaks, it is God speaking. To the influencers of his day, he looks like a nobody pretending to be Somebody. Jesus does a one-two move. First, he reveals their dishonesty. Everyone knows he's a hunted man, so he calls them out: "Why are you trying to kill me?" In response, they reject his question, attack him as crazy, and accuse him of being the problem. Second, he reveals that he understands the Torah better than they do. He argues that from Abraham to Moses, circumcision is recognized as essential to individual and community wholeness. Yet their primary accusation against him is what? That he did far more than circumcise a man—he restored a man’s ability to walk! Having established the contrast, Jesus draws his conclusion: Judge righteously, not superficially. The hardest part? Jesus tells them that the only way to make righteous judgments is if their life is committed to righteousness. He said this surrounded by torches that said, "We want to be close to God." But when God showed up, they wanted to burn him.
When someone teaches or speaks about faith, what makes you take them seriously? Where do credentials rank on that list?
Jesus says willingness to obey comes before the ability to perceive. How have you experienced this to be true? How could this teaching be abused?
When have you dismissed someone's uncomfortable words by categorizing them instead of engaging with what they said?
Get honest with God. What's one area of your life where you need Jesus to bring wholeness to your life? Ask God and a friend for the restoration you need to follow Jesus.
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