Tag Archives: believe the good news

IN HIM WAS LIFE…

What is life?

We humans have many differing ideas about the meaning of life.

To some, life means still breathing on this planet regardless of circumstances. If I emerge from a serious accident still breathing, I am glad to be alive!

To others, really living means enjoying every possible pleasure, good or bad, filling their days and hours. “Living it up” is pure indulgence!

Still others are alive if they can do what they enjoy doing. For the rest of their time, they are only existing.

Life, for most people, means living and breathing on the earth, doing the best they can with what they have, and keeping on going until they stop breathing….then what?

Jesus made a startling statement to people to whom life was mostly a drag. The Jews lived under Roman occupation, often cruel and unjust, …and under the oppressive religious system of their religious overlords.

But Jesus said,

John 10:7-10 NLT
[7]… “I tell you the truth, I am the gate for the sheep. [8] All who came before me were thieves and robbers. But the true sheep did not listen to them. [9] Yes, I am the gate. Those who come in through me will be saved. They will come and go freely and will find good pastures. [10] The thief’s purpose is to steal and kill and destroy. My purpose is to give them a rich and satisfying life.”

Whaaat! “A rich and satisfying life” in this place, here, where I live, under this oppressive government that has bungled its mandate and made life intolerable? Is this possible?

Yes, it is!

Let’s look at life from a different perspective. What makes life intolerable? Is it our circumstances, or is it the way we interpret our circumstances? It depends on whether we live from the outside in, or from the inside out.

What do I mean?

Living from the outside in means that people and circumstances dictate my emotions and responses. Not only that but my response to people and circumstances are random, depending on whether they please me or not. Worse than that, my responses compound my feelings of fear, guilt, and shame when I react badly to whom or to what happens to cross me.

My circumstances often lead to depression because “poor me” becomes the trap to keep me “under the circumstances”. It’s all a vicious circle.

So, how can we escape this “inside out” mechanism?

First, of which we might be not be aware, there are two opposing realms in which we can live. The first is the realm of this world,  according to its systems and its principles, in which we live to satisfy ourselves as best we can. We judge and react to everyone and everything in the world by our standards, and how they affect us.

Despite God’s law written on my conscience, I do as I please because I want to do as I please. When my conscience hurts me, I feel bad, so I take it out on others, punishing them for my feelings.

When everyone living under the world system behaves this way to some degree, the outcome is conflict and chaos.

There is another realm which Jesus came to reinstate after sin had set the course for disaster.

Mark 1:14-15 NIV
[14] “After John was put in prison, Jesus went into Galilee, proclaiming the good news of God. [15] “The time has come,” he said. “The kingdom of God has come near. Repent and believe the good news!”

Who was John and why was he put in prison?

According to ancient protocol, John was appointed to announce the arrival of a great king. Although Jesus came to earth as a king, He was disguised and functioned as a servant, Isaiah’s “Ebed Yahweh”, the servant of Yahweh to carry out the Father’s will on earth.

John 1:19, 23 NIV
[19] Now this was John’s testimony when the Jewish leaders in Jerusalem sent priests and Levites to ask him who he was…
[23] John replied in the words of Isaiah the prophet, “I am the voice of one calling in the wilderness, ‘Make straight the way for the Lord.’ ”

“According to the New Testament, Herod Antipas, ruler of Galilee under the Roman Empire, had imprisoned John the Baptist because he had publicly reproved Herod for divorcing his first wife and unlawfully taking his sister-in-law (his brother’s wife) as his second wife, Herodias. He then ordered him to be killed by beheading.”
(https://en.wikipedia.org)

So, with John’s task complete, Jesus took centre stage to announce the restoration of God’s kingdom on earth. He came as the king to restore estranged mankind to God through His death for sin, and to set up God’s reign of righteousness and peace in the hearts of those who believe in Him.

Two kingdoms…seen and unseen, that rule over the inhabitants of earth.

The world’s kingdom is ruled by a usurper who had designs on Jesus’ position as Lord.

Ephesians 2:1-3 NIV
[1] “As for you, you were dead in your transgressions and sins, [2] in which you used to live when you followed the ways of this world and of the ruler of the kingdom of the air, the spirit who is now at work in those who are disobedient. [3] All of us also lived among them at one time, gratifying the cravings of our flesh and following its desires and thoughts. Like the rest, we were by nature deserving of wrath.”

“Satan is called a prince because he is a ruler and possesses power to manifest evil in the world through influencing people and commanding demons.”
(https://www.gotquestions.org)

We are all born into this realm, held prisoner to its ways, and we live it out by gratifying our own sinful desires. Our circumstances dictate our responses and leave us unhappy and tormented by our guilt.

In the realm over which Jesus rules as king, our sin is forgiven, guilt removed, ad selfish domination is broken. We are free to do life together with fellow believers in unity and peace through unselfish service and mutual submission.

God’s peace monitors our responses and is only disturbed when we act towards others contrary to the kingdom’s constitution of love. We can respond from our inner freedom from guilt and shame; God’s love gives us complete confidence to trust Him in all circumstances; His sovereignty keeps us steady in times of trouble; His peace acts as the buffer against worry and anxiety.

Living from the inside out is God’s intention for us. Through our trust in His love, we can respond to whatever life in a hostile and uncertain world brings across our pathway instead of reacting in anger or fear to every circumstance.

Jesus called this way of living, “a rich and satisfying life.”

What makes the difference between living in the world and living in God’s kingdom in the world? 0ne simple response to Jesus.

Turn away from sin by trusting in Jesus as Supreme Authority over your life.

Mark 1:15 NIV
[15] “The time has come,” he said. “The kingdom of God has come near. Repent and believe the good news!”

JESUS AND THE KINGDOM OF GOD

JESUS AND THE KINGDOM OF GOD

After John was put in prison, Jesus went into Galilee, proclaiming the good news of God. 15 “The time has come,” he said. “The kingdom of God has come near. Repent and believe the good news!” Mark 1:14-15

Jesus spoke repeatedly of the arrival of God’s kingdom, both present and future as “good news”. What did He mean by “good news”? What was the good news He announced by His coming? When the Romans arrived on the scene in the already-occupied-by-Greece land of Israel, for the Jews it was bad news. The presence of the Roman authorities was not only an affront to their sovereignty as a nation and their freedom as a people, but it also brought with it many forms of suffering.

They could never forget that they were an occupied nation. The Romans were everywhere, waiting to clamp down on them and quell any signs of rebellion. The people were subjected to severe taxation which left many of them impoverished and resentful of their overlords and those of their own people who worked for them. What’s more, their religious hierarchy were in cahoots with Rome, benefitting handsomely from applying whatever pressure was necessary to keep the peace.

Jesus’s announcement of good news might have sent His disciples’ pulses racing but for one thing – He made no attempt to deal with the Romans. In fact He practised and taught the opposite; He healed people indiscriminately, in response to their faith and not according to their race; He taught His disciples to love their enemies, and to submit to their overlords. That did not sit well with the religious zealots who were more than eager to get rid of the Romans by whatever means it took.

So, if the good news was not about ridding Israel of Roman occupation and re-establishing the glory of the Davidic kingdom, what was it about? To understand His message, we must go back to the Old Testament. Isaiah prophesied of a day that was to come when Jerusalem would be restored after the devastation of captivity. He offered good news to the people of Zion.

How beautiful on the mountains are the feet of those who bring good news, who proclaim peace, who bring good tidings, who proclaim salvation, who say in Zion, ‘Your God reigns!’ Listen! Your watchmen lift up their voices; together they shout for joy. When the LORD returns to Zion, they will see it with their own eyes. (Isa. 52:7-8)

“Your God reigns!” That was the good news but what did it mean and when would this happen? God would finally dealt with their core problem – sin – and deliver them once for all from the ravages of sin through His Suffering Servant. Isaiah graphically described, in fifteen verses (Isa 52:13- 53: 12) the nature of this deliverance – the sacrifice of the innocent for the guilty so that the guilty may be forgiven and be reconciled to God.

Inherent in Jesus’s message of good news was the restoration of God’s authority over His people when their sin was atoned for and removed once for all. This was not about Rome. This was about an occupation far more sinister and far-reaching than Rome’s. Their hearts were occupied by a usurper whose power over them had to be destroyed by exposing his deception and breaking his hold over them so that they could return to the God who had called them into a covenant with Him.

Jesus announced that the time had come for this to be accomplished. God was at hand to establish His reign in their hearts once again. Through them, He would extend it into every corner of society and every part of the globe until Jesus returns to dispose of the devil and establish His eternal kingdom on earth.

Adam and Eve sold out to the deceiver who aspired to usurp God’s place as Lord! Over the millennia, the devil has done everything in his power to own and keep this title by enslaving the human race through the sin, sorrow and suffering that came with their disobedience. The good news Jesus brought was truly “good news”. God said, “Enough is enough! Satan has had his day and now the time for deliverance has come.”

God’s reign is intended to restore righteousness and justice in the earth where evil reigns and destroys. When Jesus is acknowledged as Lord by every person who has ever lived and every angelic being, good or evil, Satan and all evil will finally be disposed of to the place where he belongs. All creation will know that Jesus is Lord and not the devil or any of the false gods he has hidden behind from the beginning of time.

The new era of the kingdom of God was ushered in when Jesus came, which He demonstrated by His words and works. The kingdom of God is among us now, but not yet in its fullness. It will only come fully when Jesus returns to reign over His redeemed people and a renewed and restored earth.

Scripture is taken from THE HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION®, NIV® Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.