Heaven: Why The Divine Nursery Matters

heaven-1We have a ton of images about heaven in our head, but few of them include a divine playground. Jesus says that the kingdom of belongs to little children. Think about this. Christ does not compare the kingdom of God and acceptance into the kingdom upon to our great choirs. He does not compare entrance into the kingdom of God to the great preachers. No, Jesus says that we get the best feel for heaven when we go to the nursery. When we spend time loving and caring for little children, then we begin to see what heaven will look like.

How strange. Today, children are not viewed to be blessing by our culture. They are viewed to be a burden and a cost. According to the Department of Agriculture, the average parent will spend $233,610 to raise a child. Children are viewed in terms of costs. Being expensive, children quickly become a threat to their future parents’ financial, career, and life goals. Consequently, parents delay having children. According to the New York Post, the number of live births per 1,000 women in the U.S. has dropped 9 percent, while the number of small dogs has ballooned to over 40.8 million. As one pet mom said, “Dogs are better!” She is not alone. On the other side of the spectrum, the new slogan goes, “Cats not Brats.”

So why go back and focus on children? Why go back and focus on these helpless little burdens who do nothing but demand time and attention that should be devoted to our goals, hopes and dreams? Why in the world would Jesus make such a comparison?

Jesus makes such a comparison because we are prideful human being who forget our place in the universe. We forget that we are helpless before God.  We need to focus on children because Jesus saves. If we miss the beauty and the value of Children, we will miss the beauty of heaven and of Christ. According to Mark 10:13-16, we need to approach Jesus as a child because Jesus saves.

To come to Jesus as a child, we must abandon the disciples and our propensity for self-worth because Jesus saves. When the mothers with young children (padawans) approach Jesus, the disciples rebuke them. The word rebuke is the same word Jesus uses when he encounters and cast out demons in Mark 1:25 and 9:25. This is a harsh command of separation. They are clearly demarking who Jesus has time for and who Jesus does not have time for. The blessings of Jesus’ touch were to be reserved for those who deserved his blessing and the privilege of being with God. Children were not worth of such an invitation. Thus, the disciples rebuked them.

To understand why the disciples arrived at this conclusion, we need to reflect some on Jewish culture. The Jews and the disciples saw children as a disruption to the advancement of the kingdom. They had the idea that Jesus wanted to only spend time and devote time to people who could help him in his mission. They held to a mantra that Jesus helps those who can help him. 

Consequently, Peter offers to build Jesus a tabernacle on the mount of transfiguration, they are stunned when the rich young walks away, and James and John want to sit on Jesus right and left hand. The disciples were all about networking with people who could help God do God’s plan.

In the process, they became prideful and missed the whole point of the gospel. They essential are acting on the idea that God needs them. They are part of the twelve because they have something to offer to God. They are special.

michael-mims-130838We often tend to view life the same way. We will tell people that they are so special that God died on the cross for them. We say that God died so that you could be happy, have a good marriage, and find a great job. We say things like: “God needs you. Without you, God cannot reach the nations. Without us, God cannot accomplish his goal to seek and safe the lost. Brother, sister, friend, I am so glad God saved you because together we can do so much.”

With this mindset, we charge after the talented. We want every Championship coach to be saved so that they can speak at our banquets. We want our Presidents to pray so that we can finally have a Christian nation. We want the wealthy man or woman to come to our church so that we can finally build a new worship center. We want to devote all our energies to ministering to and to reaching those who can greatly help us, our churches and our families.

We like the disciples do not have time for the children and for the helpless. They are a burden a distraction from our vision statements and our growth. We don’t have time for ‘brats’ because we are focused on the good people of this world.  Like society, we can be tempted to devalue children, because we fashion ourselves as being self-sufficient.  We see ourselves as co-pilots with Christ. And so we rebuke the little children who want to be with the creator. We think we have done God a great service.

But we have not. Jesus gets angry with the disciples. He becomes enraged. The disciples strong reaction is meet by an equally strong reaction from our savior.  The text says, “But when Jesus saw it, he was indignant” (Mark 10:14a). Jesus was angry with the disciples because he never came to seek and save the self-righteous. Jesus never sought out people because he needed them. No man, woman or child can offer anything to God. Jesus did not come to collect his A team. He came to save the sick. As he said in Mark 2:17, “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. I came not to call the righteous, but sinners.”

Jesus is mad at the disciples because they have missed represented the gospel. They have given the impression that heaven is comprised of self-righteous men and women who can boast of all they have down for God. In reality those people are not in heaven. They are in hell.

Because the gospel has been misrepresented, Christ cannot remain silent. Truth hangs in the balance, people’s souls hang in the balance. And so, he speaks.

Starting in verse 14, we read: “Let the children come to me; do not hinder them, for to such belong the kingdom of God. Truly, I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it.”

Jesus cannot tolerate the view of the disciples. We must not tolerate it because their view is a distortion of reality because Jesus saves. And because salvation is not based on our works and on our abilities to contribute to the kingdom of God, Jesus saves all the little children who die.

Those who die before they can grasp the gospel are in heaven because Jesus saves. Yes, their bodies are tainted by sin. If they were free of sin, they would not die since death is a byproduct of sin. And, yes in some cases, those little souls did willfully sin before death. We have all seen a little one cry selfishly or hit their mom in anger. But salvation is a free gift of God. Jesus saves not because these kids are worth it, but because he loves them and covers their sin with the righteousness of Christ. God pays for their sins on the cross and they are in heaven because they have trusted Christ.

Writing to a family who recently lost a little baby, John Newton, the author of the hymn Amazing Grace, said, “I hope you are both well reconciled to the death of your child. I cannot be sorry for the death of infants. How many storms they escape! Nor can I doubt, in my private judgement, that they are included in the election of grace.”

I agree. God saves children and can freely do so because the disciples got salvation wrong. Salvation is not based on us. It is based on Christ.  Because of God’s grace, heaven is in large part the nursery for infants. As John MacArthur notes,

“If children are not readily and fully received into the kingdom of heaven, the analogy to spiritual conversions would be a very poor one. As it is, the analogy is a great one! Children are readily accepted into the kingdom.”

Friends, we cannot cling to our pride, we cannot assume that we have something to offer to God, and we cannot pretend to be self-sufficient if we hope to get into heaven. The kingdom of God is not a senior adult home for weary saints who worked hard nor is it a home for the brave fighters of old like Valhalla who strove valiantly against the world. It is a home for humble infants. Do not be like the disciples here and cherish your works because Jesus saves.

If we are not to boast in our accomplishments, what are we to do?

We are to be like children because Jesus saves. In verse 15, we read: “Truly I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it.” To be right with God, we have to view our works and our ideas correctly. We Jesus tells us to be like children, he is not calling us to be innocent. Rather such a call would point to self-works to purging’s, to great feats of human strength. But as we just looked at this is not Jesus mission. As James Edwards said,

“If we assume that Jesus commends children because of their innocence, purity, acceptability, or even spontaneity, then we must conclude that the disciples acceptability in God’s kingdom depends on similar virtues. But, as Mark’s depiction of the disciples makes repeatedly clear, that I exactly what they are not, nor are we.” 

As the famous preacher Charles Spurgeon said, “If Infants be saved it is not because of any natural innocence. They enter heaven by the same way we do: they are received in the name of Christ.” 

Rather, the call to be a child is a call to helplessness. The disciples are right to assume that the children have nothing to offer Jesus. What they get wrong is their ability. Like the children they have nothing to offer the heavenly father. They are just as worthless as the tiny little children. But, they do not realize it. This is the difference between the children and the disciples, between the children and the Rich Young Ruler, and between the inhabitants of heaven and the residents of hell. The first understand that they bring nothing to God. The second still think they can save themselves.

To embrace Jesus as our savior, we must embrace Jesus and Jesus alone as a child. We must humbly admit that we are sinners. We must agree with Isaiah and declare, “We have all become like one who is unclean, and all our righteous deeds are like polluted garments. We all fade like a leaf, and our iniquities, like the wind, take us away.” (64:6). When we get to this point and only when we get to the point of humbly depending on God to save us like a child can we enter the kingdom of heaven. They are no prideful, self-righteous people in heaven. There are only children and men and women who are like children. We have to trust Christ and Christ alone to save us. Our boast is the cross. We become nothing and Christ becomes everything. We submit our thoughts, our words, and our actions are all to his divine authority.

The world finds this message offensive. It finds children offensive because they remind us of this truth: We are not God. Children call us to repent. They call us to realize that our good deeds will not save us. The message calls us to admit that our cars, our trips, and our crazy experiences will not satisfy. It is a call to submit to the God of the universe, crying out, “God save me. I am a sinner.” But it is a call, we hate. It is a call we cannot embrace without the aid of the Holy Spirit. But it is the call we have to embrace if we want to enter heaven.

It is good for us to have children, to work with children and to welcome them into our church services. Because as they struggle with eating, with sitting still, and with obeying commands, we grasp a sense of our own condition. We see our frailty, our propensity for foolishness, and our need for our heavenly father to shepherd us through life. I fear that we often want children out of sight and out of mind, because we want to think ourselves sufficient for our spiritual lives. We want to focus on the flashy ministries that are praised in Christian media. We do not want to be reminded of our weakness and need for divine help. Don’t flee from your condition. Embrace it, embrace children, and humbly follow after Christ, proclaiming yourself to be nothing and Christ to be everything.

And the great truth of this passage and of the gospel is that all who go to Jesus as a child will be saved. Notice verse 16, “And he took them in his arms and blessed them, laying hands on them.” If we humble ourselves, we will not be rejected. All kinds of prideful pastors, teachers, elders, and deacons will be rejected by God. But all those even the most insignificant of us who humbly embrace Christ while no one is watching will be welcomed into the arms of Christ. He will embrace the children as his sons. He will bless them with the blessing of Christ. And he can do this and do it fairly because he has paid for every single sin we have committed.

“For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.” (2 Corinthians 5:21)

Christ has made a way for the humble to enter the kingdom of God. He offers salvation and entrance into heaven. But to get there, we must do the unthinkable. We stop trusting in our good works and humbly embrace Christ as a child. Are we ready to enter heaven as little children?

Christmas Reveals the Worst in People

dark-side-of-humanity.gifThe Christmas holidays is perhaps one of the greatest sources of hope for humanity. We gather together to eat big family meals, we exchange presents with long lost relatives, and we take an interest in the poor and broken. The very lights on the street seem to boldly proclaim that hope for humanity does exists. As Lady Gaga recently said, “Kindness is the cure to violence and hatred around world.” Is there a kinder time than Christmas for the western world? Let the hope bubble up anew.

And though the world is understandably hopeful at Christmas, we must recall that this is not the point of Christmas. The point of Christmas is not that a lifetime of kindness can change the world. The point of Christmas is that humanity is beyond fixing. The point of Christmas is that humanity forces the kindest person in the world, Jesus, into stable and then seeks to violently kill the baby that offers to heal the sick and to restore the broken-hearted. The greatest gift of kindness is met with some of the greatest expressions of human violence and hatred that the world has ever known. The message of Christmas is that men and women are hopeless race devoted to violence and hatred. Even the best of us violently reject God’s loving design for our lives. In short, the message of Christmas is one of human despair. As the philosopher Bertrand Russell once said of the human condition:

The life of Man is a long march through the night, surrounded by invisible foes, tortured by weariness and pain, towards a goal that few can hope to reach, and where none may tarry long.

But that is not the end of the story. Christmas is also comes with a message of divine hope. Men and women are not left condemned to wonder through clouds of doom on their way to death.

In Isaiah 9:2, the prophet says,

The people who walked in darkness Have seen a great light; Those who dwelt in the land of the shadow of death, Upon them a light has shined.

The story of Christmas is the story of how a great light broke into our dark world. It is the story of how the Son of God came to earth as a baby to fix our relationships and to usher in peace between us and God. It is the story of how our God suffered poverty, loneliness, hate, and even death to overcome the violence and hatred that ultimately lead to his death on the cross. Christmas is not about our acts of kindness; it is about how Jesus’ one act of kindness ( his death, burial, and resurrection) liberated all of God’s children from this world of doom. Christmas is hopeful precisely because it is all about Christ.

And Christ is not the ultimate motivator of human self-advancement; he is the savior. He is as Isaiah wrote the, “Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.” He is the God of the universe who sacrificed all to save us from our despair. This Christmas and every Christmas, we should seek to make much of him as we talk to our kids, as we open presents, and as we interact with our families.Christmas is a time of hope!

How do you point people to Christ at Christmas?

Why Don’t They Get It?

why-dont-people-get-it“Why don’t they get it?” is a question we often ask as parents. Why don’t our kids understand that crawling off the sofa, sticking Cheetos up their noses, and driving their cars via their knees while texting never ever ends well? Why? Why?

But if we are willing to be honest; it is not just the kids that we wonder about. When we look around our churches, we can be tempted to ask them same question. “Why don’t they get it?” Why doesn’t Sally see that her complaining is super unhelpful, why doesn’t Jim realize that criticizing other peoples’ kids produces nothing but useless conflict, and why doesn’t Susie understand that her constant attack on sugary drinks is not leading people any closer to Christ? Why don’t people understand the beauty and glory of Christ like we do? Why don’t people get it?

The easy answer is, “they cannot get it.” Apart from Jesus’ divine revelation none of us can get it. No one can understand spiritual things on their own. In Mark 8:22-26, Jesus heals a blind man in Bethsaida. But he does not heal the man in the usual way. He first touches the man’s eye and then ask if the man can see. The man responds in verse 24 saying, “I see people but they look like trees, walking.” Some people have assumed that the man did not see at first because he lacked faith. His faith was only powerful enough for a half healing, if you will.

But this is not what is going on. No mention is made of the man’s faith. And Jesus is more than powerful enough to overcome a little unbelief. Look at all the miracles Jesus performed for the disciples benefits. They were not exactly the most ardent believers as Jesus began his ministry.

Rather Christ performs the miracle in stages because he wants his disciples and us to understand an important lesson. We do not lead ourselves to Christ. Jesus is showing us that salvation and spiritual knowledge comes exclusively through him.

The man starts out blind in the narrative. Christ touches the man’s eyes; he begins to see. Jesus touches the man’s eyes a second time and he fully sees.

Right before the miracle in Mark 8:21 Jesus directly asked his disciples, “Do you not understand?” In short, he asks them,  “why do you not understand who I am and what I am about. Why don’t you get it?” The disciples have seen Jesus perform bunches and bunches of miracles. And yet they don’t get it. They don’t understand who Jesus fully is.  So, why don’t they get it?

Well, Jesus doesn’t leave us in suspense. He answers his question with a miracle. Jesus shows them that spiritual knowledge comes only through the miraculous power of Christ. Through this miracle, Jesus teachers the disciples that they are blind and that they can only see when Christ gives them sight. And by working in stages, Jesus shows his disciples that people can be a different parts of the spectrum. Some see vaguely. Others see clearly. But both have encountered the living God and have received their sight from him. Both can only see what they see via God’s help.

What does this mean for us?

First, we must embrace humility.

The reason we get something, the reason we don’t struggle with complaining, bad language, or credit card debt is not because we are something special. We have not worked hard enough nor been bright enough intellectually to earn this standing. We have received mercy through Christ Jesus our savior. We have the understanding we have because God has caused our blind eyes to see. We are started out just as blind as everyone else. We must not forget where we came from.

And we must know where we are going. We are on our way to perfection in heaven. But we are not there yet. And though God has granted us some spiritual wisdom and insight, we have not arrived. Remember Peter. In Mark 8:29, we see that Peter final gets it and declares that Jesus is the Christ! And then Peter turns around and tells Jesus to abandon the gospel. In short great growth is meet by great failure.

The same is true of us. We should want to be peaceable, kind, and out of debt. But the moment we place our hope in our nice words, or our generous giving, or in our budget, we become prideful and prone to sin. If we measure our success by our own standards and fail to realize that God also wants us to love our spouse better, to stop judging others eating habits, we still have some serious blindness in our own souls. In short, God wants us to conform ever part of who we are to who he is. This is a lifelong task. No one has arrived. No one sees perfectly this side heaven.

Second, we must extend mercy to others.

The reason we handle complaining better than our kids is not because we are superior people. We avoid the whininess of life, because God has been gracious to us. He has opened our eyes fully while our kids see only vaguely on their way to saving faith. Instead of condemning people as stupid, worthless, or worthy of punishment, we should extend mercy to them. As we discipline our kids for the hundredth time, we don’t blow up in anger telling them that we were never as reckless as them. Rather, we discipline them in love, telling them that we know obedience is hard. Instead of shouting at our cranky family member, we should endure their prideful boasts knowing that only God’s mercy keeps us from committing the same sin. And when people at church fail to see theology the way we do, we do not beat them into submission with logic. Rather, we lovingly point them to the Scriptures trusting God to work in both of our hearts.

Because here is the great truth. If God begins to open people’s eyes, he will give them full sight. He will not leave them half blind. We very well may not be God’s intended agent of change in someone’ life. But God is still working. Instead of trusting in our arguments to give sight, we must appeal to God to work. He will make the blind see!

And If we truly understand that we all begin our spiritual quest blind, we will stop asking, “Why don’t they get it?” And we will start asking, “Why do I get anything?”

S0, what question are you asking?