Self- Reliance: When Grown Men Fear Children

men-girlsTears of gut-wrenching sorrow streamed down Peter’s face. A few short hours before he had been promising to fight side-by side with Jesus to the death. But now his manliness and bravado consisted of cowardice and cursing. He was in this state because an insignificant servant girl had identified him as ,”one of them” (Mk 14:67,69). Peter was scared of a lowly servant girl. What happened to this brave apostle who had recently proclaimed Jesus to be the, “Christ” (Mk 8:29)? Why was he now cursing and telling all who would listen that, “I do not know this man of whom you speak?”

He became self-reliant. He trusted in his strength, ability, wisdom, and power. He forgot that salvation was accomplished by Jesus and that human efforts did nothing to pay for sin. Peter was undone by his self-confidence and by his pride.

Often our own Christian lives and our own churches are undone by this same mentality. The pastor D. Martin Lloyd-Jones noted, “It is our cleverness that is our undoing.” We believe that we can accomplish the Christian life with our own wisdom, power, and ingenuity. And without fail, we fail.

How do we avoid this failure? We listen to the Word of God; we depend on Christ in prayer; and, we repent of our sins.

In Mark 14:27, Jesus quotes Zechariah 13:7 and applies it to his disciples. He tells them that he will be killed and that all of them will flee.

 And Jesus said to them, “You will all fall away, for it is written, ‘I will strike the shepherd, and the sheep will be scattered.’

But, the disciples deny the charge. Peter especially finds Christ’s words troubling and boldly tells Jesus in verse 29 and again in verse 31 that, “Even though the all fall away, I will not…If I must die with you, I will not deny you.” All the other disciples echo Peter’s sentiment. You can almost visualize the disciples going around chest-bumping each other and chanting, “Jesus or Death!” over and over again. Talk about ego and egoism. The disciples think they know more about God’s plan than God. The openly reject the Word of God, trusting in their wisdom, understanding, and foresight.

Such is true of many Christians today.  They read about how God hates divorce, pride, lying (manipulation), and sexual immorality and choose to go against the Scriptures. They know they must bend the rules a little to find joy in their lives and to grow the church. They believe that their emotions which contradict the commands of the Bible are valid. They believe their arrogance is excused because of all they do in the church. They believe lying and deception are justified because otherwise people would not give. And they believe all acts deemed loving by us humans are loving. They believe they have the freedom to go against God’s Word. They believe like the apostles that they know more than God about how to live life. Thus, they openly defy the Word of God and yet hope to please him. And instead of pleasing God, they find themselves in opposition to God. James 4:4 succinctly states:

You adulterous people! Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with God? Therefore whoever wishes to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God.

Their divorce, their pride, their lying, and their sexual immorality do not lead them to happiness or their church to health. Rather, they find themselves denying Christ, full of frightful thoughts and consumed by turmoil. Even the honest questions and reflections of children scare them for these believers are walking away from the Word of God. Those who trust in their own strength do not find success but disaster. To fight against the temptation of self-reliance, we must submit ourselves to the Word of God. We must place our desires under the Bible instead of placing the Bible under our desires.

The self-reliance of Peter and the apostles dominates the crucifixion narrative. After Jesus warns the disciples about their impending failure and tells Peter, “Truly, I tell you, this very night, before the rooster crows twice, you will deny me three times,” (Mk 14:30), the disciples go to sleep. Instead of joining Jesus and imploring God for mercy, the disciples sleep. Peter sleeps. The text tells us that Jesus goes to Peter three times and finds him asleep all three times. Peter is so self-confident, he is asleep. Jesus is sweeting drops of blood. Peter and his fellow brave men are sleeping. They have no need to depend on God because they’ve got this. The God of the universe is about to die and is in turmoil and the disciples are sleeping like little babies.

Many in the church follow the disciples’ example. We think, we scheme, and we speak and then we sleep. We never give a second thought to prayer. We never implore God for wisdom, direction, and protection. We boldly declare that we have got this. We know what to do. We have are two swords and are ready to take on army of several thousand men. And then we step forth, we preach our sermon, we launch our event, and we start are program. People are offended by our ill-timed joke, no one comes to the event, and the deacons start to comment about the dumb new discipleship class. We find failure. Why? We depended on our own strength instead of the God of the universe who merely speaks and soldiers fall down in fear. We depend on our own strength and find ourselves acting like the disciples who “all left him and fled” (Mk 14:50).

To break this trend, we must call out to Jesus. We must implore him. We must realize that we are weak and that he is strong. We need to spend less time blogging, updating websites, organizing programs, and facilitating trips and spend more time crying out to our Messiah imploring him to work and to move. We must depend on God in prayer. As the famous preacher British preacher George Muller said,

Precede all your labors with earnest, diligent prayer.

Those who depend on God, pray to God.

Finally those who depend on God, humbly repent. After Peter denies Christ three times, he hears the rooster crow twice and breaks down in sorrow. He remembers the words of Christ and repents of his sin. A few weeks later, the man who hid his relationship with Christ from a servant girl stands before the rulers of Jerusalem and declares, “And there is salvation in no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved.” Peter goes from coward to bold preacher. He repents, he stops trusting in his wisdom and begins relying on Christ. Then God uses him to do great things.

If you tend toward self-reliance, if you neglected prayer, and if you ignore the Bible when it says things you don’t like, I encourage you to repent and to return to Christ. James 4:8a promises that if you, “Draw near to God, and he will draw near to you.” If we tend towards pride, we need to ask God to give us sight. We need to ask God to use our neighbor or our child, or our quiet time to awaken our souls to the reality of God’s word. We need to ask God to give us a moment of conviction that leads to repentance. If we are self-sufficient, we need to repent. And we need to regularly repent, knowing that we are sinners in need of repentance.

Peter’s repentance was marked with tears according to Mark 15 and the other gospels. Those who humbly themselves under God will often experience great emotional outbursts. But the emotions do not equal repentance. We know Peter repented because his tears lead to changes actions. 2 Corinthians 7:10 states,

For godly grief produces a repentance that leads to salvation without regret, whereas worldly grief produces death.

Tears and strong emotional reactions can occur apart from true repentance. Men and women can mourn the discovery of their embezzlement scheme because they fear God or because they fear jail. If they fear only the consequences, they will return to the sin as soon as the consequence is gone. Think of the man who promises with tears running down his face to end his affair while his wife is home but then hops into bed with another woman while his wife is away helping her mom recover from hip surgery. True repentance leads to changed behavior. Those who are tempted toward self-reliance need to ask God to help them daily repent.

Self-reliance seems great. Our culture applauds it to the point that many Christians think the phrase, “God helps those who help themselves is in the Bible.” But the opposite is true. If you try to live the Christian life by depending on your own ideas, schemes, and efforts, you will find yourself running naked through the night, terrified of young girls (Mk 14:51-52, 66-72).

Are you willing ready to depend on Christ?

Should We Obey The Government?

white-house.gifShould Christians obey the government? Regardless of your position on the current controversy surround the NFL and players kneeling during the National Anthem, most every Christians has rightfully cause to be displeased with their local, state, and federal governments. Corrupt police officers have abused minorities. Judges have promoted murder through the defense of abortion. The state department has refused to grant Christians sanctuary from persecution. And then most every Christian has cause to complain about how the IRS collects and spends their tax money. Some Christians are quick to point out the government takes their hard earned money for the purpose providing lazy bums with welfare checks. Other Christians are mad that the government allows and empowers corporations and the wealthy to enrich themselves at the expense of poor, hard working men and women. In short, most every Christian has cause not to obey the government because they are ruled by petty, corrupt, and sometimes purely evil officials.

Thus, we arrive back at the question. Do Christians have to obey their governments? Jesus says yes. In Mark 12:13-17, Jesus faces the same question that we face. He responding by saying, “Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s and to God the things that are Gods” (vs17c). Jesus call us to obey our government because he reigns. We are to submit to our local authorities as an act of submitting to God.

The Back Ground

Before we write of Jesus as being out of touch and as not understanding our current political American backdrop, we need to remember Jesus’ setting in Mark 12. The Jews did not like the Romans. When the Roman general Pompey the great conquered Jerusalem and the temple mount in 63 B.C, he had his troops slaughtered the priests, he walked over their dead bodies and entered the Holy of Holies, and then he desecrated the temple by offering pagan sacrifices. The Jewish Roman relations did not go up from this point. The Jews hated to Romans and regularly revolted against the Italians, viewing them to be interlopers, oppressors, and decidedly wicked. Most of the Jews spent their days dreaming about the Romans dying. Even much of Jesus’ popularity was tied to the hope that he would end their reign. The Romans were a wicked, unpopular, and oppressive government that readily exploited the Jews.

The Pharisees and the Herodians come ask Jesus about paying taxes to Caesar because they know that many of the Jews have ample cause to hate their Romans. Paying taxes in Jesus’ day like our day was not a popular subject. And so these leaders pose this question about governmental authority seeking to trip Jesus up. The parallel passage in Luke reports, “So they watched him and sent spies, who pretended to be sincere, that they might catch him in something he said, so as to deliver him up to the authority and jurisdiction of the governor” (Lk 20:20).

In a rather striking moment two groups of Jews that typically hate each other have been unified by their hatred of Jesus. The Pharisees were the strict, legalist leaders of the Jewish world. They were the homeschool, long skirt, anti-smart phone champions of the ancient world who regularly policed how far people walked on the Sabbath. The Herodians were the playboy, nude beach, and pro-luxury champions of the ancient world who readily embraced the bathhouses and vileness of the roman culture. Although these men had very different outlooks on life and operated on two separate worldviews, they were united in their hate of Jesus. Jesus opposed both legalism and licentiousness and called men and women to repent and believe on him. They hate Jesus so much that they were willing to overlook their own disagreements.

As believers, we must not be surprised that the world gangs up on us. We must not be surprised when we see agnostics, Tibetan monks, and Muslims uniting together to oppose Christ. They all affirm different answers to life’s most meaningful questions of purpose. But they all are unified in their rejection of Christ. They share a friendship based on the belief that humans can reach God apart from the saving work of Jesus on the cross. Those who proclaim Christ will be hated by the world. We must expect opposition. And now falter in our gospel witness when we see the world teeming up to oppose Christ.

The trap they set revolves around to supposed answers to their question “Is it lawful to pay taxes to Caesar or not? Should we pay them or should we not?” These men ask the question seeking to trip Jesus up, seeking to derail his ministry much like Jesus had done to the chief priests the day before when he asked by what authority did John baptize (Mk 11:27-33).  The Jews believe that Jesus can give only one of two answer. First, Jesus could tell the Jews not to pay taxes to Caesar. Jesus would win over the crowds with this answer but would also commit treason against Rome. As a result, the Jews could scamper back to Pilot report Jesus’s treasonous words which would compel the Romans to arrest and most probably execute Jesus. Second, Jesus could tell the Jews to pay taxes to Caesar. If Jesus responded in this manner, then the crowds would leave him. Jesus would go from trending to being blocked on twitter and Instagram. As the crowds melted away, the Jewish leader could seize Jesus and kill him because no one would care.

In their Pharisees and Herodians’ minds, they had landed on the perfect question. Regardless of how Jesus answered, they would win. But Jesus calls an audible. He gives them a completely unexpected answer and says, “Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s” (Mk 12:17c).

Render To Caesar

We are to obey our crooked police officer when he unfairly asks us to stop, we are to pay our taxes even when we think the government is wasteful, and we are to obey the laws of the land because God reigns. Our government, the Romans, and every other government in this world exists because God appointed them to power. President Obama and President Trump have both run this country because God wanted them to rule America. We do not obey them because they are always good, wises, and worthy of our respect. We obey them because God is always good, wise and worthy of our respect. We obey our government because God reigns and has appoint our local, state, and federal officials to rule over us. We should respect our elected officials with our words, we should pay our taxes, and we should stop when we see blue lights pop up in our rear view mirror because we are to “render to Caesar the thing that are Caesar’s.”

The apostle Paul said,

Let every person be subject to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have been instituted by God. Therefore whoever resists the authorities resists what God has appointed, and those who resist will incur judgment.

Again Paul is not calling the government good. But he is saying that our God good instituted the government. The government that fallen and messed up still exist for the good of the people. The goverments still protect us from our foreign enemies, from the evil people in our neighborhoods, and from other corrupt government officials. Again some will say, “but God does not get how bad things are in my town.”

spenser-h-194645He does. Paul wrote this words most likely when Nero ruled Rome. The man tied up Christians to polls, dosed them in fluid and set them on fire to provided lighting for his garden parties. If Christians are admonished to obey this emperor surely we can obey our president our respect our flag regardless of the party in power.

We are not called to look the other way when our government sins. We should take legal steps to fight for justice. We should call our police officers to treat all fairly. We should call our congressmen to stop wasting our tax dollars on abortions and other sinful practices. And we should encourage our state department to welcome Christians being persecuted for their faith. But we should speak to these things orderly and obediently recognizing that their authority comes from God.

And because our governments come from God, we should also beseech God to change our governments and to graciously provide us for godly men and women to rule over us. “First of all, then, I urge that supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings be made for all people, for kings and all who are in high positions, that we may lead a peaceful and quiet life, godly and dignified in every way” (1 Tm 2:1-2). Brothers and sisters if you want persecutions to stop injustices to end, do not riot. Do not sin. Beg God for mercy. Plead with God to change hearts and to bring justice. He can and he does. And moreover, plead with Christ to return. As Augustine said, “sin is the primary cause of servitude.” The City of God, the perfect garden where all men and women live in perfect harmony will not arrive until Christ returns and assumes his proper place as ruler of this world. All who suffer under imperfect governments who are mistreated by those in authority should long for that day. We should submit to our governments because they are appointed by God.

Render To God

Then we must render to “God the things that our Gods.” Our governments make demands of our time, person, and wealth. We have to suffer through the DMV and through filling taxes and then we have to pay taxes. But God requires more than lip service. God demands more than a perfunctory service or portion of our income. God demands our whole person. We owe God true obedience and worship in every area of our lives.

Yes, we should be good, caring, loving, informed, and involved citizens. We should vote. We help our neighbors clean up their yard after a storm. We should seek to understand various politicians and their legislation so that we can make informed decisions when we pick up our ballot and slide the yellow voting card into the computer. We should speak up when we see county officials abusing their power by cutting the new road through their property for the purpose of personal gain. We should speak up when we see police officers abusing the poor. We should attempt to remove crooked congresspersons and the president from office through impeachment or the voting booth when the practice evil. We should be involved citizens because God sovereignly reigns over all.

But obedience to God extends well beyond the limits of being a good citizen. Men can open doors for women, and greet everyone with a firm handshake and still refuse to give Jesus the worship that he is due. Women can slow down and rid their house of every electronic device and still not render to God the things that are God’s.

sergio-souza-285121And Christ is not just making demands upon our worship. We should want to long to be in the house of God. We should enjoy singing, giving, and hearing the word of God preach. But we can do all these religious things and more and still not render to God the things that our Gods. In Mark 7:6-7 Jesus quotes from the prophet Isaiah and condemns the Jews for the improper worship, saying “This people honors me with their lips, but their heart is far from me in vain do they worship me, teaching as doctrines the commandments of men.” God is not pleased with a self-righteous worships. He cares little if we give the social acceptable amounts. He cares little about the number of times we have prayed in public. He does not respect us for all the solos and choir specials that we have sung. He is not impressed with our years of nursery service.

God does not ask us to render him a few moments or portions from our table. Christ wants it all. He demands our whole life. He calls us to place our whole life under his authority. He demands that we worship God with our heart, soul, mind and strength (Mt 22:37). Every aspect of our life is to be devoted to Christ through heart felt obedience. We cannot worship God apart from obedience.  Jesus plainly said, “If you love me, you will keep my commandments.” To render to God the things that our Gods is to obey him in every aspect of our lives.

We are to obey God in our sex lives. We are to flee from pornography, adultery, and fornication. We are not to live with our boyfriend and girlfriend before marriage. We cannot practice homosexuality and still walk with God. We can regularly divorce and do what God hates and render to God the things that our God. We must remain chaste until marriage and then delight ourselves in our spouse for as long as we both shall live.

We are to render to God the things that are God when it comes to our words. We must embrace Christ commands and speak only the truth in love. We cannot render to God the things that our God’s if we regularly attack, insult, slander, and belittle people with our words.

We must render to God the things that our God’s in our recreational life. We cannot forsake the assembling together of the brethren to make every weekend tournament and render to God the things that our God’s. When cannot become desperately sorrowful when our teams lose and then sinfully boastful when our teams win and think we are right with God.

God demands our whole life. Every aspect of our lives from time to money, from sports to school, from singleness to marriage must be brought under God’s jurisdiction. We must render to God the things that our God’s.

Admittedly no person God can do this in their own strength. We cannot work our way to heaven. No can we will our way to rendering to God the things that our God’s. Regardless of my effort, I cannot make an unwieldy, non-aerodynamic toy airplane fly. I tried and the plane shattered when I sent it off tumbling off the top step of the walkway that slopped down our front yard. They plane lacked the capacity. We too lack the capacity to obey God. We are sinners with corrupt hearts that long to do evil all the time.

Thankfully, God offers to change our nature. He offers to change our broken hearts. Through his son’s death on the cross, Jesus redeems the lost who call on him for salvation. Jesus gives us his righteousness. He gives us new hearts and his spirit so that for the first time in our history we can obey him from our hearts. We can go past lip service and truly worship him. If you have not repented, I implore you to repent and believe today.

And if you are a believer, I encourage you to daily confirm your life to God’s image. No one in this life perfectly renders to God the things that our God’s. And thankfully, we do not have to achieve perfection to reach heaven. Christ has already lived the perfect life, fully rending to God all the things that our His. We reach heaven not based on our righteousness but based on Christ’s. But if God has transformed our hearts, we will daily long to be more like. We will work we the spirit to transform our lives. We will daily see areas of our lives where our rendering falls short and will repent, change and start rendering to God what he is do. We will delight in obeying him. We will delight in becoming like Christ through rendering to God the worship he is do in every aspect of our lives.

Final Thoughts

Generally speaking governments are not good. They exists because men and women are sinful and need protection from each other. At times, they need protection from the very source that is called to protect them. But our ultimately reason to obey our authorities and to pay our taxes does not flow from our governments. We obey our rules because God is sovereign. And though we should render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, we should be even more concerned about rendering to God the things that our God’s. God’s demands extend beyond claiming some of time, efforts, and resources. To render to God the things that our God’s, we must worship him with our whole life. We can only truly worship God if we are redeemed by Christ and indwelt by the Holy Spirit.

And now the question is to you. Will you render to God the things that our Gods?