Saturday, October 12, 2024

Avoidable Offenses

 Gtcotr/ss101324

Matthew 9:1 Jesus got into a boat, crossed over, and came to His own city.

The city called His own city is Capernaum. It was called the city of Jesus because Jesus had chosen to live there when He reached the age of 30. A Jewish male was considered to be middle-aged, wise as to the affairs of life, focused on making his own decisions and responsible to take care of his own family at the age of 30.

When Jesus turned 30, He went to be baptized by John the Baptist in the Jordan River, spent 40 days fasting in the Judean desert, returned to Nazareth, preached His first sermon, and subsequently He relocated to the city of Capernaum to call His disciples and begin His public ministry. Jesus stayed with Simon Peter in a house in Capernaum which belonged to Peter’s mother-in-law.

Jesus performed many of His miracles in and around the city of Capernaum. It was in Capernaum that Jesus called one of His disciples who had a job working for the Roman government as a tax collector.

Matthew 9:9 As Jesus passed on from there, He saw a man named Matthew sitting at the tax office. And Jesus said to him, “Follow Me.” So he arose and followed Him.

The next verse reveals that Jesus had a good relationship with many of the tax collectors in and around Capernaum even though the Pharisee leaders of the Jewish community saw them as treasonous sinners. Who better to get saved than the IRS agents who have come to audit you?

There were two major tax collecting agencies in those days. One was the state tax collectors who worked for the Roman government and collected Roman taxes. Matthew, a disciple and the writer of the New Testament Gospel of Matthew, was one of those Roman tax collectors.

When Jesus was asked a question concerning paying taxes to the Roman government, His reply was:

Mark 12:17 … “Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s.” …

Jesus believed and the Bible supports paying taxes to the government as required by law. (Romans 13)

The second tax mentioned in the Gospels was the Temple tax. It was voluntary but had really been required since the days of Moses. Temple taxes kept the doors open and paid for the daily needs of the Temple. Exodus 31 is but one of the many mentions in the Old Testament concerning the amount of money each man over the age of 20 should give to the Temple for the service of the House of God each year.

On the 15 Day of the month Adar, around February, Temple tribute, (or Temple tax as it was called), collectors would sit in the marketplaces and at the gates of each city and ask men who passed by if they had given their voluntary offering to the Temple yet. Although it was voluntary, it was often given under public pressure. After about 2 weeks of reminding people in public that it was time to give the yearly Temple tax, the collectors would move to the Temple entrance and catch everyone coming through the doors to make sure they had not missed anyone.

As earlier stated, the disciple Matthew was not a Temple tax collector, rather he was as a Jew who worked for the government collecting taxes for Rome. Nonetheless, the idea of tax collecting was no doubt something that interested him. We imagine this because since Matthew is the only one of the Gospel writers who includes an account of Jesus being asked to give a tax tribute to the Temple.

We know it was in February when Jesus was about 31 or 32 years old. Every male over the age of 20 was required to pay a temple tax to the temple in their own city providing they had lived in that city for more than 1 year. Let’s turn to Matthew 17 and read the account Matthew shares:

Matthew 17

24 When they had come to Capernaum, those who received the temple tax came to Peter and said, “Does your Teacher not pay the temple tax?”

25 He said, “Yes.” And when he had come into the house, Jesus anticipated him saying, “What do you think, Simon? From whom do the kings of the earth take customs or taxes, from their sons or from strangers?”

26 Peter said to Him, “From strangers.” Jesus said to him, “Then the sons are free.”

27 “Nevertheless, lest we offend them, go to the sea, cast in a hook, and take the fish that comes up first. And when you have opened its mouth, you will find a piece of money; take that and give it to them for Me and you.”

The three most common words used in connection with God and money in the Bible are:

·        Bring

o   We bring our tithes to our local Church

o   Tithes hold a special place in the heart of God and allow the Church to function and accomplish the Great Commission.

o   Following the covenant of Abraham and Jacob over 500 years before the Law of Moses.

o   It is like bringing partnership dividends to God

·        Give

o   Give our offerings to meet needs and sow seeds

o   Helping a neighbor; an unfortunate or needy person; or a mission project.

o   A thanksgiving offering or as a seed for future harvest.

o   The Bible teaches us to give when we have abundance and when we are in need.

·        Pay

o   We pay our vows as though they were a debt we had agreed to before God.

o   Many times I have promised God I would do something special or extra if and when He blessed me with something special or extra.

o   Vow and be committed to pay what you promised.

As we take a look at the life of Jesus and the lessons He teaches us, allow me to share these few points.

1.   Jesus belonged.

a.   His own city …

b.   His own local Synagogue/Church …

c.    His own group of followers …

d.   He had a sense of community. – He knew where He belonged.

e.   His friends and followers knew what He would do.

f.    These truths are important enough for God to include them in the account of the life of Christ.

2.   Jesus cared what others thought about Him.

a.   Concerned about causing avoidable offense.

Matthew 17:27 “Nevertheless, lest we offend them …”

·        Offend = Skandalizo = Scandalize

o   To put a stumbling block in front of and cause to trip …

o   To cause one to judge unfavorably and unjustly

o   To make a person distrust and desert one whom they ought to trust and support

o   To cast the wrong image and turn the mind away 

o   Jesus was very interested in what people thought about Him … it is the whole basis of salvation and the single requirement.

o   He had no desire to create avoidable offenses …

3.   Jesus saw giving, not as a necessity, but as an opportunity.

o   Jesus lived a lifestyle of giving.

o   Jesus followed the word … not because He had to, but because He wanted to.

§  He harnessed His soul to participate.

§  He was ever the example.

·        From water baptism

·        To the cross

o   Even though Jesus was exempted from payment, He never expected less of Himself than He asked of others.

Because He was God, He gave so as to not belie His nature. It was not from necessity but rather saw it as an opportunity. What about you? Why do you tithe; why do you give; why do you pay what you’ve committed to pay? Because it is a godly trait and a part of your new nature. Embrace every opportunity this week to act like your heavenly Father.

Saturday, October 5, 2024

The Best News

Gtcotr/ss100624

 

Can you imagine a world where people go to school for decades and some continue their education for the rest of their lives but never do anything with what they have been taught. You wouldn’t expect that from:


• A farmerA doctorA lawyer
• pilot; A welder; A Salesman; or A Cook

 

The whole education paradigm is aimed at making us more successful by applying what we have learned to help ourselves and others. Most people in the US attend school a minimum of 12 to 14 years. A good number go beyond that in order to specialize in a chosen field hoping to find a job doing something they have been trained to do in school.

 

Going to school and learning how to do something seems like a waste of time and opportunity if you never apply what you’ve learned. Yet many Christians attend school each week. Some for 20, 30, 40, or even 50 years of their lives, (I’m referring to Sunday School), and never put what they have learned into practice. In fact the majority of Born-Again Believers in Jesus Christ who attend Church each week still don’t know how to witness and most have never personally led someone to Christ.

 

I’m not trying to be critical, but it does seem a little odd. Especially when the whole point of the Gospel is to teach and train others to be teachers and trainers of others. It can start with a simple meaningful conversation.

 

2 Timothy 2:2  And the things that you have heard from me among many witnesses, commit these to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.

 

Like I said, I don’t intend to be critical, but I am a little concerned. Christianity is always only one generation away from extinction. Unless we can educate and motivate others to share the Gospel and participate in world missions, the Church will cease to exist within the next 50 years.

 

You represent the most educated generation of Christians the world has ever known. We know more about the Bible and have greater access to the Gospel than any other generation who came before. You have more information about Jesus and the Gospel in your phone than did the Apostle Paul or any of those early Christians in the Churches of Ephesus, Philippi, Colosse, or Corinth during their whole lifetime. You have the whole Bible and endless commentaries at your fingertips every second of every day. And yet, do you know many people who claim to be Christians can’t even tell you for certain if their spouse or their parents or their children have accepted Jesus as their personal Savior? 

 

Salvation is designed as a personal decision, but it is not meant to be a private matter. If there was ever a time in the history of the world in which to boldly and kindly ask your loved ones if they have accepted Jesus as their personal Lord and Savior … it is now! No one who is truly Born-Again and has the Holy Spirit living in their heart will refuse to share their salvation experience with someone who is genuinely willing to listen. Like I said: It can start with a simple yet meaningful conversation – maybe with your children or grandchildren, an office worker or a friend.

 

Perhaps they have never been asked and then given the time to share their personal belief in Jesus without interruption. It is a very personal decision which often affects people emotionally. Many have hidden their experience with Jesus deep in their heart and it takes time and patience from the listener for them to feel safe enough to talk about it. Sharing something so precious can be difficult but it holds such great rewards

 

People are won to Christ by the anointing on the testimony of life that was changed by Jesus. There is a spiritual code programmed into the souls of every person waiting to be awakened by the witness of a true Believer in Jesus Christ. A testimony opens hearts and minds when nothing else will. 

 

Allow me to share the last words we have record of Jesus speaking to His disciples before He ascended up into heaven.

 

Matthew 28 NKJV

18  And Jesus came and spoke to them, saying, “All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth.

19  “Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,

20  “teaching them to observe all things that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.” Amen.

 

The fact that Jesus saved my soul and rescued my family from the eternal penalties of sin makes me want to follow Him and tell the whole world this same Good News.

 

You cannot pay for your own salvation, but You can help to pay for others to be saved. Let me ask you: “What are you putting into the Gospel?” 

 

God has given us a blueprint of His plan to save mankind. We just read it … its called The Great Commission. The Bible is the only picture we have been given of God’s great plan. The New Testament is a picture of a local Church making disciples and sending them out to do world evangelism through spiritually motivated humanitarian relief efforts accompanied by the sharing of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. 

 

Nothing says “I love you” more than helping someone who can’t help you back. A meal when you’re hungry; clothes when you’re naked; a drink when you’re thirsty; a kind word when you’re sick or down on your luck. Yet a meal won’t save a soul … but it will open hearts and minds.

 

Mark 16 NKJV

19 ¶  So then, after the Lord had spoken to them, He was received up into heaven, and sat down at the right hand of God.

20  And they went out and preached everywhere, the Lord working with them and confirming the word through the accompanying signs. Amen.

 

Three Considerations:

1. Would you consider giving?

To keep the Church strong and to World Missions to spread the Word

Bring your tithes and give your offerings.

2. Would you consider going?

Over the seas and right next door.

You are the best news God has to offer the world.

3. Would you consider sharing?

Your salvation story.

Learn, practice, and share your testimony with everywhere.