by Thomas Denegre
Today’s reading from Mathew 5:38-47
As a Christian, you are called to be the most powerful
person in the room. I’m not talking about Bill Gates power, or President of the
United States power, or a mafia boss power. I’m talking about the power of God that is
within us to change people and to change the world. Let me tell you about Louie Zamperini.
In the true story called Unbroken, Louie Zamperini was an
American Olympic runner from the 1936 Berlin Games. In World War II his plane crashed in the
Pacific and he spent 45 days adrift in a life raft. Hardly alive he was captured by the Japanese and was tortured for
the next two years. Barely holding himself together after the war, he recounts
his story to crowds of people. But he
must first numb himself with alcohol to tell his stories. Living in a death-ward spiral in alcohol,
Louie attended a Billy Graham crusade giving his heart to Jesus. His life became transformed and renewed where
he set up a powerful ministry transforming the lives of thousands. Truly, when his heart broke for Jesus, life, meaning, and power entered into Louie.
So let’s explore the nature of power.
To satisfy justice, Jesus explained the old way of tit
for tat; or eye for an eye and tooth for a tooth. Throughout the ancient world the custom was
revenge for a wrong against you. This
was the code of the sinner or the ungodly, (Psalm 1:1) who used their force of
will upon one another. Force is not power.
We all know the outcomes of using the force of our will
against another because for every push we impose we get one back. Force always has a counter force. Force seeks conflict and justification. Force
is prideful, selfish, and brutish. Force
seeks to judge and condemn. It results
in polarization, not unity and its costs are high. Someone must always win or
lose, whereby enemies are created requiring a constant defense. Being defensive
is always costly as the anger, bitterness, envy, lust, and resentment will
result in negative outcomes personally and culturally. This is the way of the
sinner, the ungodly person, and the wages of sin is death. Romans 6:23
Then Jesus tells us how to become the most powerful
person in the room. He said we must love
our enemies and to pray for those who persecute us, “that you may be the
children of your Father in heaven.” (Matt. 5:45) Finally, Jesus said,
“be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect.”(Matt 5:48)
Being perfect throws us all off, because we think it’s
impossible. Yet, we know our loving
Father would never set us up for failure.
The Greek word here is 'teleios' and it can mean ‘perfect’ but it is
more usually used to refer to maturity or wholeness. Research indicates the
writers of the Vulgate translated the word into ‘perfectus’, when it really
means “to be complete.” Or, to be made whole.
To understand this mystery the Lord brought to my
attention two pieces of artwork. In
Japan, Kintsugi artwork will deliberately break a pottery bowl and mend it back
with gold transforming it into a unique beauty.
The other artwork shows major cracks in a human sculpture with bright
light shining through it.
The answer becomes obvious. It is through our brokenness that our creator
makes us whole and complete with the power of the Holy Spirit. Our brokenness
does not come in our destruction, but when we open our hearts to God's love and
trade in our pride for humility. In the same way, Louie didn’t become
transformed and powerful until he opened his heart to Jesus.
We become a unique beauty that radiates the light and
power of God’s love. By dying to Jesus,
we admit to our brokenness, humility, failure, and incompleteness. We just
can’t do things without God. By being born again, we become saints, (Eph.2:1-10) who are set apart to be with God. By living in life union with Jesus
and having his words living powerfully within us, the power of God transforms
us while His power radiates through our cracks into to the world.
When Jesus said, “I have given them the glory that
you gave me, that they may be one as we are one,” (John 17:20-23) we become
the most powerful person in the room as the same glory of God that filled
Jesus, fills us. Did not Jesus say we
will be doing greater things than himself? (John 14:12) By being broken to God, His glory and power
is allowed to complete us and to transform.
As a son or daughter of God we must understand the power
of God’s glory is within us. Unlike the sinner’s (ungodly) use of force, a son
(saint) of the light knows God’s power is rooted in love, meaning,
significance, and purpose. Rather than having a counter-power, power stands
still. It is like a standing field, such as gravity, that does not move, for
love, forgiveness, mercy, kindness, compassion, and generosity are always
received and never reacted to.
By being in God’s power we find nobility of purpose and
sacrifice are inspirational, giving life significance. Like water filling a
sponge, God’s glory completes us, enables us, and nourishes us. God’s power is self-evident in that life is
more important than death, that honor is preferable over dishonor, that the
constructive is preferable over the destructive, that forgiveness is preferable
over revenge, and that mercy is preferable over judgment and condemnation.
We become the most powerful person in the room by allowing our brokenness or humility to reveal God’s power through non-judgmental love, understanding, mercy, and forgiveness. By extending these powerful forces to friend and foe alike, we allow God to disarm them while soothing their wounded heart. By living in life union with Jesus, we are given the ability or power to see people as God sees them. Compassion, wisdom, and mercy will arise in our hearts from Jesus to make us the most powerful person in the room to transform lives such that, “thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.”
2 comments:
Beautiful truth! Thanks Tom!
Quite profound and truth-teaching.
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