"Behold,
the Lamb of God!"
(Jn. 1:36)
"Behold,
the Lion of the tribe of Judah . . ." (Rev.
5:5).
Preachers
and other teachers constantly urge us to be more Christ-like. "The
spirit of Christ," "the mind of Christ," "Christ-like," and "Christ-like
spirit" are terms used to express the same idea.
We can find
no fault with these expressions, but rather applaud them, when taken at
face value. A Christian should be able to sing "more like Jesus would I
be" and mean it.
However,
when one hears these terms, he would do well to stay turned for the
details. The speaker's Jesus may not be the biblical Jesus. His Jesus
may be of the modern imagination a passive, ever-smiling, back-patting,
soft-spoken, all-embracing Jesus who would never be critical of people
much less become upset enough with them to raise his voice to them.
This is the
Jesus that we are urged to become like by a few brethren who are
specializing in freeing the church of the pharisaic spirit and restoring
"the spirit of Christ." This is a noble work, if this is what they are
really doing. Again, one needs to stay turned for the details. If one
listens carefully he may sense that these students of the pharisaic
spirit have caught the disease through the back door. They thank God
that they are not as other brethren are: proud, boastful, negative and
condemning but are humble, sweet, positive and up-lifting as they
represent their brand of the "spirit of Christ" in the world.
Their
distorted portrayal of Jesus, not only weakens the gospel and the
church, it undermines the efforts and undercuts the moral support of
good brethren who are trying their best to obey the divine charge to
"preach the word! ... convince (reprove KJV), rebuke and exhort, with
all longsuffering and teaching"
(2 Tim. 4:2).
They despise those who "rebuke with all authority"
(Tit. 2:15),
especially those who "rebuke them sharply"
(Tit. 1:13).
They often suggest to audiences that such preaching may well be the main
obstacle hindering our taking the world for Christ. Oh, yes, they can
occasionally be stirred to break out of their version of the spirit of
Jesus long enough to rebuke sharply those who rebuke sharply.
Jesus was
both "the Lamb of God" and "the Lion . . . of Judah." One can hardly
reflect the spirit of the real Jesus without beholding him in both
capacities. Emphasizing either at the expense of the other gives one a
warped picture of the real image of Jesus.
Jesus could
look at some people and be moved with compassion
(Mk. 6:34)
and look upon others with anger
(Mk. 3:5).
He would
weep at the prospects of the destruction of his beloved Jerusalem
(Lk. 19:41; cf. Matt. 23:37)
after calling its religious leaders "Serpents, brood of vipers!" and
rhetorically asking them, "How can you escape the condemnation of hell?"
He could be
both tender and tough. He could lay his hands on little children and
pray for them and then, just two chapters later, use the same hands to
overturn the tables of the moneychangers and drive them from the temple
(Matt. 21:12-13; cf. Jn. 2:15).
He could
answer the cries of the blind men for mercy by compassionately touching
their eyes
(Matt. 20:29-34)
and a little later, say to the Pharisees "Woe to you, blind guides, ...
Fools and blind"
(Matt. 23:16,17).
He could
even sometimes cry out as he taught some who opposed him
(Jn. 7:28).
Now, such crying out is a definite "no, no" to many who have
restructured the "Christ-like spirit" for us.
Stephen is
correctly held up as one who possessed the "spirit of Christ" as his
dying words were, "Lord, do not charge them with this sin"
(Acts 7:60)
just as Jesus' had been, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what
they do"
(Lk. 23:34).
Such a forgiving spirit is indeed indicative of the true spirit of Jesus
and is direly needed in the church today. What spirit was Stephen
imitating when he, just moments before, concluded his speech to the Jews
with, "You stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart and ears! You always
resist the Holy Spirit; as your fathers did, so do you. Which of the
prophets did your fathers not persecute? And they killed those who
foretold the coming of the Just One, of whom you now have become the
betrayers and murderers, who have received the law by the direction of
angels and have not kept it"
(Acts 7:51-55)?
Did not these words also reflect Stephen's Christ-likeness? All of this
was uttered by one "full of the Holy Spirit"
(v. 55).
What a pity
it would be if we could only see the toughness of Jesus without his
tenderness, his boldness without his benevolence, or his strictness
without his sensitivity. We would have a warped picture of what we ought
to be like. Conversely, it would be tragic to see only his tenderness
without his toughness, his benevolence without his boldness, or his
sensitivity without his strictness.
Let us both
behold the Lamb of God and the Lion of Judah as we sing "more like Jesus
would I be."
Guardian of Truth - May 5, 1994