The difference between faithful and Pharisee

Every Christian has Pharisee potential. At times, there is a fine line between faithful and Pharisee.

If you are like me, you are looking forward to the midterm elections so we can get rid of all those commercials! Most of the political ads are slanderous, and I wonder what our children think when they see and hear the vitriol—of our leaders.  

No wonder so many teenagers are struggling with depression and social anxiety. They have been given a set of standards by various sources that certainly don’t encourage kindness. Words are like weapons these days and people are getting hurt. Our culture is getting hurt. 

A lot of Christians who run for office use faith for political advantage. 

I want to vote for a faithful person but not a Pharisee. 

The difference between faithful and Pharisee

The Pharisees knew more about God than almost anyone in the culture. They also lived lives of strict obedience to the rules as their witness. That’s why all of us who have “learned the ropes” of our faith have Pharisee potential. 

It isn’t that the rules were all that bad. In fact, most of them made a person look “set apart” from the culture and helped to keep them from sinning. If a Pharisee worked hard to follow the hundreds of rules that had been written by Jesus’ day, they wouldn’t have had as much time or opportunity to commit a sin. 

Or so they thought, until Jesus came. 

John the Baptist and Jesus called the Jewish leaders a “brood of vipers.” Their words and their witness didn’t lead people to know and love God. Instead, they kept most people from wanting to know God. Their words were like venom that poisoned the people from knowing the truth about God, who loved them and wanted to be their Father. 

So, you see why it is easy for the faithful to have Pharisee potential. Does our witness attract people to want God as their Father? And do our words speak God’s truth, or do they offer a message we think will impress or influence others? 

Paul defined the faithful Christian witness in his letter to the Thessalonians. He wrote, “To this he called you through our gospel, so that you may obtain the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ. So then, brothers, stand firm and hold to the traditions that you were taught by us, either by our spoken word or by our letter” (2 Thessalonians 2:14–15). 

The Pharisees’ big mistake

I think most Pharisees start out wanting to please God. They wanted to be seen as people who have a faithful witness to others. They wanted to faithfully follow the rules and guidelines of their faith. 

The Apostles and the true prophets of the Old Testament spoke similar messages to the faithful of their day.  

The Apostle Paul said, “Hold to the traditions that you were taught by us, either by our spoken word or by our letter.” There is a reason the Apostles were given that title in Scripture. Apostolic teaching was the anointed word from God.  

In the Old Testament, the prophet Jeremiah spoke a message from the Lord saying, “Thus says the Lᴏʀᴅ of hosts: ‘Do not listen to the words of the prophets who prophesy to you, filling you with vain hopes. They speak visions of their own minds, not from the mouth of the Lᴏʀᴅ” (Jeremiah 23:16). 

Every generation has people who spoke God’s truth and people who only thought they did. The Apostle Peter explained the difference: “Knowing this first of all, that no prophecy of Scripture comes from someone’s own interpretation. For no prophecy was ever produced by the will of man, but men spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit” (2 Peter 1:20–21). 

The Pharisees made some mistakes along the way that led them to become “a brood of vipers.” Most of the laws and rules the Pharisees worked hard to follow were manmade, man-authored. God hadn’t given those rules; people had. Jeremiah spoke about the false prophets who were filling people’s minds with “vain hopes.” Jeremiah’s warning should be seriously considered by God’s people today. 

The true prophets weren’t usually the most popular preachers. In fact, many of the prophets lost their lives because they refused to preach what the people wanted to be true. The truth has always come from people who “were carried along by the Holy Spirit” and willing to write, teach, and speak God’s biblical truth. 

The best way to remain spiritually strong

Paul spoke about the difference between milk and solid food in 1 Corinthians 3:2.

Baby Christians need milk. They need to have someone consume the meat of God’s word and process it into spiritual food that others can benefit from. 

Mature Christians have learned to pick up their Bibles and consume God’s word directly for themselves. Christian maturity is the ability to consume the solid food of God’s word. We all need good teaching, but that teaching should cause us to learn how to understand the Bible for ourselves. We need to focus on the voice of the Holy Spirit as we read and study. The Holy Spirit will never alter, edit, or contradict God’s word. His voice simply gives us the ability to receive God’s truth at the deepest levels. 

How much spiritual steak are you consuming each week? How much milk? How often do you read God’s word for yourself and prayerfully listen to his voice teach you truth?  

Christians need to consume more steak.

Fight the Pharisee with faith

I will end this blog post with a request. I want you to spend some time with one of my favorite passages about consuming the pure truth of God’s word. God’s word is wisdom, and Proverbs 2 is about the benefits of consuming God’s pure wisdom. 

Pharisees followed men’s words and ideas and failed. The faithful follow God’s word and stand firm in its truth. They are counted among the righteous. Proverbs 2 explains why. Pray before you read that chapter and ask the Holy Spirit to speak the words of Scripture as God’s message of instruction for your life. Hear God’s voice of truth as you read.  

We all have Pharisee potential. Thankfully, God gave us his Holy Spirit to guide us back to the truth. Jesus called him the “Helper” and the “Spirit of truth” (John 15:26). Allow the Holy Spirit to teach you the rich truth of Proverbs 2 today. 

Christians are called to be witnesses and are gifted with the Spirit of Christ. Let’s strengthen our faith and fight the tendency to act like a Pharisee. Our culture needs to know and love their heavenly Father.

 

Share God’s word, not word salad

Wouldn’t it be wonderful to share God’s word with perfect clarity? 

I’ve most often muddled the task when I have assumed I know what to say instead of understanding I don’t. The only perfect words are authored by our perfect God and it’s easy to get in his way sometimes. 

One of my favorite verses in Scripture is Psalm 19:14. It is a verse I like to pray before I teach, speak, or write a blog post. The psalm says, “Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in your sight, O Lord, my rock and my redeemer.” 

We need more than words to communicate the truth of God; we also need an acceptable heart.

The phrase word salad has been used for political purposes recently, but I wondered what the phrase meant. As it turns out, it’s a pretty good description for some of our “muddled” speech. If we want to share God’s word with clarity, we should understand what that means biblically.

What is word salad?

Merriam-Webster defines word salad as “unintelligible, extremely disorganized speech” or “a string of empty, incoherent, nonsensical words or comments.” 

Technically, it has often been used to describe the speech of someone with a mental disorder. Lately, word salad has been used politically to describe an answer to a question that never really provides an answer, or a series of relevant-sounding phrases that are actually irrelevant to the listener.

If you are like me, you’ve heard sermons and podcasts or have read articles or papers that, when finished, haven’t seemed to make an important point at all. (Even as I type those words, I am prayerful for my own writing!)

Someone described word salad as a jello salad, saying, “Who first thought about opening a can of fruit and putting it in a bowl of jello? It is like taking something healthy and mixing it with something to make it less healthy.” 

Obviously, that person isn’t a huge fan of jello salad! 

Do we sometimes mix God’s word up with things that make it sweeter to the taste but less beneficial than God intended his word to be? 

One of the best seminars I ever attended was led by a Christian fiction writer who had, on occasion, been criticized for being too graphic in his mystery writing. He said his editors would often ask him to “soften” his words.

The man then spent the next minutes describing several passages in Scripture that had been “softened” in order to teach or preach them in church. I will always remember the point he made that day. He asked us, “At what point did God give us permission to edit or soften his word?”

It is sobering to consider the words of Christ who said, “I tell you, on the day of judgment people will give account for every careless word they speak, for by your words you will be justified, and by your words you will be condemned” (Matthew 12:36–37).

Careful speech is not “softened” truth

I think we need to word God’s truth carefully. 

I sometimes cringed when I sat in the pew with my young boys and listened to a biblical passage or sermon that dealt with sensitive, adult topics. I knew the car ride home might get interesting! 

Thankfully, I knew the preacher was coming home soon and I could just say, “Wait and ask your dad about that.”

My husband, Jim, and I were talking about our early years of ministry. We had a conflict in our small church because some of the women wanted to do a baby shower and help an unmarried, pregnant teen get ready for her baby. Other women in the church worried that we were expressing acceptance of sin as we were offering compassion to someone who needed it. Honestly, both sides of the conflict were able to make a strong, biblical argument.

We ended up hosting the shower and helping the unwed, teenage mother. I’m glad we did that, but, at the same time, forty years later, I’ve seen the problems associated with softening or withholding God’s word on the subject of a premarital sexual relationship. A 2015 survey said that almost 90 percent of unmarried men and women confessed to having a sexual relationship prior to marriage. Other articles called premarital sex “the norm.”

When is the last time your preacher boldly preached the truth of God’s word on the subject? 

Hebrews 13:4 is a clear statement: “Let marriage be held in honor among all, and let the marriage bed be undefiled, for God will judge the sexually immoral and adulterous.”

Have we softened God’s word on the subject of homosexuality? 

Paul told the church in Rome that there would be consequences for those who engaged in that behavior. He said, “For this reason God gave them up to dishonorable passions. For their women exchanged natural relations for those that are contrary to nature; and the men likewise gave up natural relations with women and were consumed with passion for one another, men committing shameless acts with men and receiving in themselves the due penalty for their error” (Romans 1:26–27). 

Many have tried to edit Paul’s statement or rewrite it to bring it into agreement with current, more tolerant thinking. There isn’t any way to edit Paul’s words to make those sexual sins acceptable today.

At what point did God give us permission to tolerate what he has said is dishonorable, unnatural, and shameless? Are we helping a person if we offer tolerance for sin instead of offering the truth about that sin? 

Paul taught we must speak “the truth in love” (Ephesians 4:15), but he also taught we must speak the truth.

Does our word salad sweeten God’s word but make it less beneficial?

As I have said before, one of my “life verses” is from the book of Hosea. God told the prophet, “My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge; because you have rejected knowledge, I reject you from being a priest to me. And since you have forgotten the law of your God, I also will forget your children” (Hosea 4:6).

Is our good desire to protect people’s feelings hindering God’s desire for them to know the truth? 

Current statistics would seem to say that tolerating sins is not helping people to understand that God has said there are consequences to those sins. 

Are people’s lives, and eternal lives, being destroyed because they lack knowledge of God and his word? Is a lack of truth destroying our children’s and grandchildren’s generations?

I know I have softened God’s word at times to help it feel more appropriate or acceptable. I may even have helped others feel better about their sin as a result. I pray that God will forgive my offering of word salad when what they most needed was the truth of God’s word.

There is a new way to look at an ancient psalm. Those words say, “Set a guard, O Lᴏʀᴅ, over my mouth; keep watch over the door of my lips! (Psalm 141:3)” 

As I read that psalm, I pictured the plexiglass guard that hangs over the salad bar at a steakhouse. My new version of that psalm became this: “Hang the guard, Lord, over all my ‘word salad’ and help me leave the jello-words unspoken. Instead, guide me back to the table to consume and share the meat from your word.” 

The words of our lips ought to provide people the wisdom they need to walk in God’s truth.

Let no one suffer because they lack knowledge of who God is and what God most wants for their lives now and eternally. 

They might want the salad bar, but we need to help them choose the steak instead.

Empty shelves, rich lives

I took my mom to do a little shopping and, I have to admit, the news reports were right about the shortages on the shelves. The stores are decorated for Christmas, but where are the stacks of merchandise that usually fill the shelves? “’Tis the season” but there “is no reason” to do much shopping!

Apparently, our Christmas gifts are floating off the coast of California. This is either an excellent marketing strategy for retailers, or we are going to have some amazing after-Christmas sales in February and March.  

The good news for this holiday season is the good news of God’s priorities. The most important holiday celebration this year might be Thanksgiving.  

The empty shelves at the mall might lead us to live richer lives, filled with better priorities. 

A turkey shortage?

CBS News reported that there will be ten things that will be tough to find and small turkeys topped the list. It sounds like we need to clean out our freezers to accommodate a giant frozen turkey in the next week or do without. I vote for a pork tenderloin and no stress or mess! 

Apparently, there is a gaming system that will be almost impossible to find. I think all of us can think of about forty reasons why we shouldn’t be too sad about that one! 

A lot of toys are floating on those ships. Maybe we will all use our imaginations to create gifts that require imagination instead of batteries. 

Sportswear is in short supply. But, how much sportswear do you have stacked on your shelves or hanging in the closet? I don’t want to admit this, but if I didn’t buy another piece of sportswear until 2025, I’d be just fine. 

There is an alcohol shortage. How is that a bad thing? 

As I scrolled through the rest of the article, I realized that this “CBS Essentials” article was really just an ad for all the things they were suggesting people buy that are in stock. If you click on the article and then choose to buy something, CBS makes a little money too. 

I miss the days when CBS made money for reporting accurate news or producing entertaining shows.  

A gift that “keeps on giving”?

I couldn’t help but wonder if there was a Bible shortage as well. No one has said anything yet, but a lot of our Bibles are printed in China too. How many cases of God’s word are floating on those ships? 

What if this is the year we give Bibles to the people we care about? What if we personalize them by highlighting our favorite verses before we wrap them up? It will take a while to do, but that time is part of the gift. Giving a gift that shares God’s word is an idea that the apostle Paul would recommend. 

Paul wrote about the value of God’s word to the church in Colossae. He encouraged them to “let the word of Christ dwell in you richly, teaching and admonishing one another in all wisdom, singing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, with thankfulness in your hearts to God” (Colossians 3:16). 

Last year was a difficult year, and we have so many reasons to be thankful this holiday season. Our gratitude will be for what we have, not for what we can or cannot buy. If every one of those cargo ships carrying toys, sportswear, and other things we don’t need sank, we would be just fine. (Unless the ship is carrying coffee . . . that would be a problem!) 

What is the Lord asking us to be thankful for in 2021? 

Our offering of praise

We don’t know who wrote the book of Hebrews, but he was a wise and godly man. The words of that book are profound, written to Christians who understood the value of a life lived with God’s priorities. 

The writer of Hebrews closed his letter with some great advice for all Christians. He said, “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever” (Hebrews 13:8). He encouraged them to be strong in their faith and live godly lives that honored Jesus. The author said, “Through him [Jesus] then let us continually offer up a sacrifice of praise to God, that is, the fruit of lips that acknowledge his name” (Hebrews 13:15). 

Christians have the most amazing gifts to give this year.  

  • We can give the benefits of God’s word and wisdom with thankful hearts. The best thing about the current angst in our culture is that Christian calm and peace are really being noticed!
  • We can encourage a discouraged world by offering our praise for all we have instead of complaining about what we don’t have or can’t get.
  • The “fruit of our lips” will be the things we say that acknowledge the place Christ has in our lives.

Empty shelves or full hearts

What are you purely grateful for today? 

God is redeeming 2020 even as we close out 2021. We have a lot to be thankful for in our lives. What will be your “offering of praise” this holiday season? 

God is at work in our lives, changing our priorities to line up with his. Christians shouldn’t be focused on the empty shelves. Instead, let’s focus on our rich blessings. We are called to “continually offer up a sacrifice of praise to God” because “the fruit of our lips” will be the things we say that “acknowledge his name.” 

Allow the empty shelves to inspire

The empty shelves are a strong reminder of everything we don’t really need. God doesn’t want our lives to be filled with stuff. He wants us to fill our lives with praise for all that matters most. That is our offering to him and to our culture. 

Praise God for the ability to be thankful, not the fact you scored a small turkey at the grocery store.

 Praise God for the ability to be with family, not shop for them. 

Praise God for filling your life with his rich mercies and those empty shelves won’t bother you very much at all. 

Let’s empty our witness of the cultural angst and allow our voices to be an offering of praise. God is redeeming 2020 with the unusual blessings of 2021. 

May the empty shelves cause us to be thankful for everything we already have, starting with our salvation in Christ. 

After all, there is a reason we call our holiday Christmas.