Guidance from Overlooked Men and Women of the Bible

Category: Seers, Sayers, Schemers & Saints (Page 1 of 3)

Grandma’s Got It Going On

Genuine faith never appears out of thin air. Timothy absorbed it from his mother, Eunice, and his grandmother, Lois. Paul knew them both and perceived their faith as the spring that watered the flowering of Timothy’s commitment to the Lord. The text mentions neither Timothy’s father, who was thought to be Greek, nor Timothy’s grandfather. Timothy’s faith developed from his matriarchal lineage.

A strong and sincere faith is not guaranteed from one generation to the next. Many well-meaning parents apply all the religious parenting techniques currently in vogue only to see their children reject the faith, or ignore the faith, or quietly set the faith aside. Christianity is only one generation deep. Every generation must believe afresh. Lois did something right. Too bad we don’t know her practices as we could use them to develop a series of books, podcasts and video guides on how to raise children of faith. We could dub it the “Lois-ization” of our children. I would have bought it when my kids were little. However, we do own one clue about her methodology—her faith is described as sincere.

Sincere is defined as being free from pretenses or deceit; not hypocritical, genuine, whole-hearted, real, honest, frank, upfront, candid, on the level, pure. Our children sniff out hypocrisy in our lives and our words as parents. When we act one way in front of others and a totally different way at home, the kids notice. They start to surmise that the Christian faith that their parents profess is not fully realized, not efficacious, and not deeply meaningful. Kids correctly deduce that if that’s all there is to the Christian faith, then no need to waste their time here. Plenty of other good things to pursue on a Sunday morning.

This was not true of Lois—her faith molded Timothy. You are never alone as you live out your faith. Our sincerity does not fade away in vain, even if we do not see the results. Two old sayings come to mind when I think of Lois and the many godly grandmothers who followed in her path. The first reminds us that the hand that rocks the cradle is the hand that rules the world. Good grand-parenting imprints qualities on the following generations. If another old saying is true, that our most important contributions are the ones we leave behind, then the legacy left by Lois will be hard to surpass.

Forever stamped in Scripture, this quiet grandmother’s endowment offers us much to ponder as parents, grandparents and leaders.

From Seers, Sayers, Schemers & Saints and 2 Timothy 1

Photo by Raul Petri

Michelangelo, Nicodemus, & a Few Tears

The Pietà by Michelangelo in Florence

My favorite piece of artwork I encountered on our recent trip to Italy was a statue by Michelangelo. I found it intriguing as I gazed at it for the first time, one of many fabulous works in this museum. However, as our guide told us the backstory of the sculpture, I leaned in and held my breath.

Michelangelo craved this piece at the end of his life. It’s a Pieta, a depiction of Jesus being taken from the cross, and this was not the only one he created. The most famous resides in Saint Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City (we saw that one also). But this one struck me personally.

The face of Nicodemus, a self-portrait of Michelangelo

Michelangelo, an earnest disciple of Christ, chose to portray Nicodemus taking Jesus down from the cross, along with Mary, Jesus’ mother, and Mary Magdalene. In this work, Michelangelo carved his own face as the face of Nicodemus, a self-portrait, if you will. Adoration for Christ did not always motive Michelangelo. But at the end of his life, he carved for posterity this image of true devotion.

Nicodemus served as a model for Michelangelo. Nicodemus first approached Jesus by night, but he refused to commit to Jesus. Scared and intimidated by the scoffers and doubters, Nicodemus took years to fully embrace Christ, finally doing so in that moment of taking the body of Jesus from the cross. In his own slow, halting journey of faith, Michelangelo found a kindred spirit in Nicodemus.

The thought struck me powerfully. I wrote about Nicodemus in my book, Seers, Sayers, Schemers & Saints. I’ve been fascinated for years with the searching and wrestling we see in the life of Nicodemus. He may be my favorite character in the New Testament, and he is certainly the one I relate to the most. To hear that Michelangelo felt the same stirred my heart. The artist’s religious fervor expanded as he aged. Michelangelo’s love of Christ informed his art and drove him during his last phase of life.

Great art can move one to tears. Such an occurrence rarely happens to me. But as I stood in front the this masterpiece, slowly understanding that the master artist carved his face into the marble to show his devotion to The Master, the tears welled. I cannot wait to meet Michelangelo in heaven, along with Nicodemus, and relive the lives of wrestling and eventual capitulation to full faith in Jesus that we and many others have shared.

Now Available on Amazon.com!

I’m happy to announce that Seers, Sayers, Schemers & Saints is now available in the Kindle version on Amazon.com. You can purchase the print version at Crustore.org. If you feel inclined, I would love for you to post a review on Amazon and Goodreads.com, which would be a great help to me as the author.

If you haven’t gotten a copy, I encourage you to download it or send for one, I think you’ll be encouraged by what you read.

Thanks so much – Dave.

Ananias – Quiet Bravery

The message was clear. Unambiguous. No doubt from the Lord, the significance of it rocked Ananias, leaving him confused and frightened. He was to present himself to the chief persecutor of the fledgling Christian faith. A man to hide your babies from rather than to embrace, a man to avoid at all costs. Saul, brilliant and murderous, tormented Christians, yet the Lord sent Ananias to actually help him in his time of pain and confusion. Ananias walked into the room with Saul representing the bravery of many, many Christians who followed him over the centuries.

Saul, an energetic zealot, saw Christians not as people but as problems. His life work morphed into the eradication of the new, dangerous, sect of Judaism. Not only did he approve of the murder of Stephan, the first martyr of the early church, Saul set out to add to the list of beaten and imprisoned followers of Jesus. Today we might call him a radicalized fanatic, even a terrorist. Saul certainly spread terror as he pursued anyone who lined his or her life up with Jesus. This was the Saul on the mind of Ananias when the Lord sent him on his mission to heal his new affliction of blindness. Ananias did not know of Saul’s dramatic encounter with the risen Christ on the road to Damascus. Ananias did not know of Saul’s remarkable change of heart, or his new devotion to Jesus, or of his humble conversion. The Lord didn’t fill in many details as he sent Ananias to Saul’s aid.

Ananias questioned the Lord and received a bit more intelligence in return. The Lord had plans for Saul, plans involving both speaking before kings and plans for suffering and humility. Then Ananias went. No pause is recorded, no taking a night to sleep on it or time to kiss his family good-bye, maybe for the last time. Ananias walked to Saul’s house, placed his hands on Saul and prayed. Ananias even welcomed Saul to his new club of Christ-followers by calling him “brother.” From despised enemy to brother. Only then did the scales fall from Saul’s eyes.

Leading involves bravery. Ananias showed us the way by going to meet Saul. Ananias walked straight into the house of a man who could kill him and his family. That’s bravery. Some might say foolhardy, but it paints for us a picture of faith. Ananias heard God speak, so he went. Acting on faith always involves a level of bravery. Even if you go with questions in mind, just like Ananias, you demonstrate bravery when you step out your door. You don’t just think bravely, you act bravely. You may feel brave in your mind, but unless you follow up that thought with action you’re only daydreaming. The world holds lots of daydreamers, far fewer brave leaders.

Saul, soon to change his name to Paul, demonstrated bravery throughout his life as he spread the gospel across the Roman world. Whether in beatings, shipwrecks, persecutions, or facing crowds filled with hateful people just like he once was, Paul stood bravely for the Lord. There is no more powerful example of bravery in Scripture except for Jesus himself, and maybe Ananias, the quiet man just living out his faith, who quickly and unreservedly acted on the Lord’s command. Ananias left home that day to heal the devil himself. God used his hands to remove the scales from Saul’s eyes and from Paul’s heart. Ananias was literally the first Christian to touch Paul. In doing so, God used Ananias to change a life that changed the world. A simple man acted in brave obedience. Happens every day. God grant us the grace to do the same.

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