Food For Thought..

Jesus became your sin, absorbed God's wrath, died the death you deserve, and rose again to give you life. This is gospel.

Monday, January 30, 2012

preach what you practice.

As humans, I think it's natural to have a disdain for hypocrisy. False advertising, betraying friendships, faulty leadership.. We are surrounded by it and I doubt anyone enjoys that. The only problem this poses is we're all hypocrites. When was the last time you said something but didn't do it. Think of how ridiculous this is: what if a cowboys fan never went to or watched any games, didn't own any cowboys attire, or didn't tell anyone they were a fan. Or what if somebody bought a cowboys jersey and said they played for the team. wait... whatttt? that wouldn't make any sense! I know what you might be thinking. Ryan, why are you bringing up the cowboys? psych.. it's probably a question of why I'm talking about hypocrisy and such. Well.. we have coined this nice little phrase that I would like to repair and hope to help us all walk away with a new perspective that spurs us on to walk a little taller and look a little more like Jesus.

Practice what you preach.

We have probably all said it or been mad at someone who didn't manage to accomplish it. I'm here to redeem it.. hopefully. But we'll have to deconstruct it a little before we can rebuild a better, more applicable saying. The problem with practice what you preach is its emphasis on talk. Paul said God's kingdom isn't about empty talk, but power and action (1 Cor. 4:20). Our culture is one of saying and doing completely different things. Politics, hollywood, the church.. hypocrisy is the way of the world, but there's a reason for it and we all know what it is. Sin. No, not acts of rebellion against God but the force that draws us to commit those acts. We're spiritually dead aside from Christ and we will always commit acts against the Character of God until we submit to Him.

So what does that mean for our beloved statement? We flip it. Preach what you practice. This statement is far more realistic and far more practical. Want proof? here we go.

Back to Paul, the apostle and slave of Christ. In his letter to the Galatians, he is rebuking the churches of Galatia who had Judaizers come and turn them away from the Gospel of Jesus Christ. They were people who were persuading believers they had to follow the Jewish Law to be a follower of Christ. Paul writes in verse ten of the first chapter, "For am I now seeking the approval of man, or of God? Or am I trying to please man? If i were still trying to please man, I would not be a slave of Christ." The Gospel he preached to them was the gospel he practiced. It was what he lived every single day; it was everything to him.

What's the gospel? The gospel is literally the "good news" of Jesus Christ. He came and lived a perfect life, died a perfect death, but didn't stay dead. He came back to life and secured for all peoples the ability to be returned back to communion with God. Remember the sin thing we talked about earlier? That's what separates us from Him. The solution? We turn away from living independently, apart from God, and believe Christ's sacrifice was enough to restore what we destroyed; that's salvation. Good news, huh? You probably already knew that, and if you didn't, comment or find me on facebook or twitter or whatever and we'll grab coffee, yeah? sweet, moving on.

So Paul is saying in this verse, "I'm not compromising the work Christ did on the cross or what He's done in me. I don't care what men say, I'm going to give Christ everything and preach the truth that He gave everything for us and it was enough." The theme of this verse is identity. Paul knew who he was which determined what he did. He was a slave of Christ and so he gave everything to follow Him. He preached the truth because He practiced the truth. Who you are determines what you practice; what you practice is what you'll preach. What does that mean?

Preach who you are.

Paul was all about preaching his identity. He did it to intro all the letters he wrote to churches. His name had been Saul and eeeeeeeeveryone knew Him because He was killing Christians. Then, the road to Damascus happened and He became one. Him opening all of his epistles with "Paul" is a testament of grace, a proclamation of the Gospel of Christ. He preached who He was.

Preach who you are. Plain and simple. Preach the good news of Christ to yourself daily and revel in what He's done for you. When you constantly have an understanding of who you are, it will change what you practice. When you're constantly practicing the gospel, you'll be preaching the gospel. You'll radiate it.

Hallelujah, praise the Lamb. The cross was enough. I love you guys.

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