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POSTED 06 JUNE, 2009
Falling Into
Trial
by
J.K. McKee
editor@tnnonline.net
reproduced from the McHuey Blog
One of the easiest to overlook, yet most
instructive verses, that we find in the entire
Bible, is James 1:2. Here, the brother of our
Lord Yeshua teaches,
“My brothers and sisters, whenever you face
trials of any kind, consider it nothing but joy”
(NRSV).
James the Just says that whenever trials come
into our lives, we are to face them with joy.
This should not be too surprising for us to
hear. Psalm 81:1 exclaims, “Sing for joy to God
our strength; shout joyfully to the God of
Jacob.” Similarly in Nehemiah 8:10, “Do not be
grieved, for the joy of the LORD is your
strength.”
What is easy to overlook is the first part of
James 1:2. Translated variably as “encounter” (NASU),
“meet” (RSV/ESV), or even “experience” (HCSB),
the verb
peripiptō (peripiptw)
actually means, “so
to fall as to be encompassed by” (Thayer,
504). It is better rendered as “when you fall
into various trials” (NKJV).
One of the things that I get to do as a
Messianic Bible teacher is counsel Messianic
Believers on how to properly explain their faith
practice to other people. I have always
encouraged people that the best way to
demonstrate that Torah observance is something
that the Father wants His children to do,
is to
actively show His blessing and love to all.
Yeshua’s prefaces His words about fulfilling the
Law with, “Let your light shine before men in
such a way that they may see your good works,
and glorify your Father who is in heaven”
(Matthew 5:16). When we can remember that a
proper Torah obedience begins with love for
neighbor (Leviticus 19:18), then today’s
Messianic Believers can truly demonstrate good
works in the world and can do exactly what God
wants us to do!
Sadly, as many of us can testify, some of our
Christian family and friends have met our Torah
obedient convictions with criticism and rebuke.
Not only do they not understand what we have
been called by God to do, and not only do they
want nothing to do with it—but
they make it their duty to let us know why they
think we are in error. They will
give us one-line responses, and bits of
Scripture quoted here and there out of context.
Too frequently, they are not interested in
reasonable dialogue. As James 1:2 tells
us—consider it all joy when these trials come!
In experiencing the joy that James speaks of
when trials come, we are not allowed to
victimize ourselves. Instead, we are to remember
Yeshua’s word, “Rejoice and be glad, for your
reward in heaven is great; for in the same way
they persecuted the prophets who were before
you” (Matthew 5:12). Let the Lord be the Judge
of any person who may unfairly criticize you for
your Torah obedience—because He is the only One
who can judge any of us.
God alone gets
to determine who enters into God’s Kingdom.
But how many of us realize that it is exactly
that—“when you encounter various trials” (NASU)?
Trials will just come as a fact of life. James the Just
did not say,
“When you cause trials” or “When you create
problems for yourself.”
There are many Christian brothers and sisters
who do not want to sit down with us, crack open
letters like Galatians and Romans, consult the
Greek Apostolic Scriptures, join into the
conversation of modern scholarship, and really
consider various statements that appear to be
anti-Law. This is unfortunate, because it is
really the only way that one-liners and canned
answers can be overcome. Such is the call of the
modern Berean (Acts 17:11).
Yet similar to the Christian who does not want
to hear about the complexities of Ephesians
2:14-15, or what
telos
(teloß)
means in Romans 10:4—what about the Messianic
who wants to respond to criticism with the same
kind of one-liners and canned answers back?
What good can this really do? How many of us, rather
than responding in fairness, and in wanting to
represent the example of a life that is really
experiencing God’s blessings—do something else?
In testifying of our Messianic faith to
Christian brethren, how many of us have done the
following?
·
Hand someone a copy of a DVD, audio CD, or
cassette tape that uses insulting and
berating techniques to explain the
significance of Torah observance to
Christians?
·
Hand someone a copy of a sensationalistic
publication that makes claims about the
Bible, religious history, the Biblical
languages, and theology that cannot be
substantiated with evidence?
·
Actually take a person to a conference or
seminar where a Messianic teacher not only
spends more time explaining perceived ills
of the Christian Church, pandering to the
crowd, but is there to peddle his or her
latest wares?
I could list some more things, but I think you
all get the point of what I am saying.
Too many of the trials we encounter or fall
into,
are actually trials of our own making.
Consider all of the websites, audio teachings,
YouTube postings, blogs, and publications that
make a killing on “Christianity is pagan!”
rhetoric. If you have directed any of your
Christian family or friends to this kind of
“stuff,” you may have very well stirred up a
hornet’s nest of your own making.
For that, you
may need to go back and not only apologize, but
humble up and ask for their forgiveness.
These kinds of things not only do not help the
credibility and believability of today’s
emerging Messianic movement, but they represent
base human emotions that do not originate from
the Holy Spirit.
In the future, I would encourage you to not hand
a copy of that sensationalistic DVD or
publication to your fellow brother or sister in
the Lord Jesus—but instead find constructive
ways of focusing on areas of common agreement.
Find a way to ask a targeted question like,
“Have today’s Believers really been empowered by
disregarding the Old Testament?” Find quotations
from Christian pastors and theologians who
recognize that the Law of Moses needs to be
reconsidered, and that lawlessness is not a good
thing. Allow them to see that your pursuit of
God’s Torah and a Messianic lifestyle is
something that has aided your relationship with
Him, allowing you to further grow in God’s grace
and love, and by no means has made you into a
person that is only interested in insulting
others. Remember the Apostle Paul’s words of
Ephesians 4:1-6:
“Therefore I, the prisoner of the Lord, implore
you to walk in a manner worthy of the calling
with which you have been called, with all
humility and gentleness, with patience, showing
tolerance for one another in love, being
diligent to preserve the unity of the Spirit in
the bond of peace.
There is
one body and one Spirit, just as also you were
called in one hope of your calling; one Lord,
one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of
all who is over all and through all and in all.”
J.K. McKee
(B.A., University of Oklahoma; M.A., Asbury
Theological Seminary) is the editor of TNN
Online (www.tnnonline.net) and is a Messianic
apologist.
He is a 2009 recipient of the Zondervan Biblical
Languages Award for Greek.
He
is author of
numerous books, dealing with a wide range of
topics that are important for today’s
Messianic Believers. He has also written many articles on
theological issues,
and is presently focusing his attention on Messianic commentaries
of various books of the Bible.
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