Tuesday, January 16, 2018

the little piggie who stayed home











Last week I passed a milestone in my writing, publishing number 1800 on this blog.  In just a bit under ten years, who would ever have guessed where God would take me when he gave me this vision.  But here I am and here we are, and I hope that the spirit has made you think and consider the claims of Jesus as you read.  And gone out and shared Jesus with others, equipping them to equip others, that’s discipleship.  But it would surprise many to know I haven’t been to church but once in the last six years, yet grow in the Lord.  Like the little piggie who went to market, I have gone out and lived a Christian life outside of the church, much to the chagrin of many church folks,and their regulations, living under the guise of being a Christian.  When Jesus gave me Matthew 25, he wanted me, us to be different from those mentioned whom he never knew, the same ones who made him sick in Revelation 3, he wants us to get out and live and serve among the masses.  Yet I was taught in church that evangelism was inviting a lost friend to church, missions was giving more, tithing was required, even if it made me bitter, and the safety I need was found within the church body, if only I went with them. But where was Jesus and his love? Like minded Christians they are called, who never see how they are like the Pharisees that hated Jesus, yet were so religious and pious no one liked them.  A rigorous exterior of God, but rotting inside from the lack of the spirit.  Saved but not cashing in on the blessings, on earth as it is in heaven, as Jesus put it.  Whose claim of godliness is no problems, yet crater at the first sign of distress.  They’re in the word, sadly the word never appears in them.  And Jesus told about them in the parable of the prodigal son.  You may know the story....
Jesus taught in parables so we would relate to them and see our weakness, and repent and turn to him.  So much time is spent condemning the younger brother who wanted his inheritance and then wasted it foolishly and on sin.  A great evangelistic message of turning to Christ, but few neglect to see the older brother, the little piggie who stayed home was really the wasteful, useless, and prodigal son.  His true colors being revealed when his younger brother returns and is celebrated.  A bitterness within him overflowing, bragging how he never left, he always took care of his father’s business, but failed to see how much of a Pharisee he was.  Do you rejoice when someone is saved?  When someone is healed?  When one who has gone astray returns?  The older brother didn’t.  But his father did.  Jesus was showing here how the Jews thought they had heaven based on Abraham being their father, nothing else was necessary, but nothing else was farther from the truth.  They needed to be forgiven and saved also, he was just like those who are self righteous, bragging on what they have done for God, seeking reward in it.  But God sees their hearts, and their likemindedness doesn’t include Jesus.  Like the Pharisees, and many churches today, they don’t want to deal with sinners in the body, it offends their reputation to find sinners in their church, and forget the joy of rejoicing when one comes to Christ.  No wonder Jesus got sick from them, and hung with the sinners, they knew they needed him, and acknowledged it.  While the church was too self righteous.
So the father comforts him with three things, “son you are always with me,” the word son meaning child.  You never lost your place in the family, I know you and what you are doing, don’t let sin get between us.  Second he says “all that I have is yours.”  The younger son spent his third, you have 2/3’s as your inheritance.  More.  The division, the will has already been signed into action.  And thirdly,  “it is fitting to celebrate your brother’s return, for he was lost and now is found.  He was dead and now lives.”  Jesus is reminding us that we should not find fault when others are saved, but rejoice as the angels in heaven do when one is.  And that his place was secure no matter what the younger one did, he loved both of them equally.  It is God’s grace, the holy spirit that saves and changes things, not going to church, having family who are saved, or kids on the worship team.  Gee, if only they could be like us, is the message they send.  It is not good works you boast in, but Jesus who saves.  If only the older brother had gotten it, he would be at the party instead of outside whining and complaining. 
One little piggie went to market, and came to Christ.  He knew his father’s love.  One little piggie stayed home and was miserable.  Both had the same father, only one repented.  One worshipped his father for accepting him back, the other miserable because he never left, but had checked out years ago.  From a father he never really knew.  He was so selfish and worrying about himself he missed the blessings.  Blinded by bitterness he is like the Pharisees, and many in churches today, sharing the same father with the little piggies who went to market, but never enjoying the fruits of the spirit.  He tried to please his father by his works, the younger one by his changed heart.  Which piggie are you....
The church has left the building, it is active on the street, among hookers and bikers, in prisons, and even in churches.  Spirit driven, and joyful, the true test is how we react, not how we act.  The Pharisees were all about the external, Jesus is all about the internal.  The piggie that went to market was glad he didn’t get what he deserved, the one who stayed home was upset he didn’t get what he thought he deserved.  Same father, different brothers.  And after the younger had squandered all he had been given, his father still had more to give.  Just like the Jesus I know.....do you? 
The law kills, the spirit gives life.  So get out and live.  Give and don’t tithe under compulsion becoming bitter.  Don’t waste an hour on Sunday and go home and back to who you really are.  Don’t be bitter that no one matches up to you, but realize you never can match up to Jesus.  One little piggie went to market, one stayed home.  Which piggie was the prodigal?  One little piggie was a whiner, going wee, wee, wee, wee all the way home.  Remember one little piggie ate roast beef, the fatted calf.  While one little piggie had none.  How fitting that piggies are pork, and the Jews were forbidden to eat them....
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com