Mark 8:17-21
Sometimes
in life you just have to be straight forward and point out the obvious that
someone is missing. We have to point out the elephant in the room. We must tell
people that the king has no clothes. Sometimes we even have to be willing to
tell the king. Or that passing on trillions of dollars of debt to our
grandchildren is immoral.
The
reason this type of action is necessary in the first place is that people get
comfortable believing what they believe. We tend to hang around with people who
believe like we believe. We read things that reinforce our beliefs. We begin to
avoid exposing ourselves to the opposition rather than engaging it.
There
are reasons we do this. I think the primary reason we do this is because we
want to avoid conflict, we want to get along. But Truth will rock our world. It
will change the way we think, act and feel. It will make us uncomfortable. It
will move us. It will make enemies. It will offend people. It will start an
argument. So, we avoid it.
This
can be true in families and even among close friends. We carefully navigate
controversial topics to avoid those on the ‘forbidden’ list.
Jesus’
disciples had become hardened in their thinking. They had become ‘one track’
thinkers. Jesus had mentioned the religious and political leaders’ yeast. The
disciples had put their minds in park and focused on physical bread. And
somehow they had landed in a parking lot and thought they were still driving.
They hadn’t even realized that they were missing the obvious. They thought they
were still on target.
Jesus
gets them to engage their brains, to put their spiritual minds back into gear
and pull out of the parking lot. He does this by pointing out the obvious. He
had fed 9000 people with only a few loaves and a few fish. He had proven that
physical limitations like quantity weren’t limitations for Him. So He engages
the disciples’ minds and spirits by bringing them back to these two events,
reminding them of those moments, getting them to engage where they were parked.
When
we get stuck on a belief and are unable to engage in discussion around that
without anger flaring, then we have a hard heart. We have taken up such a
defensive position, dug trenches and put in defensive towers, that we keep
genuine seekers at bay. No one can approach us to even ask a genuine question,
one that could lead them to faith, because we sit in fear of being attacked.
Find
these defensive positions in your life. Take time to discover the reasons you retreat
behind the walls. Learn enough to be able to hold a conversation around these
topics, to give an answer about the faith we have. Be ready to state the
obvious. State the Truth.