(16)
The Will of the Father and the Evil Side of Religion
This meditation teaches about choices and deep needs of our soul: the need for personal recognition, for personal affirmation, and for personal security in a society where true godliness is clearly apparent. The Father understands that we have these needs of the soul, just as he understands that we have material needs. And he promises to meet these deeper needs... but in His way and in His timing. If we cultivate a personal relationship with the Father âin secretâ, his truth and character will start to take root more and more in our hearts and lives. For what is in our hearts is what overflows in our religious words and religious actions: either as fruit that blesses others or as thorns that abuse and wound them. So if we focus our eyes on our heavenly Father and nourish our relationship with Him, we not only will get to know him better, but we will become âknownâ by him and become more like him. âJohanna Duran-Greve (Germany)
Meditation Text
'Father' texts:Â Matthew 6:1,4,6a-b, Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â 6:18a-b; 7:21
Scripture passage:Â Mat.6:1-6,16-18, Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â 7:16b-19,21-23; Â Lk. 6:44-46
Introduction Video Time:Â 01:00
SCRIPTURE PASSAGE
MATTHEW (6:1-6 GH[i])
âBe careful,â Jesus said ânot to practice YOUR relational righteousness [Gr. dikaiosunee][ii] in front of other people to be seen by them, otherwise YOU have no reward with YOUR Father who is in heaven. ¡So whenever you[iii] give to the poor, you should not sound the trumpet before you, like the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the broad streets so that they may be honored by people. I tell YOU for sure: they are receiving their reward. ¡But when you give to the poor do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing, ¡so that your gifts to the poor might be in secret. Then your Father who observes what is in secret will reward you.
'And whenever you pray do not be like the hypocrites, for they like to pray standing on street corners and in the synagogues so that they may be seen by people. I tell YOU for sure: they are receiving their reward. ¡But whenever you[iii] pray go to your storeroom, locking your door, and pray to your Father who is in secret. And your Father who observes what is in secret will reward you.
(6:16-18)
'And whenever YOU fast, do not become like the hypocrites, for they disfigure their faces with a sullen expression so that they may show their fasting to people. I tell YOU for sure: they are receiving their reward. ¡But when you[iii] are fasting, wash your face and put oil on your head ¡so that it will not appear to people that you are fastingâonly to your Father who is in secret. And your Father who observes what is in secret will reward you.Â
(7:16b-19)
'Does anyone pick grapes from thorn bushes, or figs from thistles? ¡Even so: a sound tree produces good fruit but a rotten tree produces bad fruit. ¡A sound tree cannot produce bad fruit, neither can a rotten tree produce good fruit. ¡Every tree that does not produce good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire.Â
LUKE (6:44a, 45-46)
âEach tree is known by its own fruit⌠¡A good person produces what is good out of the good stored up in his heart, but an evil person produces what is evil from the evil stored up in his heart. And out of the things that fill the heart, the mouth of a person speaks. ¡Why do YOU call me, "Lord, Lord" and not put into practice what I say?
MATTHEWÂ (7:21-23)
âNot everyone who says to me, âLord, Lord,â shall enter into the kingdom of heavenâonly the one doing the will of my Father who is in heaven. In that day many will say to me âLord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, cast out demons in your name, and do many miracles in your name?â But then will I confirm to them that, âI never knew YOU! Depart from me YOU who engage in lawlessness!ââ
MEDITATION
These texts from the Sermon on the Mount relate to the fourth pair of statements directed to âour Fatherâ in the Lordâs Prayer (see the bold type in the boxes).
1a. Our Father in heavenâŚ
2a. May your name be kept holy
Â
3a. May your kingdom come
4a. May your will be done on earth
       the same way as in heaven
1b. Give us today our daily bread,
2b. Forgive our debts in the same way
      we forgive our debtors,
3b. May you lead us, but not into testing,
4b. Deliver us from the evil one.
.
In the two previous meditations, we looked at the choices we make with respect to our material needs (Med.#14 & Med.#15). We now look at what Jesus says about the choices we make in regard to our deeper needs of the soulâfor personal recognition (âto be seenâ: Mat.6:1,5), for personal affirmation (âto be honoredâ: 6:2), and for personal security in a society where righteous relationships with God and with people are clear to all (âthat they may showâ: 6:16).
My Father understands that I have these needs of the soul, and he promises to meet them⌠but in his way and in his timing. His way is to meet them first âin secretâ, in a personal relationship where he is the one who affirms (rewards) me. And in his time, when Jesus returns, he will reward me openly for doing his will in private as well as in public. But on that day Jesus will also reveal those who practiced spiritual disciplines and exercised supernatural power to gain public recognition and affirmation, and to impose their forms of godliness on society. For any good religious practices and demonstrations of miraculous power can be used for evil. And many who think they are defending Godâs principles and power in society will end up being told by God that they are âhypocritesâ and no different from other âlawless onesâ, because their lack of relationship with (being âknownâ by) him, resulted in evil fruit (thorns and thistles) that wounded and abused others.
The only way to avoid such an end is to cultivate a personal relationship with my Father âin secretâ. For what I do in secret will overflow in my religious words and actions, If I focus on learning what is his will and on doing itâwhether I get recognition from others or notâI will grow to be like my Father and bear the good fruit of the Spirit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. And it is âin secretâ that I learn to wait for his timingâfor His Spirit to convict others of sin and to bring about the public vindication of godliness in my family, my work place, and in my society.
Please note: Jesus does not reject the traditional spiritual disciplines (âWhen you give, âŚpray, âŚfast). But the key to my bearing good fruit lies in practicing these disciplines with the Father where he is, âin secretâ. By listening to his Spirit and his Word, and by putting into practice what I hear and readââin secretââI will receive recognition and affirmation from him âin secretâ as well. Through this personal dialogue with my Father, I not only get to know him better, but I make myself âknownâ to him, and become more like him.
My Father âsees what is done in secretâ. Some people use this truth solely to make us afraid of God. But there is also a positive connotation to it. My Father knows my heart in ways that no one else does! When I have tried my best to do his will and I am overlooked, misunderstood or encounter opposition, it is a great comfort to know that âHe knowsâ my heart. He is a Father who knows me in ways that I do not even know myself, and he longs to affirm me, to reward every small step in relational righteousness I have made with a quiet âwell doneâ. Remember, he is like Jesus, not like earthly father-figures who were âevilâ (Med.#10 & Med.#14). A few years ago I was struggling with discouragement over lack of results in our ministry. Yet in more than one prayer time, I was surprised to hear an inner voice say: âYou are my son, Iâm pleased with you.â I canât tell you what that meant! Even his correction is accompanied by affirmation because we are his precious sons and daughters. Yet fear can keep me from hearing these words of affirmation which he desires to speak to me âin secretâ.
That our Father âis in secretâ has another implication for our religious behavior. He often does not act immediately to publicly expose unrighteousness in the world. Nor does he always reveal (show) his righteous purposes right away. For many generations, he kept âthe mystery of his willâ hidden in himself and didnât reveal it (Med.#6). When you find it difficult to put up with the ungodliness around you, and you suddenly feel religiously obliged to speak out or show people the way it is supposed to be, consider your Fatherâs patience. Think of how long he put up with evil before revealing his relational righteousness[ii], while giving witness âin secretâ ways like: daily âcausing his sun to rise on the unrighteousâ, and giving them ârainâŚand crops in their seasonâ (Med.#12, Acts 14:17).
While Jesus gives us authority to prophesy, cast out demons and do miracles in his name, it is not these that make us like our Father. His character is displayed most often in deeds we do out of the public spotlight, like: peacemaking (Med.#11), forgiving those who have wronged me (Med.#13), doing good to enemies, being kind to foreigners, and being compassionate to people who are ungrateful (Med.#12). But unless the righteous character of my Father is growing in my heartâthrough my relationship with him âin secretââmy religious deeds will not only be hypocritical and empty, but they will be downright abusiveâlike thorns and thistles. Sheep-like behavior cannot conceal the casualties that people with wolf-like hearts leave in their wake.
PRAYING THE WORD
NOTE:
[i]Â The whole Scripture Passage is taken from J.K. Mellis, The Good News of the Messiah by the Four Witnesses, pp.67-69.
[ii] Greek dikaio-sunee = ârighteous-withâ or ârelational righteousnessâ with God, or with people, or with both (See note [ii], Med.#11).
[iii] After addressing his listeners as a group, using the 2nd person plural (âYOUâ), Jesus switches to the 2nd person singular (âwhen you giveâŚ, etc.â). He does this to personalize the practice of all three spiritual disciplines (giving, prayer and fasting), and to make each discipleâs relationship with the Father personal as well (âyour Fatherâ) .