The Politically Incorrect Jesus Esimerkki
Golden Rule or Golden Calf?
Everyone can quote the Golden Rule — “Do to others as you would have them do to you” (Luke 6:31 NIV).
Unfortunately, this long-revered maxim of civility seems to have fallen on deaf ears of late. The money- making schemes by brand-name banks and investment firms, personal investment counselors, and members of Congress have not helped foster the golden rule.
What’s contributed to such an erosion of personal and corporate responsibility? Simply, when you remove God from the public square, ethical conduct diminishes. Biblical principles are thrown out the window, and God’s laws are ignored and even ridiculed. Self-sacrifice is soon replaced by self-gain.
Much like Moses’ experience at Mt. Sinai in Exodus 32, people begin to look elsewhere for their significance and security when God’s presence leaves the camp. Without leadership based on God’s moral law, many of us will clamor for gods that are fashioned to fit our lifestyles and cravings.
Ironically, we’ve replaced the golden rule for a golden calf. We often look to worship the created rather than the Creator.
Ultimately, with no moral constraint or concern for others, chaos ensues. Society crumbles under the weight of its sin.
When Moses came down the mountain, he saw the madness and lawlessness that came as a result of worshipping the golden calf. He had to literally throw the Word of God at the situation to stop the madness. God’s Word is needed yet today to stop the madness we face.
God may not be politically correct in the public square, but without him that square soon fills up with people dancing around idols of their own creation. King David tells us in Psalm 115 that those who seek to replace God with an idol (literal or figurative) will ultimately be like them—hollow, hard, and unbending.
Ultimately, we wind up worshipping ourselves. That’s a scary thought. I don’t know about you, but I’d make a terrible idol.
Question: Are you living out the golden rule, or dancing around the golden calf?
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Much of what Jesus taught and stood for clashes with popular politically correct notions that want to redefine and reinterpret the person and teachings of Jesus—and ultimately the Christian faith—so that neither step on anyone’s sensitivities. Jesus, however, calls us to be salt and light, not chameleons. If we are Christ’s representatives, changing colors may allow us to blend in, but it will be at the expense of our integrity and Jesus’ admonition for us to follow his words, which are life. We need to grasp hold of a faith that is THE center of our lives and meets us in the trenches of life. That faith acts as a filter for what we experience daily—in media, entertainment, politics, relationships, and yes, even in the church. The Politically Incorrect Jesus addresses issues and ideologies in our current cultural climate, juxtaposed with the clear teachings of Jesus, so readers can embrace being who God designed them to be—men and women of counterculture faith, making a difference in a counterfeit world.
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