The first thing in this post I want to tackle is the idea of “inalienable rights.”
Despite what modern liberal progressives will tell you, the founding fathers of America studied the Bible extensively for principles of self-government. That’s because the earliest system of government based on ideas of equality of man and republican democracy was not Greece or Rome but Israel.
These men were at the very least Deists and felt strong conviction of a single creator. And if that Creator designed the immaculate way in which our world works ecologically and biologically, then He must also have ideas about proper government and we would be fools to ignore it.
And if God instituted a government based on certain rights of self-government and equality, then God also gave those rights to man. And if God instituted rights, then they could not be taken away. Those rights were inherent to man, like his DNA – “inalienable.”
Among the rights they found in the Law of Israel was the right of life and property.
My point here is that you have a biblical right to live and a right to your stuff. It is your right to choose to do with it what you will. The plea to give up your stuff and your life is not a denial of those rights, but rather evidence those rights exist.
Even in Acts, during a time when the whole church in Jerusalem seemed to be giving up their stuff, Ananias and Sapphira were told by Peter, before God struck them dead, “It was your property to do with what you will.”
Paul, in 1 Corinthians, pleads with that fellowship to be compassionate in financial giving, but he also makes it clear that it should never be by obligation. It should be with a willing heart.
All of this establishes that no one can take what is yours by right. Take this with a grain of salt because you will ultimately lose both your life and your stuff, usually simultaneously, but while in this life you must still give it willingly. And yes, oppression exists, but oppression is evil for the very fact that the rights of self-government and private property are from God Himself.
Jesus never forced anyone to give up anything. He only declared the spiritual reality and allowed for people to choose eternal destruction or eternal life.
These are rights and privileges that must be given up in this life to have the life and authority of Christ both now and for eternity.
In America, we love to defend our rights. Anytime we want something or feel something is unfair, we claim it as a right.
It is honorable and good for a worldly government to recognize and protect certain rights. But it is truly Christ-like to lay them down.
“Let this mind be in you” – the mind that recognizes certain rights from God – i.e. life and property – and renounces them for a greater reward – the rights and priveleges of being a child of the King.
Jesus didn’t fight for the rights of this life but continually expressed the authority and freedom of a heavenly kingdom. If we give up our citizenship here, then we are free to be citizens of heaven.
As we see in Paul’s testimony in Philipians 3, Paul even counted his Jewish heritage as lost. In the context of discussing “no confidence in the flesh”, Paul lists the things he could take confidence in as a Jew – even concerning righteousness which is in the law, “blameless.” And he counts it all as rubbish “that I might gain Christ.”
“That I might gain Christ.”
Jesus died on the cross to show us the way to life. And we must identify with that act in order to be like Him.
Galatians 3: I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now life in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me.
1 Tim 2: Here is a trustworthy saying: If we died with Him, we will also live with Him.
Colossians 3: For you died, and your life is now hidden with Christ in God.
While it may seem morbid, God wants you dead so He can give you life. Your previous life is over. A dead man doesn’t need to bother himself with the things of this life. That dude in his grave probably isn’t worrying about leaving the iron on … and if he is, he can’t do anything about it now.
We must die, be crucified with Christ, so we can be dead to sin. This identification with Christ in His death is a constant struggle because while the flesh may be dead, our brain doesn’t know it yet.
I call it the phantom limb syndrome. You know, there’s this guy who loses his right leg in a war. But it wakes him up at night with aches and pains and it itches him. He swears he feels pain in his right pinky toe.
But he has no right pinky toe. His whole leg no longer exists.
Our brains are so used to living by the flesh, it is difficult to convince our mind that the flesh is dead. Hence the importance of renewing our minds and not conforming ourselves to the ideas of this world. “If you have died with Christ from the basic principles of the world, why, as though living in the world, do you subject yourself to regulations-” Colossians 2.
“Likewise you also, reckon yourselves to be dead indeed to sin, but alive to God in Christ Jesus our Lord.” Romans 6.
A disciple changes his thinking, considering himself dead to sin, and “how shall we who died to sin live any longer in it?”
In Colossians 3, Paul goes into more detail, explaining that we are to put off the “old man”, the dead one, and put on the new. And he makes it clear that this actually means changing our behavior.
However, too often we hang on to our life, our dreams, our desires, our concerns, our careers, our rights and priveleges, our comforts. God wants us to be about the Kingdom above all else, to the literal exclusion of all else, not only when we can fit it into our schedule.
He wants His house to be a house of prayer, for our zeal for Him to consume us. That necessitates being dead to this world and the things in it.
Before I move on, I at least want to mention the fact that some are killed and executed for the faith. I don’t want to minimize at all the reality of truly suffering for Jesus. All of the first apostles except for John were killed for Jesus. The early church honored martyrs as great men and women of faith. There are still martyrs all over the world suffering and dying for the Name as we speak. True discipleship makes you a target, even if they don’t kill you - if they hated Jesus and tried to kill Him, how will they treat you? “No servant is greater than His Master.” That is part of the cost you must count.
8(c) next …
Peace.