GLENN'S BIBLE STUDY
Title: THE CHALLENGE OF CHANGE
by Pastor Glenn Pease
THE CHALLENGE OF CHANGE
Based on Acts 22:1-21
On a dark November day in 1884 the people of Chicago passing over the
bridge near Clark street were surprised. Below them at the dock was a ship
piled high with Christmas trees of all sizes. The news raced through the
city, and soon there were reporters there sensing a story, and they were
right. A 13 year old boy named Herman Schuenenman, who was an orphan from
Wisconsin, conceived of the idea of a Christmas tree ship that could bring
Christmas trees from Northern Michigan to Chicago.
His idea worked so well that it became a Christmas tradition to buy
a tree from his ship. Children who bought a tree with their parents grew
up to become parents, and they brought their children to buy a tree. In
1898 the ship sank in a Lake Michigan storm, and Herman's brother went down
with it, but he didn't quit. He got another ship and kept the tradition
going. In 1912 Herman and his crew of 18, and all of the trees, went down
in another terrible storm, and they were never found.
Barbara, his
wife, known as the Christmas tree lady, the following year in 1913 shipped
in the usual 20 thousand trees and kept the tradition going. She kept it
going until 1932 even though in the last years all her trees were brought
in by train. She died in 1933, and with her the tradition ended. All that
is left is the cemetery headstone engraved with their names and a Christmas
tree. The point of this true story is that even deeply formed traditions
can and do change, and nothing stays the same, for the very essence of life
in a fallen world is change.
We can all remember experiences of Christmas that can never be the
same. I had a cousin and uncle near my age, and we ran around together
as young boys. Christmas at grandma's house was a tradition all my boyhood
life. It was a special time, but once I grew up it was never the same,
for all of life had changed. It is the same for everyone, for nobody can
stop time and keep everything the same. Even if you lived in the White
House you cannot do it. Listen to Elinor Roosevelt describe her Christmas
experience.
"I remember especially the Christmas that Mr. Churchill
was with us after we were involved in World War II. After
that year, the Christmases weren't so cheerful. My mother-
in-law died in the autumn before that first war Christmas.
The boys all
went off to different war theaters. Their absence
meant that we did what
we could to cheer their families if they
were with us, or we tried to get in touch with them by telephone
if they
were far away. We did more in those years for foreign
people cut off from their homelands by war, but it was no
longer the old-time
Christmas and ever was to be again."
The world changes, the family
changes, you change, and all of life joins in a conspiracy to make sure
that nothing stays just as it is. There is good reason for the wedding
vows being a covenant for better or for worse, for both are inevitable in
a world of change. But thank God there is a solid rock in the midst of
this quicksand of constant flux. Jesus is the same yesterday, today, and
forever. He is the Rock and the Anchor that gives stability in this world
of perpetual change. Nancy Turner wrote,
Under the old and arching
skies
Clear carols call, by street and hill;
The stars that saw the great Star rise
Are shining still, are shining still.
In all the long years, come what will,
There's nothing new and nothing strange
In one old night of song and light-
The heart of Christmas cannot change!
If we are going to cope with life in a changing world, we need a heart
that is captivated by the heart of Christmas that cannot change. We need
to be filled with the Spirit of Christ, and surrender to His Lordship.
This is always the key to a happy new year. The way to God does not change,
and the ways to please God do not change. What we need to see is that even
the Christ-filled Christian has to still live in, cope with, and adjust
to, a constantly changing world.
Paul becomes an ideal subject for the study of a Christian in a world
of change. He went through the most radical change of any of the Apostles
in his conversion. He had the most radical change of career, and faced
the most radical changes in theological commitment. I do not think you
will find another person in all of the Bible who had to adjust to more change
than the Apostle Paul. He was changed from a persecutor of Christians to
a promoter of Christians. He was a brutal, prejudiced, and legalistic tyrant
who became a gentle, open minded, grace oriented servant of the very people
he persecuted. He changed from a Jewish focus to a Gentile focus.
Paul was a settled scholar who was changed into a world traveler. All this
change was not without struggle, and so we can learn a lot about facing
the future with all its changes from a man like Paul. What does the New
Year hold in store? We do not know, but we know for sure there will be change,
and so learning to understand change and how to deal with it will always
be an asset. The first thing we want to learn from Paul's life is:
I.
THE REALITY OF CHANGE.
Paul's life does not prove that change is
good, or that change is bad. It just proves that change is a part of reality,
and that it is inevitable. It can be good or bad, or both. His conversion
was good, and the best thing that ever happened to him. Nobody can be saved
without change, for one cannot go from a lost sinner to being a new man
in Christ without change. Change is of the very essence of God's plan of
salvation. Every major theological word dealing with salvation revolves
around change. D. L. Moody saw this, and on the fly leaf of his Bible he
had these notes:
"Justification, a change of state, a new standing before God.
Repentance, a change of mind, a new mind about God.
Regeneration, a change of nature, a new heart from God.
Conversion, a change of life, a new life for God.
Adoption, a change of family, a new relationship toward God.
Sanctification, a change of service, separation unto God.
Glorification, a change of condition, at home with God."
There is no point in being anti-change, for change is a vital part
of God's plan. No change would mean no hope for a fallen world and lost
men. It is the reality of change that gives us Paul instead of Saul- a
builder instead of a destroyer of the kingdom of God. The first thing we
have to do is face up to the reality of change as a blessing. Yes, it can
be a burden, but it is not automatically so. Change also means hope. The
negatives of life can become positives because of the reality of change.
Lost people can be saved. Messed up lives can be restored to order. Good
can be brought out of evil. Thank God we always have the hope of change.
Balzac considered himself an expert in handwriting. One day someone
brought him a notebook of a small boy and asked him to evaluate the lads
potential. After careful examination of the child's scroll he said to the
woman, "My frank opinion is the child is slovenly and probably stupid,
and I fear will never amount to anything." The woman began to laugh and
said, "This is your very own book from when you were a little boy in school."
Thank God that little boys change, and what they do changes. Paul said,
"When I was a child I talked like a child; I thought like a child, I reasoned
like a child. When I became a man I put childish ways behind me." Don't
knock change, for that is the key to growth, maturity, and progress, not
only for Paul, but for all of us.
Bernard Shaw once said, "My tailor is the only sane man I know. He
re-measures me every time I go get a suit." In other words, he assumes
the possibility of change. Others often judge by what was, and forget that
a person can change and be different. The Christian has an obligation
to expect others to change. The optimistic view of change should characterize
Christian thinking. We ought not to put people into a box and say this
is who they are and what they do, and how they think, and that is all there
is.
People who did that with Paul missed a great chance to be among
the first to know and love the world's greatest Apostle. Jesus believed
in Paul, and knew that with adequate light Paul would go the way God willed.
He was truly blind and ignorant in his zeal for the law and opposition to
Christ. But Jesus knew He had the capacity to change, and that is why he
was chosen. Everybody needs somebody who believes they can change. So
many people take their own lives because they keep saying to themselves,
"Nothing will ever change. I am like I am forever, and things are like
they are forever." Their blindness to the hope of change is what plunges
them into the pit of despair.
The Gospel is the good news that anybody
can change, and anything can be made different in its ultimate impact by
the grace of God. The miserable people of the world need to hear that life
can change. The sick people of the world need to hear that life can change.
The sad and rejected people of the world need to hear that life can change.
The reality of change is the hope of the world. We look for the coming
of our Lord again because that is the ultimate demonstration of the reality
of change. He will change everything, and all evil will pass away, and
there will be a new heaven and new earth wherein dwells righteousness.
Change is the name of the game that God is playing, and that is why every
new year is filled with potential happiness for there is no end to the possibilities
it holds because of the reality of change.
Paul is trying to get the Jews to see that God has changed everything
by the sending of the Messiah into the world. His plan is to use Israel
to reach the whole world of the Gentiles. But they were not open to this
change. Their tradition of being God's chosen people blinded them to the
reason for their being chosen. They were chosen to be a tool to reach the
whole world, but they were locked into the idea of being chosen as an end
in itself. They were chosen just to be special they thought, and they were
not open to change. That is why we must be ever evaluating our traditions,
and asking if they are valid.
During the Boer War when the British fought the Dutch, the sharp eyed
Dutch were expert snipers. Many a British soldier was shot in the light
of his own match when he lit a cigarette. This is why the saying started
that it was bad luck for three people to light a cigarette from the same
match. Two might quickly light, but for a third to do so would give the
sniper time to focus in, and it could mean death to that third soldier.
It was no superstition. It was the fact, and a life or death fact. But
away from that context the idea is pure superstition with no basis whatever.
Change the context, and you change the meaning of all that relates to that
context.
There was a point in Israel's history when relating to Gentiles was
forbidden. God needed a people who were cleansed and sanctified to be a
people who could be a channel of His love and truth in the world. They
were to avoid the ways of the Gentiles and not get involved with their evil
life-style. That has never changed, but now that God has achieved His goal,
and sent His Son into the world through the pure virgin of Israel-all is
changed. Now God's plan is to reach those lost Gentiles. Those who could
see the reality of change, and how God even changes His strategy at different
points in history, responded to change and became Christians. But as we
see here, most rejected change as bad and unacceptable. You could be missing
God's best by rejecting change, but what we want to see is that it is not
easy to accept change. Paul in this context had a battle which leads to
our second point which is-
II. THE RESISTENCE TO CHANGE.
Paul was quite cooperative with Christ when he was confronted by His
supernatural presence. He quickly said, "What shall I do Lord?" And he
followed instructions. He went into Damascus and was then baptized after
the urging of Ananias. But then in verse 17 Paul says that later in Jerusalem
when he was praying God spoke to him, and urged him to quickly leave Jerusalem.
Paul then responds to God with resistance. He tries to explain to God that
fleeing the city is not really necessary, for his reputation there will
stand him in good stead. He did not realize how his conversion would change
everything. He wanted to keep the status quo and go back to Jerusalem,
and keep his role there intact.
God said, "Nothing doing-your out
of there. Go, for I am sending you to the Gentiles." Here we see the other
side of change. This is the side we don't like because it means loss of
the familiar and the comfortable. Paul did not mind being changed from
an unbeliever to a believer, but he sure hated how it complicated his life,
and forced him to give up his loved environment. God had a new job for
Paul as a Apostle to the Gentiles. Paul came to love it, but it was a radical
change in his plans, and he resisted the change. Change can often seem
like the enemy, and we are conditioned to oppose it.
Change is not automatically good, and so there is a legitimate right
to question it and resist it, but it is important that we examine our motives.
Do we resist change for selfish reasons? Paul just did not want to run
away from his people and his position of responsibility in Jerusalem. Paul
Courtney wrote a poem about his resistance as a conservative Catholic to
the changes in the church.
Latin's gone
Peace is too
Singin' and shoutin'
From every pew.
Altar's turned around
Priest is too
Commontator's yellin'
Page twenty-two.
Communion rail's goin'
Stand up straight
Kneelin' suddenly
Went outta date.
Possessions are formin'
In every aisle
Salvation's organized
Single file.
Rosary's out
Psalms are in
Hardly ever hear
A word against sin.
Listen to the lector
Hear how he reads
Please stop rattlin'
Them rosary beads.
Padre's lookin' puzzled
Doesn't know his part
Use to know the whole deal
In Latin by heart.
I hope all changes
Are just about done
That they won't drop Bingo
Before I've won.
This clearly self-centered resistance to change is funny, but more
prevalent than we are willing to admit. A little boy prayed, "Lord if you
can't make me a better boy, don't worry about it. I'm having a real good
time as it is." We all tend to resist change that affects us personally,
and which we perceive to be a loss to ourselves. Paul was not unwilling
to serve God, but he was just not convinced that God's way was the best.
God had to push Paul to go against his feelings in order to be all he could
be for the kingdom of God.
This same thing happened to Ida Scudder. Her doctor father and her
mother were missionaries in India. She had no interest in India, but when
her mother became severely ill she went to India to care for her. She longed
to get back to America and the comfortable and familiar. One night as she
lay daydreaming about her homeland, a knock came at the door. When she
opened it, there was a stately Mohammedan who bowed to her and urged her
to come to help his wife who was ill unto death. She explained that her
father was the doctor and not her. But the man said that "no man has ever
looked upon the face of my wife. She needs you." She explained she was
no doctor and could not come. Three times this happened. Bramins who could
not ask a male doctor to treat their wives begged her to come to help.
She naturally resisted and refused, and all three of those women died.
Their religion made it forbidden to use a male doctor. Ida Scudder had
no plans to be a doctor, or to be a part of India's history. She want only
to get back to her comfortable life, but the death of those three women
changed her whole life. She went back to America and became Dr. Ida Scudder,
and she changed the lives of tens of thousands of people as the famous head
of the Mary Tabor Schell Hospital in Vellare, India.
Resistance
to change is natural, but we need to keep examining our resistance to see
if we might be resisting the call of God to a change that fulfills His very
purpose for our lives. God's plan may not look like our plan, but it is
always the best for us, and resistance is foolish. A young girl won the
Junior National Award for the best recipe, and she was being offered a check
on national TV. But she said, "That is not my creation," and she refused
the check. The MC was embarrassed and looked to the judges. One of them
had to come over and explain, "We baked it in a different shape, but it
is your recipe." So the girl took her prize. She resisted because of the
change in shape, but when she understood the change she gave up her resistance.
We don't have to like the shape of things, but we have to surrender when
the change is in hands beyond our own.
Even Jesus resisted the radical change of giving his healthy life
to death on the cross. It was not the shape of things that would appeal
to anyone, but it was that cross shape destiny that would change the whole
world and all eternity, and so Jesus surrendered to this radical change,
because it was the Father's will. Resistance is normal, but God expects
surrender when His will is clear. This leads to our third point-
III. THE RESOLUTION TO CHANGE.
That is what we see Jesus doing in Gethsemane. He resolved in His
heart and mind to go along with the change to fulfill God's plan. So Paul
also did not like the shape of things that God presented, but when he got
the message that this was God's will that he go to the Gentiles, Paul resolved
in his heart and mind that he would go and be the best Apostle to the Gentiles
he could possibly be.
This whole chapter of Acts 22 is Paul's testimony of how he was changed.
He was no longer a legalist locked into the law. He was now a man for all
men. The Jews did not like the change. In fact, they said his change made
him worthless to Judaism, and he ought to be dead. Every change seems to
be bad news for somebody, but Paul's change was good news for the whole
world, even if some hated it. Because Paul resolved in his heart to surrender
to the changes God wanted in his life, Paul became a major instrument in
God's hands to change this world for Christ.
What we learn from
Paul is that one of the best ways to have a happy new year, and new life,
is to resolve to change, and become a more flexible instrument for God.
Get rid of the idea that so often dominates us, and says that we are what
we are, and can make no changes that are significant. We tend to feel we
are destined to be in certain ruts, and however boring our routine, that
is where we are ordained to stay. Not so! We can be different, and change
for the better. If we have wanted to read through the Bible for years, but
never got it done, we can change this year and do it. Pass failures do
not lock us in. We can change and do what we have never done before.
If there was something that you have always wished you could do, or be,
for Christ, but just have never been motivated to do it, let the potential
of change excite you about the days ahead. Everyone of us can make changes
that will be pleasing to God and beneficial to us and others. In a fallen
world we must face the facts. Sin, folly, mistakes, and failures of all
kinds will be a part of the future. Until the final changes that Christ
will make at His coming, we have to admit some things will never change.
Death and taxes, and as the poet said,
Something will never change although
We tour out to the stars;
Arriving on the moon we'll find
Our luggage sent to Mars! June Brady
The fact is also that we cannot always do what we once did, and so
change is not always progress, but sometimes regress. We may slip back
in some area of life and not be as capable as we once were. Again the poet
captures the point.
The fabulous Wizard of Oz
Retired from business becoz
What with up-to-date science,
To most of his clients
He wasn't the wiz that he woz.
The idea is to recognize that in spite of negatives, and in spite of
decline in life, we can all resolve to change in some ways that make us
more effective as tools in the kingdom of God. Just a change in attitude
can make a world of difference. Paul no longer thought God loved only Jews,
but he changed and recognized that God loved Gentiles as well. The thing
we need to do for rapid growth is to change our attitudes before they are
changed for us by time.
Back in the 60's the cry was to not trust
anyone over 30. It is gone the way of the dodo bird now because those who
cried it are now over 30. It is not to their credit that they change their
attitude. They were forced to do so by time. True wisdom would have been
to change their perspective and recognize the value of people over 30 before
they were that themselves.
Paul gets no credit for being saved and
radically changed in many ways. It was all of grace and God's doing. But
Paul can be honored for his resolve to cooperate with God, and to make the
changes necessary to be more useful. If you are going to be a better Christian
in the coming year, you must resolve to change in some ways. If you are
going to be a better mate in the coming year, it calls for change. If you
are going to be a better anything in the coming year, you must make a resolution
to change.
Ananias was not at first very favorable to God's plan
to go and visit Paul. He resisted a change in attitude toward Paul, for,
after all, he was a persecutor of God's people, and he had already done
a great deal of harm. We can all understand his resistance, but we can
all also be grateful that he surrendered and changed, and went to Paul,
for his acceptance of Paul opened the door to a whole new history of this
man's life. You need to ask yourself, is there anyone I can change my attitude
toward in the coming year that may open the door in changes in relationships
that will be a blessing.
I read of a woman who lived in a Boston hotel who heard music coming
from the adjoining room. She called the manager to complain. She threatened
to sue the hotel if it was not stopped. When she was informed that the
man playing in the room next to her was the world famous Paderewski she
withdrew her complaint and invited her friends over to listen with her to
this great musician, as he prepared for his evening concert. Her liability
suddenly was changed to an asset, and her whole attitude was changed. We
make so many bad decisions in ignorance. If we knew more we would have
a change of mind that could turn burdens into blessings.
This is what conversion is all about. People who do not like God,
and do not believe that He cares often hear the Gospel of His love, and
they change their mind. They repent of their folly and blindness, and of
their sin and indifference, and they receive Christ as Savior and Lord.
We come into the kingdom by change, and it is by change that we grow in
Christ and become more useful. Therefore, be it resolved that we will seek
for ways to change our attitudes and actions in the coming year so as to
be more useful in the coming year.
It is not a sign of weakness
to change your mind. Everybody in the Bible changed their mind when they
got more light. Paul changed his mind on most everything. He had a bad
attitude toward God's plan for the Gentiles, but when he received more light
he came to love the Gentiles as brothers in Christ. Change is not optional
if you are going to be available to God. If you not flexible and open to
change, you have already arrived at your goal. Paul said he had not arrived,
but was ever pressing on toward the goal. This means he was ever open to
change in order to be what Christ wanted him to be in any situation.
It was no haphazard choice that Christ made in choosing Paul to be the Apostle
to the Gentiles. Paul was chosen because he was a man that could be molded
and shaped so as to fit the need. He was a man who was alive to the challenges
of change. Paul had to be changed by force at first, but soon after it
became a way of life for him. He chose to change whenever he could. He
chose to be all things to all men that he might win them to Christ. He
was content in any state, and could accept prosperity or poverty. He could
accept any change just so long as he could be useful for the kingdom of
God.
In other words, Paul was anchored in the rock that does not
change. Christ was the center of his life, and this was the source of his
unchanging security. But he could change, adapt, and adjust to all the
changes of life because the goal of all change was to keep Christ in the
unchanging center of life. He did not change for change sake as if change
was an inherent virtue. It is not! It can be evil as well as good. Paul
changed for only one reason, and that was to be more effective in doing
the will of his unchanging Lord.
Astronomy changes not because the
stars change, but because astronomers change in their understanding of the
stars. So the Christian changes not because Christ changes, but because
the Christian gets more and better light on who Christ is, and what He wants
from our lives. We change in response to our changing light. Chuck Swindoll
said, if you were going to Hawaii and the plane instead took you to the
Alps, you could sit around in your bikini and mope, or you could go get
some ski clothes and enjoy the change in environment. He was saying that
life does not always turn out like we plan. It didn't for Paul either.
He was heading for Spain and he ended up in prison. That was not even on
his agenda, and he spent years there. He did not curse the change of plans,
but he made the change count for the glory of God by writing his Epistles
there.
In the coming year we can be sure of one thing, and that
is change. But let's not fear it, but instead, cheer it, and rejoice in
it and ask God's guidance in even provoking change so that the new year
might be a year of Christian growth. Let us enter it with a spirit of optimism,
and be ready and willing to face the challenge of change.
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