#123
Live Life At Its Best - Part VII (04/04/04)
Message
by Robert H. Schuller
My son
and I are continuing our messages on the Bible verse Galatians
5:22. Many of you know this verse by memory. St. Paul writes,
"The fruit of the Spirit ..." What does that
mean? That means to analyze your life. What characteristics dominate
you? What type of person does God want you and me to be to live
life at its best? Can you describe your life in the fruit of the
Spirit? Love? Joy? Peace? Patience? Kindness?
Goodness? Faithfulness? Gentleness? Self control? You can't
go through a book anywhere ever written in any language, by any
so called healer of persons; psychiatrist, psychologist, philosopher,
theologian or social worker, and find in one sentence the positive
values that produce emotional healthy human beings that comes
close to the power in this one verse.
EQ
is more important than IQ
Ultimately
we know EQ (emotional quotient) is more impacting in the life
than IQ (intellectual quotient). Your emotional health, more than
your intellectual knowledge, will produce the kind of character
you want to produce. EQ is more important
than IQ. That has been established only in the last few
years. So this Bible verse (Galatians 5:22) gives you the keys
to living life at its best. Wow.
People
were asking me this week, "Schuller, what did you think of
the movie, The Passion of The Christ?" Well, Mel Gibson invited
my family ... my wife, me and our kids to his studio months ago
to see it in its rough edit. It was enormously impacting. We had
our impressions and shared them honestly. Then I saw the movie
on Ash Wednesday, the opening day, and I would say everybody should
see it at least twice.
The first
time you see it you are not prepared for it. You've never seen
anything like it. You must see it a second time. Then the movie
really got through to me in depth. The first time there was too
much shock. And I've got to see the movie a third time, because
as I have discussed it with my wife and children, they would share
what impressed them and I would say, "Was that in the movie?"
... "Oh yes." ... "Was that line used?" ...
"Yes ..." Who said it? ... I must see it a third time.
It is phenomenal.
See
how Jesus lived while He was dying
What make
it such a profound movie? First of all, it honors Jesus. And there
are books like the Da Vinci Code that do not honor Jesus. And
there are lots of articles written by so-called experts, who may
be theologians, they may be priests of the Roman Catholic Church,
or evangelists in the Protestant Church, who are into a school
of thinking called revisionism. Suddenly they act very intelligent,
avant-garde and ego motivated, so they come up with conclusions
and insights into Jesus that are pure fantasy. This movie of Mel
Gibson’s, The Passion of The Christ, is not fantasy! It
is reality. And it tells the truth like you have never heard or
seen before.
Maybe
more whiplashes than Christ actually received, I didn't count
them, but this movie honors Jesus Christ like no other movie I
can remember seeing in my lifetime. And what makes it great is
you will see life at its best in this Person!
You can never judge a life, truly, until you see how they live
while they are dying. You catch a glimpse
of how Jesus lived while He was dying! That's pretty awesome.
See "The
Passion of The Christ" and you will see Him at the ultimate
crossroads. It is where you can relate to that. All of
us have crossroads in life, from stage to stage. I am so pleased
that the movie opened with Christ in Gethsemane. That was really
the ultimate final introduction to the decision that changed the
world. Jesus knew what was ahead of Him. He was at the real crossroads
of His young life and He could do something about it. Crossroads
are when you have to make a decision and every time you have to
make a decision, you are making choices from options and alternatives.
So the challenge in making a decision is making sure that you
make the best decision. Oh, you probably know immediately what
is best, but then are you prepared
to pay the price? ... To decide the best
instead of the good enough?
We are
talking about what ultimately becomes the defining moment of a
person's life that can qualify for them that beautiful adjective
in our Bible text this morning. And the adjective is "good.
The fruit of the spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, GOODNESS
... That word is right in the middle of the text for good
reason. All of these words come together like a recipe for life.
Leave one word out and life won't be as it should be.
Paul doesn't
say that all you need is to be good. No. He is saying you should
be joyous, loving, patient, kind, peaceful, faithful, gentle and
self-controlled. In the middle of it all, is to be "good."
What is goodness? What makes a person a "good" person?
... a "good" husband? ... a "good" wife? ...
a "good" child ... a "good" student? ... a
"good" professional? Allow me to sum it up. Goodness
is making the best decision. It is not enough just to make a "good
enough" decision, because often times a "good enough
" decision is not the "best" decision. No. That
is why we tend to move away from excellence and live life on the
level of mediocrity. It doesn't cost so much. The price a person
pays for uncompromising excellence takes an enormous emotional
drain out of you.
My life
has been facing decisions and always the challenge for me is making
the "best" decision not just a "good enough "
decision. Yes!
Now in
the film, "The Passion of The Christ," people are asking
me, "Well, what do you think? Who killed Jesus? Do you think
the Jews killed Him? Do you think the Romans killed Him?"
Nobody killed Him! That is the truth. That is why in the movie
itself you hear Jesus say in a flashback early in His ministry
the words from John 10:17-18:
"My
Father loves Me, because I lay down My life that I may take it
again. No one takes it from Me, but I lay it down of Myself. I
have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again.
This command I have received from My Father."
What you
see is not an execution. No. The Romans thought it was, and those
who wanted Jesus dead thought it was. It was not an execution.
It was not suicide. It was a sacrifice.
What is the difference between a suicide and a sacrifice? ...
All the difference in the world. A suicide is cutting out, running
away, chickening out and leaving the mess for somebody else to
clean up. Suicide is ultimate selfishness.
My apologies to you who sit here and had a child or loved one
who committed suicide, because they were under chemical control,
but I have to say what must be said; suicide is the ultimate act
of selfishness.
Sacrifice
is the ultimate act of self-giving love
Sacrifice
is the ultimate act of self-giving love for something bigger and
more beautiful than you are by yourself alone. Who killed Jesus?
Nobody! He made the sacrifice because He loves me and He loves
you. But it was a struggle for Him. I mean if the sacrifice wasn't
hard to make, it probably did not have much value. He sweat drops
of blood in the Garden of Gethsemane saying, "God,
not My will, but Thine be done ..." I as a human don’t
want to do this... "If it is possible,
let this cup pass from me." (Matthew 26:39)
The only
one who could make that possible was Jesus Himself. It was a painful
decision. That is where character is formed. Where are you? Where
am I? You and I am not Jesus. We are not facing a decision this
week of whether or not we are going to make a sacrifice to be
killed in a few hours. No.
But you
are at the crossroads of life every day. So am I! Challenges.
All of us do face decisions between good and evil. That is what
we all face every time, and that is what you see in the movie
of Mel Gibson, Christ facing evil. The way evil is personified
in a non-gendered face is just brilliant. And in the same way,
evil temps you and me. On the screen you hear evil say to Jesus,
"One person can't die for all the sins in the world, come
on ..." A little later, tempting him again, "And people
won't appreciate it, will they?"
The negative
thinking of evil is profound and it comes across that screen quite
attractively. Well, you and I face it every day at life's crossroads,
and we have to make a decision. One is positive, the other negative.
Or probably both are positive ... one is excellent and one is
mediocre. And then, this Bible verse makes it so clear. We have
to take the long look in making decisions that will form our character
and will earn for us the adjective, "good" ... he was
a "good" man, or she was a "good" woman, she
is a "good" mother, or she is a "good" child.
To make
that kind of decision which produces those characteristics takes
faith. It takes enormous faith for the long look to see where
the road of goodness leads.
"Goodness
by its nature is everlasting. Evil dies out."
Wow. Who
killed Jesus? All the people who were there are dead, they are
gone! But Christ is alive! One of
the Bible commentators I read this week in preparation for this
message is named Hastings and he said, "Goodness by its nature
is everlasting. Evil dies out. Goodness continues to live. The
more evil grows, the nearer it is to perishing. Hatred, revenge
and impurity die from its own inner poison."
Goodness
grows! It doubles and triples itself. It attracts the best people
... the best minds ... the best hearts ... the best characters
... so it becomes more and more alive, more and more dynamic.
Every
good deed begins with a good thought, but it does not end in and
of itself. A good thought becomes a good action, and it is repeated
and grateful receivers enjoy it and pass it on to their friends
until it becomes a mighty movement in uplifting humanity."
The movie
doesn't end with Jesus on the cross. No ... it ends when you see
the inner side of the tomb with the cloth that has been wrapped
around the body of Jesus now empty, laying there, folded. That
is the symbol of the resurrection.
When we
decided to stage the Passion play in this Crystal Cathedral over
twenty years ago, we put a great deal of research and study into
it. The Glory of Easter is focused on the empty tomb, the living
Christ. Oh, you will see the whipping and the scourging and hear
the pounding of the nails, and see the three crosses rise slowly
with the bodies on those crosses, but the emphasis is on the resurrection
of Jesus. I don't think Mel Gibson would have any problem with
that. That was just not part of the script that he was called
by God to show in the movie. I applaud him for his courageous
commitment to Jesus Christ. See the movie, then attend the Glory
of Easter here at the Cathedral and tell your friends.
Life's
Ultimate Crossroad
Today
the real crossroads for you might be, "Do I become a believer
in this Jesus? ...
"Do I become a believer that there is a God, an intelligent
God? Does that God want to connect with me personally? Come into
my life and shape me?"Are you at a crossroads? Make the decision
only you can make. You can say, "Nobody takes my life from
me." You are right. "Only I can give it up." You
are right. So you live with the responsibility of that decision.
What happens? Life becomes beautiful, unbelievable when you decide
to be a believer in Jesus Christ. That is why Christianity impacts
millions of human beings on planet earth two thousand years later.
This morning as I was sharing these thoughts for my message with
my daughter, Gretchen, she said, "And you can remind people
what Jesus said."
I asked,
"What do you have reference to?"
She replied,
"Well, He said God will have the last word and it will be
good."
I asked,
"Did Jesus say that?"
"Sure
it's in the Bible."
"Old
Testament or New Testament?"
She said,
"I don't know. I think Jesus said it, not one of the prophets."
I said,
"Gretchen, you're wrong. It's not in the Bible. Jesus never
said it. I said it!"
I’ll
never forget it because I know how that sentence came to me many
years ago. I was listening to the radio when a news story broke
saying Oral Roberts' daughter had just died in a plane crash with
her husband. Their children were not with them. The second child
of Oral and Evelyn Roberts to die a violent death ... a son and
now a daughter. I need to send him a message.
What am
I going to say? I prayed.
I said,
"God, what do I say?" And out of my fingers, holding
a pen, came words on white paper. "Dear
Oral, God will have the last word, and it will be good."
Are you
at a crossroads this morning? Where are you at? If you do not
have a personal relationship with God in prayer so that you can
talk to Him and you know He is listening, that is where you need
to begin. It is where the movie began. The prayer of Christ in
Gethsemane,
"Father,
all things are possible to You. If it is possible, let this cup
pass from me. Nevertheless not My will, but Thine be done."
(Matthew 26:39)
Start
there, on your knees, give your life to God ... and guess what?
It will be a GOOD life.
Prayer: Lord, I must make changes in my life. I want to become
a good person. I want to make the best decisions at the right
time. So, O God, I need You inside of me to become the kind of
person that Jesus Christ was and is. Are You alive like Schuller
says? Is he right? Am I wrong if I haven’t believed it?
And, Jesus, if You are alive, can You come inside of me somehow,
someway, meaningfully. I want to get out of the way, Jesus. Come
in. Take over. Amen
    
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