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#77
The Be Happy Attitude #8: Eight Principles for Successful Living
(18/05/03)
The
Message
By Robert A. Schuller
Our "Be
Happy Attitude" today is based on the incredible words
of the 8th Beatitude of Jesus Christ, "Blessed
are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs
is the kingdom of heaven." (Matthew 5:10)
Jesus Christ was prophetic
when He proclaimed these words to the thousands of people on the
lakeside hill of Galilee. This week is known as Holy Week in all
Christendom, where believers around the world remember the persecution
and passion of Jesus Christ. First there was the falling away
of His popular opinion ... then came His arrest and mock trial.
He was stripped ... He was flogged ... He was given a mock crown,
one made of thorns which pierced into his head. Then Jesus Christ
was crucified with thieves and He was buried.
He was "persecuted
because of righteousness." I believe that Jesus led by example.
He wants us to know that even when we are "righteous,"
when we do the right thing, we will not always be applauded, but
will even be condemned by the public, yes, even friends.
February 9, 2001 was
just another beautiful day in the paradise of Hawaii as Captain
Scott Waddell commanded is submarine through the beautiful Pacific
waters. It was a routine day with routine drills that his crew
had done a million times before; nothing was out of the ordinary.
They had a few guests on board who were civilians. When suddenly,
as they made a rapid ascent to the surface, they hit a Japanese
fishing vessel, which sank and killed nine young Japanese sailors.
What a horrific tragedy! Commander Scott Waddell had to deal with
the responsibility of this tragedy. The grief and the blame came
from everywhere, Japan and America. It was overwhelming, but in
spite of the recommendations of his attorneys and advisors, Commander
Waddell decided he needed to do the right
thing. He would take responsibility for the actions because
the tragedy took place under his command. He decided he would
apologize to them as best as he could. Today, in his book entitled,
"The Right Thing," he shares his testimony and his incredible
faith in God to help him through these incredible tough times.
Regardless of how good
you are ... regardless of how hard you try to do the right thing
... there are times in your life where you are going to face persecution.
It happens. Later in the same chapter following the Beatitudes,
Jesus Christ, in the Sermon on the Mount tells us that: "The
rain falls on the just and the unjust alike." (Matthew
5:45) Bad things happen ... they happen to everybody.
Persecution:
"A willingness to accept continuous action."
Now the word "persecuted"
is an interesting word. In the Greek language the word "dioko,"
meaning "persecuted," is in a special tense. The Greek
language has fifty different tenses. In the English vocabulary,
we have only three tenses ... past, present and future. And so
the tense, which is used here, is actually a passive perfect participle.
To put it into English, it simply means a "willingness
to accept a continuous action." And that is the tense
that Jesus used in this Beatitude, "Blessed
are those who are persecuted for righteousness..."
The Puritans defined
"righteousness" as "ought-ness" ... that we
"ought to do" ... or as Commander Scott Waddell
said, "I must do the right thing."
"Blessed
are those who are persecuted for doing the right thing (righteousness),
for theirs is the kingdom of heaven."
(Matthew 5:10)
Jesus knew as He spoke
these words, that He would face persecution. Each of the Gospel
writers tells about the last events of the life of our Lord. Read
their accounts of how on Palm Sunday Jesus entered Jerusalem with
a loud "Hosanna" from the crowds, but immediately after
Palm Sunday, He begins to experience His first persecution ...
the swing of popular opinion against Him. Read how He is then
arrested and His mock trial is held. He is flogged and a crown
of thorns put on His head. He is stripped naked; His garments
are auctioned off ... basically gambled away. He is paraded through
the streets and mocked. Then Jesus Christ suffers the most horrific
of all persecution, He is crucified, He hangs on a cross between
two thieves until He dies.
Persecution comes in
different forms and in different levels. Jesus experienced all
of them from the least to the most horrific persecution one can
ever experience.
"Blessed
are those who are persecuted ... theirs is the kingdom of heaven."
(Matthew 5:10)
Each of us, at one
time or another, experience the least form of persecution, the
falling away of popular opinion and criticism. My children would
say that they are being "persecuted" when their friends
criticize and put them down. They are both teens, of course, and
as teens the popular opinion and the admiration of their peers
is probably the most important thing in life. That is why they
have to wear the right T-shirt. If it doesn't have the right label
on it, the tide of popular opinion fades quickly. And, of course,
the shoes ... you know ... they need to be the right brand of
shoes. Not just any shoes will do. I try to take them to K-Mart
and I say, "Here's a great pair of shoes, and they are only
$9. They look identical to this pair of shoes that you want for
$50. What's the difference?"
Money, a lot of money,
but more than that, the one with $50 have a certain name on it.
And they want that name so that they
have that popular opinion. I teach them constantly that popular
opinion comes and goes. If all you do is seek immediate popularity,
you are only a follower. The leaders will never have immediate
popularity, but they will have ultimate
respect. And I teach them that they have to make decisions
in life. The choice is immediate popularity
or ultimate respect.
The persecution of
Jesus began when the popular opinion swung against Him. Then His
persecution became one of horrendous shame as He was arrested,
tried like a criminal, and stripped naked.
There are those who
have suffered in this same manner, treated so shamefully by other
human beings. It is difficult to imagine what people have endured,
and endure today, through such torture and abuse.
I remember as a young
man listening to Corrie ten Boom, who came often to our home and
she spoke here in church on numerous occasions. She delivered
her unforgettable messages in what is our Arboretum today. (It
was used as our worship center before the Cathedral was built.)
I'll never forget the time when she was here and I had just graduated
from college. Now that I was a seminary student, I was reading
scripture in the morning worship service. This was in 1976. I
have a photo that was taken with Corrie ten Boom, where my hair,
in the picture is long, flowing al the way to my shoulders with
a little flip on the end. (That's the truth).
I admired this older
woman, a saint who had suffered so much. And I shall never forget
how Corrie ten Boom shared with our congregation about her experiences
in the Holocaust. Her family tried to save the Jews. As they would
come through their town in The Netherlands, Corrie and her family
would hide them. They were part of the underground that saved
thousands of Jews. But ultimately Corrie's family was found out
and they were captured. I remember how Corrie told about the most
humiliating and the most horrendous thing for her in the entire
Holocaust experience. She and the other women prisoners would
be stripped naked, and forced to stand before the captors, not
once, not twice, not three times, but many, many times. And Corrie
said every single time it was worse. It was so humiliating, so
degrading. She said, "Finally, it dawned on me that this
happened to Jesus too, and if this could happen to Jesus, and
Jesus is my example ... and now it
is happening to me, then I am simply doing what Jesus did."
And she said, "I know that Jesus gave me that thought and
it gave me peace. It gave me comfort and I could bear the shame
and cruel treatment."
When Jesus Christ gave
us those words, "Blessed are those who are persecuted ..."
"willingly accepting this continual
action of tough times," and do it for righteousness
... then we receive the promise that "We
will inherit the kingdom of God." Yes, then we will
receive the special blessing of the presence of God. And we will
know a peace that only comes from God.
Jesus experienced the
persecution of the change of popular opinion, the persecution
of the shame of being arrested and stripped naked, and then the
persecution became violent as the beating and flogging began.
The name and face of
Private Jessica Lynch has been on all the news this week. I think
we need to applaud the young men and women who saved this incredible
soldier of ours. It is amazing that so many people realize what
is the right thing to do, then will take action
to do it! Private Lynch would still be in the hospital if she
wasn't dead by now, except for one Iraqi who went to visit his
wife, a nurse, in the hospital. While he is in the hospital, he
hears about this American, a captive, and he goes to look through
her window and sees the Iraqi commander beating her. His heart
breaks and he walks six miles ... six miles
through war-infested roads, to get to our troops and tell them
about Private Lynch. If that is not enough to risk his own life
and the life of his family, he walks back through this war torn
area again to get information, to become an inside spy, if you
will, to save this woman. Then he walks back again and provides
all the information to rescue her. Without his heroic action,
she would still be there! He did the right
thing!
"Blessed
are those who are persecuted for righteousness' sake, for theirs
is the kingdom of heaven."
(Matthew 5:10)
Jesus was beaten and
bruised as He was paraded through the streets. "The King
of the Jews." They threw a purple robe on Him, as a joke.
Then they took a crown of thorns and jammed it unto His head.
There is no doubt, whatsoever, that the blood streamed down His
face. It would be in His eyes, almost blinding Him. He would taste
His own blood as it rolled over His lips. As they crucified Him
they wanted everyone to know that there is no king of Israel ...
there is no king of the Jews ... there is only one king and his
name is Caesar.
But little did they
know that you cannot rule by persecution. You cannot rule with
fear. And Jesus rules instead with love
of the highest dimension. Today, 2000 years later, we celebrate
the victory of Jesus! He conquered the grave. Jesus
Christ conquered death and He is alive! And so today we
can conquer the persecutions that come our way.
Easter is coming! Death
cannot prevail! Life prevails! Today we travel through the wilderness
of living with its challenges, with its different kinds of persecution,
and struggles. Yes, these are tough times. But we know that Jesus
Christ is the greatest leader of all because He leads by example.
He suffered. No one ever suffered more ...
no one will ever suffer more. And so we know that we will
get through. We will find the tremendous comfort and peace of
His mercy in our lives.
Today make
a stand for Jesus Christ.
Stand up and show that
you are ready to accept His Holy Spirit of God to carry you through
your challenging times.
Stand up for the conviction
of truth!
Stand up for the reality
of righteousness!
Stand up to receive
your special blessing of peace from God.
Dear Jesus Christ,
I stand up for You today. I stand up to receive Your blessing.
I stand up to be able to take the incredible journey to everlasting
life with You. I thank You, Lord, for the incredible power that
You have given me to transform my life, to help me to see through
persecution to the ultimate blessings. Continue to empower me,
O Lord, with Your Holy Spirit and may I feel Your guidance no
matter where I go, I pray. Amen.
    
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