Watch Your Life Bloom

Welcome to the Official Blog of Author Dr. Lily L. Ratliff Jenkins, of the inspirational Memoir, The Life of a Lily: Growing in His Strength, Blooming in His Love, and many other writings.

Thanks for coming by to sit awhile and reflecting along with me on everything biblical. On this blog, feel free to share your thoughts and feelings about the various topics I present. They all do come from the heart and are meant for us to ponder, be enlightened, laugh, cry, and ultimately give God all of the praise.

You will hopefully find resources on everything from writing tips to creating your own memoir, how to journal, becoming better Christians and how to walk in your callings, destinies, and witty inventions that we have deep inside of us but sometimes don't quite know how to tap into and walk in. But GOD! It is in his wisdom along with an open mind that we will get through this together. Amen! So I welcome you my brothers and sisters!

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Scandalous Stumbling Blocks

Lord PLEASE forgive us for our scandalous stumbling blocks. We so need you to wash us, make us whole, and continously keep us mindful of our allegance to you, knowing that everything that we do as Christians should honor you. Please grant us your grace and forgiveness and help us to want nothing but to please you. Transform us by the renewing of our minds Lord, and keep us in your care, this day! Amen!


Scandalous Stumbling Blocks

READ Matthew 18:5-9

“But if you cause one of these little ones who trusts in me to fall into sin, it would be better for you to have a large millstone tied around your neck and be drowned in the depths of the sea.”
Matthew 18:6

If you were reading this passage in the Greek original of Matthew, you’d notice the frequent occurrence of words beginning with skandal-. The verb skandalize in and the noun skandalon appear three times each in this short passage. The verb skandalize in is translated here as “cause to sin”; the noun skandalon as “temptation” or “temptation to sin.” Literally, a skandalon, from which we get the English word “scandal,” was a “cause of offense” or “stumbling block.” To “scandalize” someone meant to offend, or, in Christian usage, to cause someone to stumble into sin.

Matthew 18:5-9 warns us against “scandalous stumbling blocks.” We should be sure not to lead others into sin, while also watching that we do not stumble ourselves. With typical Semitic hyperbole, Jesus underscores his point by saying that we should cut off the part of our body that causes us to sin.

We live in a day that minimizes the reality of sin. Actions once considered sinful are excused by our society as personal choices. Even the church has often been swept along in the tide of moral relativism. How easily we Christians can excuse or ignore our own sinful behavior!

This passage from Matthew calls us up short. It reminds us that our actions really do matter to God and that sinful actions are greatly to be avoided. Thus we are led, not only to examine our behavior realistically, but also to seek God’s grace both for forgiveness and for the ability to live a God-honoring life.

QUESTIONS FOR REFLECTION: How do you regard the sin in your life? Do you take it seriously? Do you minimize it? Do you let it sink you into the mire of shame? Do you confess and live in the freedom of Christ?

PRAYER: Dear Lord, today I’m impressed by how little we are scandalized by sin. Oh, I suppose that certain public sins by public people might grab our attention for a moment as we look down our noses at the offender. But how easily we neglect our own sin. We get caught up in rationalization. Or we wallow in cheap grace. Or we simply give ourselves a free pass, as if sin really doesn’t matter.

Help us, Lord, to take sin as seriously as you do. After all, it was our sin that made the cross necessary. Give us eyes to see ourselves clearly. Give us the courage to name our sins before you, confessing honestly and specifically. Help us, Lord, to receive your forgiveness with joy and to live in the freedom you have earned for us by your death and resurrection. Amen.

Mark D. Roberts, as Senior Director and Scholar-in-Residence for Laity Lodge, is an advisor and frequent contributor to TheHighCalling.org. A Presbyterian pastor, Mark earned his Ph.D. in New Testament from Harvard University. He has written six books, including No Holds Barred: Wrestling with God in Prayer (WaterBrook, 2005). He blogs daily at http://www.markdroberts.com/.

No comments:

Post a Comment

LinkWithin

Related Posts Widget for Blogs by LinkWithin