When he was at table with them, he took the bread. He blessed the bread, and broke it, and gave it to them. And their eyes were opened and they recognized him!(Luke 24:13-35)

Friday, April 22, 2022

Actions speak louder than words

 

I felt called to reflect today on the depth of faith I’m called to exhibit, and my need to express that faith.  I think it’s best summed up with the old adage:  "Actions speak louder than words." [1 John 3:18]

In an excerpt from Acts, we see Peter and John in a conflict with their Jewish brethren over the significance of Jesus.  There’s incontrovertible evidence that a man crippled since birth had been cured through the intercession of Jesus.  Yet for the Jewish officials to acknowledge this fact would undermine their own authority.  So they enjoined Peter and John not to speak to anyone in the name of Jesus.  Their reply was, "It is impossible for us not to speak about what we have seen and heard." [Acts 4:13-21]

I wonder why they felt compelled.  Did they recall being rebuked by Jesus for their unbelief of Mary Magdalene, and other eyewitnesses, who had contact with Jesus after His resurrection?   When they shared their experiences, the witnesses were not believed.   Even though His followers had spent years learning from Him and seeing the truth of His message, even though He had given them ample forewarning of what was to come, they couldn’t believe the words of their trusted companions that Jesus had risen.  Only when Jesus Himself appeared to them could they begin to accept His resurrection.  Only when they were filled with the Spirit did they feel the compulsion to speak out [Mark 16:9-15].

Is Jesus speaking to us across the years as well as to His disciples, rebuking us because we don’t believe the words of those "who saw him after he had been raised?"  Of course He is.  He also recognizes that it’s much harder for us because of the distance of time and our need to rely on the words of others.  But He still calls us to believe.

Does Jesus expect that it be impossible for us not to speak about what we’ve seen and heard?  Yes, but we must ask ourselves what it is that we’ve seen and heard.  We’re not eyewitnesses to the events of 2000 years ago, but eyewitnesses to today's reality.  And that reality is that Jesus lives among us, in the hungry, the thirsty, the naked, the sick, the oppressed.  And so it should be impossible for us not to speak out about what we see and hear.  It should be impossible for us not to ease the pain of those in whom Christ lives, just as Peter and John felt compelled to call on Jesus to help the crippled man.  We "speak" when we act.  If we believe the words of those "who saw him after he had been raised," then it will be impossible for us not to speak.

And so today I pray that my belief in the resurrection can be strengthened so that I may speak about what I have seen.

No comments: