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A Reed Shaken By The Wind A REED SHAKEN BY THE WIND
By Scott Gage
"As they departed, Jesus began to say to the
multitudes concerning John: 'What did you go out into the wilderness to see? A
reed shaken by the wind? But what did you go out to see? A man clothed in soft
garments? Indeed, those who wear soft clothing are in king's houses. But what
did you go out to see? A prophet? Yes, I say to you, and more than a prophet.'"
Matthew 11:7-9 John the Baptist was not politically correct. He was not a
groveling sycophant trying to please those in seats of power. He was a prophet
and thus he spoke the truth about the conditions in society and the lives of
those to whom he preached. He sought to bring his hearers closer to God and
that meant a message of repentance.
I read a story about a team of
researchers in Sweden who polled 162 voters near the end of Sweden's 2010
election cycle, asking if they were planning to vote conservative or social
democrat/green. They also polled them on 12 controversial issues, like tax
rates and nuclear power. This story was titled "How To Trick People Into
Changing Their Political Views". And here's where the trickery comes in. The
pollster/researcher secretly filled out a ballot with the opposite of what the
person filled in, then handed them back the altered sheet. The unwitting voters
only recognized 22 percent of the answers, and 92 percent agreed that they had
written the altered sheet. The researcher summarized "their" answers
and asked again who they planned on voting for. Of the subjects, 10 percent
changed who they first said they were voting for. About 19 percent went from
firmly in one corner to undecided. Another 18 percent were undecided before the
survey, then leaned in a direction. So almost half of survey respondents in some
way changed their minds. Do we pay attention to things that pollsters say?
Sometimes we approach work in the
kingdom with a mindset that is looking to see which way the reed is blowing in
the wind. I have had people come by my house in recent years to ask me what I
was looking for in a church. It seems they were testing the waters to see what
people wanted so they could tailor their church to fit the wants and wishes of
the neighborhood. That seems like a dangerous way to start a church to me.
Wouldn't we be wiser to look into God's word to see what He says?
Burton Coffman has this commentary
on John 11:7, "Jesus immediately launched into a dissertation on John and his
ministry that revealed the very highest estimate of both. His praise of John
the Baptist is unequaled by his praise of any other. 'The reed shaken in the
wind' suggested something of little importance, trivial, a minor curiosity.
John was not that. It also suggests a man of weak and vacillating purpose. To
speak such a thing in the context would both stimulate the popular admiration
of John and, when the words were repeated to John, would more firmly establish
his resistance against being blown about by changing winds of opinion. It was
Jesus' way of saying, 'John will stand firm. He is no reed bowing in whatever
direction the wind blows.'"
John the Baptist told his
audience, "Therefore bear fruits worthy of repentance, and do not think to say
to yourselves, 'We have Abraham as our father.' For I say to you that God is
able to raise up children to Abraham from these stones'" (Jn. 3:8-9). What we
need today is a strong and clear message of repentance and not a reed shaken by
the wind.
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May we determine not to be as
reeds shaken by the wind.
With love and concern
Larry
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