Oh, the days when we were
young (or at least when I was younger.)
Those were the days of youth and wild abandon, the days when I could
have a strongly held opinion and didn’t care what anyone else thought. I could demand the best when all I could
afford was K-Mart. And those were the
days when I worried about what everyone else thought of me.
I know popular when I see
it because I was not popular! Sounds
funny or odd but let me explain. I was
not popular in high school ,but I remember who the most popular guy was in my
high school class. His name was Rusty
Hill. Rusty was his nickname. His full name was David Harris Hill, Jr. His dad was Dave Hill, the offensive lineman
for the Kansas City Chiefs. Rusty was “mister
popularity.” He was handsome, had great
hair, perfect teeth, and killer dimples.
He was also the starting quarterback, point guard, and ran track. He lettered in three sports all three years
of high school. And he not only dated
the head cheerleader, but he also drove a 1972 Corvette. Rusty was popular then and continued to be
even later.
I remember our 35th
high school reunion. Rusty made an
appearance and was immediately the center of attention. He still was good looking, still had great
hair, a handsome smile, and big dimples.
The guys all wanted to shake his hand to see if he remembered them and
the ladies all wanted a hug and a selfie with him. I cannot confirm this, but it appeared as if
Rusty never experienced rejection in his life. In high school no one bullied
him, made fun of him, slandered him, insulted him, or showed contempt for
him. It appeared that he had all the
advantages of life except longevity – he died a few months before his 51st
birthday. We wrongfully assume that the
beautiful are blessed by life and the rest of us are not.
In his last beatitude,
Jesus said that “blessed are you when people revile you.” In other words, blessed are the people who
are scorned, defamed, taunted, or railed against. The ones who become the unenviable focal
point for everyone else’s disdain.
Interesting that all the previous beatitudes were broad and other centric,
but this one says “you.” Jesus directed
it at his disciples knowing they would be reviled for following a crucified
teacher and healer.
You see, the beatitudes
are about picking a side of the fence to walk on. You cannot straddle between the world and
following Jesus because they are antithetical to each other. You can either love the world and pursue it
or love Jesus and follow him. Paul says
that the place for this begins is in the renewing or transformation of our
minds (see Romans 12:1-2.) You must make
up your mind what you want to pursue in life – the vision of the world and the
temporal things it has to offer or the vision of following Jesus and the
eternal kingdom he offers. It is a tough
choice with no less than eternal consequences.
I invite you to take time
and read each of the scriptures above followed by reflection on the questions
below. Assess where your life is aligned
and how you are pursuing what is true and eternal. Lastly, I pray that God bless the reading of God’s
Word and the meditations of your heart.