The Warrior Faces Satan’s Ally, the World
John 18:38 “What is truth?” retorted Pilate. With this he
went out again to the Jews gathered there and said, “I find no basis for a
charge against him.”
What is real? We understand what
is around us with our five senses. We have learned to know the shape and use of
many things. You sat down in the pews (chairs) because you know they are real. We even step onto airplanes that we believe will fly. But there is a limit to what we
can know. You came here tonight (today) for another truth you cannot see but
you believe. You learn that truth from the Bible—God’s Word.
Not everyone believes that. The enemy
of Jesus wants you to question that truth. And Satan is not alone. He has an
ally in his campaign against Jesus and against his followers. The world around
us also challenges us to question what God tells us in the Bible, and it offers
lifestyle alternatives as well as a different set of answers to questions Jesus
answers. Our warrior, Jesus, faced the world’s question about what is real and
true. He defended the truth because he knows that you and I depend on it. Jesus
faced Satan’s ally, the world.
This part of the conflict is important for us because it is crucial that we understand
that we live in a world where . . .
1. God’s
own truth is under attack.
Jesus had been
standing in front of the Roman governor, Pontius Pilate, who had to decide
whether to have Jesus crucified as the Jewish leaders wanted or to set him
free. Pilate had asked him whether he was a king, which would make Jesus a
direct threat to the Romans. Jesus answered, “You say that I am a king. In fact, the reason I
was born and came into the world is to testify to the truth. Everyone on
the side of truth listens to me” (John
18:37).
Did you catch his
reference to being “on the side of truth”? He’s talking about sides! On one
side is the truth; on the other side is the lie. A lie can be an outright,
blatant lie and denial of the truth altogether, or it can contain some truth
mixed in with fake truths or some other shading of the truth. But on that side
is the liar, Satan, and he has an ally, the unbelieving world.
The world around
us accepts Satan’s lies and challenges anyone who does not agree with it. The
lies it trusts pretend to have answers to big questions of life but spout
nonsense. John warns us, “Everything in the world—the lust
of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life—comes not from
the Father but from the world” (1 John 2:16). The enemy, not the Father, stands behind those
lies.
The world in which we live is damaged and
sinful. Not the earth, or dirt, but the people who parade ungodly ideas as the
solutions to all the things that are wrong in the world. We shouldn’t be
surprised, because the world thinks that Jesus and his Word are just so much
foolishness. “The person without the
Spirit does not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God but
considers them foolishness, and cannot understand them because they are
discerned only through the Spirit” (1 Corinthians 2:14).
The world wants
nothing to do with Jesus. Sometimes I have to admit that I’ve bitten into and
half swallowed some of the lies of our anti-Christian culture. Sometimes I pick
up stuff from movies, books, music in my earbuds, and TV shows that portray
immoral lifestyles and values that go against God’s Word. Those influences
cause me to let down my guard at times. Even the children’s programs and movies
too often convey that life is based mostly on feelings instead of what’s real. “What
is truth?” Pilate asked. Our world says that it is whatever you want it to be.
Far too often, I
don’t catch it or I give in. I haven’t done all I could or should have done to
make an accurate assessment of all the ways this ungodly world seeks to
undermine and even destroy God’s truth and my need for Jesus.
You struggle too,
don’t you?
John went on to
write, “The world and its desires pass
away, but whoever does the will of God lives forever” (1 John 2:17). We are
designed for something far better and far bigger than just this earth: we are
designed to be in an eternal relationship with our Creator, our Savior, our faith-giving
God! But Satan and the world want us to concentrate on what passes away and not
on the truth about sin, death, and our need for salvation.
Jesus came up
against a cloud of rejection by people, religious leaders, and politicians. The
whole world was ganging up. Yet every day, he calmly and strongly faced them
all. Our warrior is ready. He spoke the truth to power. You just heard him tell
Pilate: “You
say that I am a king. In fact, the reason I was born and came into the world is
to testify to the truth. Everyone on the side of truth listens to me” (John 18:37).
“What is truth?” retorted Pilate. (Say it skeptically.) Those are the
words of a trapped man. He was no more able to see things as they really are
than a rhinoceros. Pilate voiced the words of his world and our world as well. Most
of his truth was whatever came from the point of the spear. Our truth comes from
distorted values and whatever makes us feel good. Trapped in a world of lies,
Pilate couldn’t even recognize the truth when he was staring it in the face.
2. Our
hero is the truth.
The answer to Pilate’s question is and has
always been: Jesus! He had told his disciples, “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one
comes to the Father except through me” (John
14:6).
Jesus is the truth.
In other words, he is the only way to understand reality—what is real and true.
He’s the only way we can possibly make sense of life. Anyone or anything else
cannot do that job. From the beginning of time and the human race to the very
last day of the earth, he is the only one who will ever be able to help us see
straight.
Everybody has questions
about reality. What can I know and how can I know it? How can I ever understand
suffering and evil? Who am I? Why am I here? What can I hope? The world, of
course, has millions of answers to those questions. The world’s guesses and
wishes and “I thinks” all fail the test of truth.
Jesus never said,
“I’m guessing” or “I wish” or “I hope” or “I think” or “possibly” or “maybe.” He
always spoke with complete authority. He often said, “Verily” or “Truly, I tell
you . . .” (Matthew 17:20 and others; adjust to the translation used). He was
certain about truth: “To the Jews who
had believed him, Jesus said, ‘If you hold to my teaching, you are
really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set
you free’” (John 8:31,32).
In other words,
God’s Word, the Bible, holds everything we need to know for life, to live
freely without guilt and death’s curse—without the fear of God’s punishment—and,
especially, to live forever free in eternity. That’s because every word in the
Bible, in one way or another, points to Jesus Christ. And that’s why it is so
important that my eyes see and my ears hear the dynamic Word of God! All other
messages come from the Father of lies and flow through the distorted filter of
the world around us.
Our world is
broken. We all see it and know it. People hate. Nature kills. Storms damage.
Death stalks us all. I think, say, and do the evil I know I shouldn’t. I fail
far too often to do the good I should. Many have tried to come up with
something to fix this mess. All have failed.
Except one: Jesus
Christ!
One sparkling,
pure, perfect, holy, and huge life came into our world. Our triune God loved us
so much that he planned to rescue this sin-damaged world. The Son came to tell
us the whole truth and to be the truth that would battle sin, death, Satan, and
a world that hates him. Throughout his entire life he remained holy so that he
could trade his life for ours at the place of God’s judgment. This is the
sacred truth that we believe, confess, and hold dear because it means the
solution for the world’s sin and for our own personal sin. Our truth-telling
Jesus gives us the certain conviction that he will take all those who trust him
to live with him in heaven. This is the only reality there is.
His promise puts
everything else into perspective. It gives us a worldview that is bigger than
our eyes can see or what we can know. It’s an amazing window into eternity! As
a child of God through faith in our Savior Jesus, who now lives in us by that
same faith, look at this great promise: “You, dear
children, are from God and have overcome them, because the one who is
in you is greater than the one who is in the world” (1 John 4:4).
Jesus came from
above with absolute truth from heaven. Here he has battled through all the
world-perverted ideas of truth in order to give us the truth he came to share. That
truth has changed us. We are on his side, the side of truth. We see
reality—eternal reality—in the cross and the love of God for us sinners.
3. He
shares the truth through us.
Our warrior Jesus calls us to be his warriors in
this world. We don’t use swords or guns as Peter tried to do in the Garden of
Gethsemane. St. Paul tells us how to wage our battles against Satan and the
world: “Though we live in the world, we do not wage war as the world does. The weapons we fight
with are not the weapons of the world. On the contrary, they have divine
power to demolish strongholds” (2
Corinthians 10:3,4).
The weapon he
gives us is his own powerful Word. That has given us a Christian worldview far superior
to any other worldview. The Word has
changed us. We have a Christ-centered common sense and faith to use that Word
well so we can bear witness to the hope and joy we have in Jesus.
Our world goes
from experience to experience, seeking some form of happiness before moving on.
That is very much like people walking through the woods at night, lighting
paper matches to find their way. The match goes out and they light another. But
they find no happiness, true joy, or real peace. Just read the news!
So our high
privilege is to grow deeply in Christ through his Word, to live with
consciences that are bound by that precious, good Word, and then to show and
share the beautiful faith he has given us. When you get out of bed in the morning,
think, “Jesus.” As you choose what to spend your time, energy, and money on,
think, “Jesus.” Let Jesus and his Word be the GPS for your entire life!
Sometimes we are
tempted to think this world is so bad that we need to just withdraw. Throw out
the TVs and computers, forbid anyone in our household to use a smartphone, and just
read the Bible all the time at home. But keep in mind that Jesus gives us some
direction. He told his disciples in a prayer during Holy Week, “My prayer is not that you take them out of the
world but that you protect them from the evil one. They are not of the world,
even as I am not of it. Sanctify them by the truth; your word
is truth. As you sent me into the world, I have sent them into the
world” (John 17:15-18).
So consider this: After
being exposed to a godless worldview—whether through entertainment media, the
news, or even a Facebook quote on a friend’s page—turn to your Bible and spend some
personal and family time discussing how Christ gives us a far more truthful
view of the world and life! Use those opportunities to equip yourself and your
family to be confident of the real truth!
Jesus has overcome
the world and given you the treasure of his truth. Go out there and live, play,
and work in God’s marvelous truth. Be ready to share it. Amen.
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