Now Korah, and Dotham
and Abiram and On, the son of Eliab…...took men. And they rose up before Moses
with certain of the children of Israel, two
hundred and fifty princes of the assembly famous in the congregation,
men of renown. And they gathered
themselves together against Moses…..And it came to pass as he had made an
end of speaking all these words and
the ground opened swallowed them up
…..(Numbers 16:1-34 KJV)
The church in the wilderness
experienced a rebellion against the leadership of Moses staged by four ring
leaders and supported by 250 princes from the congregation. These men caused many
of the ordinary people to sway and as a result, several were killed following
an earth split. These princes who were
royals were the celebrities of their day. God was not swayed by celebrity or
popular opinion then and neither is he now. As his children, we should imitate
him (Ephesians 5:1).
It is human to want to fit into the crowd as there is an
uneasiness that comes with being different. This conformity sometimes poses
problems especially as not all that is popular is right. The perspectives of
our society changes continually with increasing blurriness between right and
wrong. Rather than a clear black or white, there are several shades of grey now.
But if we are to make a difference and imprint our mark in this world, there
are several occasions where it would be necessary to deviate from popular (Romans
12:2 MSG). The media is an effective tool for portraying society’s “popular” as
acceptable. Some of the things that were a shock some decades ago have now
become so common that the average person reckons them as proper or right.
But being popular does not necessarily translate to being
wrong. Recently as a resulting of growing popularity via social network, the
world was made aware of the plight of over 250 Nigerian girls abducted via the #bringbackourgirls campaign.
Neither should we also accept everything that is popular in
the church or Christian circle as right. There is a growing Biblical illiteracy
amongst Christians that makes falling into error inevitable. (2 Timothy 2:15, 4:1;
Timothy 4:1-2, Colossians 3:16). Before we join the next big thing ,we should
check the word of God as the noble Berean
Christians did, even after Paul taught them (Acts 17:10-11).
God is not calling us to be weirdoes,
rather he is asking that we do not follow the crowd to do evil (Exodus 23:2)
which may sometimes mean not being “politically
correct”. This may sometimes lead to persecution but the persecution should
not be because we have an attitude. We have been called to be salt and light (Matthew
5:3-16). As Christians, our lives should not be based on what is popular rather
it should be based on the unchanging word of God (2 Timothy 2:19; 3:10, 16). This
should be our code for moral conduct and our final word on what is proper.
Yours in His Service,
Grace Tom-Lawyer
1 comment:
This is so true. There is a popular gospel about today. That has nothing to do withwhat God wants. What is not realized is that teachers of the word of God will be responsable, for what they teach. Scripture says there are penalties for false teaching.
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