Episode 1. Blood Relatives
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OK – so where’s God. I mean – how come sometimes He seems like He’s a million miles away. What have I done? What do I have to do to get close to Him again? Join Berni Dymet as …
OK – so with all that you have going on in your life, let me ask you, where exactly is God? I mean – how come sometimes He seems like He’s a million miles away. What have I done? What do I have to do to get close to Him again?
It is great to be with you at the beginning of another fresh week, I’m so excited. I was talking to a man the other day, in Africa. Over the last few years his country has been going through a bloody strife and conflict. So many people – men, women and children – have been killed in this war. And he’s been in the army. I can’t imagine the atrocities that he’s experienced and he said to me, “You know Berni, after everything I’ve been through, I just can’t believe that there’s a God, and if there is, He certainly isn’t interested in the lives of everyday people like you and me.”
It’s like that sometimes isn’t it? We look at the circumstances of our lives, our own lives, lives of people right around the globe, and those circumstances, they’re so powerful, they’re so compelling. We end up wondering, well, where the heck is God? Is He interested in my life really? If God is God, how can I get close to Him? Well that’s the question we will be exploring this week on the program, from A Different Perspective.
If I look back on my life, when I was a teenager at school, I had everything; a good home, I went to a good school and later in my high school life, I encountered Jesus. I believed I had a relationship with Him. I committed my life to Him. But then, well, then I grew up! And you know what it is like when we’re teenagers, we have a sense of being idealistic; we’re dreamers. Somehow for me it was easier to believe in Jesus as a teenager than when I grew up into adulthood. You know, you have the responsibility and the money and the mortgage and the career and the car and stuff, and for me God was pushed into the back seat.
I still believed in God but I decided to head off in a different direction. I was grown up; you know I had matured: I didn’t need that Jesus stuff. The longer I allowed that to go on – and it went on for a long time, a couple of decades – the less real He seemed. Reality is about what we are living in. If we are walking every day with God, if we are walking every day with Christ, we are praying and enjoying our relationship, that’s real. But if we are focusing on the here and now, if we are focusing on other things, if we let our senses be filled with the sights and smells and sounds of creation, the Creator fades from our view.
Now that’s not just a ‘God’ thing, it happens in every relationship. A husband and wife can get married and love each other and enjoy each other, but if they begin to focus on a whole bunch of other things that crowds their marriage relationship out, eventually – sadly, as happens in almost half of all cases – that marriage will fail, because we need to have that relationship as a part of our present reality.
Well, it’s the same thing with God. We can be focused on a whole bunch of other things and still kind of believe in Jesus; still have that belief somewhere in our heads. But the longer we leave it on the shelf – the longer we focus on other things and not on that relationship – the less real it becomes. And of course, because Jesus is not a physical reality – He’s not here in the flesh and blood the way a husband or wife is – then we can get to the point, which is the point I got to in my life, of thinking, “Well, does He still exist, is He around?”
And the crowd has faded from view then circumstances take a turn for the worse. Maybe we lose our jobs or there’s a broken relationship or we have money worries or we just don’t have a good sense of our own well-being – whatever it is and at that point we go, “Hang on, where’s God, is He real? Look at my mess! How can He let this happen? Does He really care about me?”
I think that is something that every person goes through in their lives. In whatever our spiritual journey and spiritual search looks like, God is a million miles away. What happened? Where did He go, why is it like this? I got to that point, after a couple of decades and then ten years ago, the best that I could pray when my life was falling apart; the most that I could muster in terms of faith was, “God, if you’re real, if you’re out there, I need you – now would be a really good time – if you exist.” That’s all I had; I just didn’t know any more, because for so long I had been walking in a different direction. For so long I had been focusing on other things that He wasn’t real anymore. He was a maybe that was the most I had.
And the question was, “What did I have to do to get close to God? What do I have to do? What do I have to do? What do I have to do, is what we keep playing in our heads, over and over again. Let me share with you an outrageous statement from a man named Paul, one of the Apostles of Jesus Christ. He wrote this two thousand years ago. And the reason it is so outrageous is Paul was a Pharisee; he was a religious separatist. He was so much into ‘religion through works‘ I can’t begin to find the words. And yet after he met Jesus Christ, this is what he wrote, “But now through Jesus, you who were once far off,” (I wonder if he is talking to anyone today?):
You who were once far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ. (Ephesians 2:13)
He came to proclaim peace to you who were far off as well as the ones who were near and through that we have access, through Jesus, in one Spirit, to the Father. (Ephesians 2:17-18)
You who were once far off! You who once thought God was a million miles away. You who once thought you had to shout through this huge void for Him to hear you. In other words the only thing we have to do is to believe that Jesus died for us. That’s what he means by, ‘You who were once far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ’, because the simple, the simple story that is all the good news that we ever need, is that all of our failures, all of our wrongs, all of our junk has a price. That price was paid for by Jesus on the cross. That’s what the blood thing is all about. Blood was a symbol in the Hebrew culture for life. He paid with His life; He spilt His blood for us, to pay for our junk.
Now Christians have heard this stuff so many times, it’s parse’, it washes over us sometimes and we end up believing it in our heads but what about believing in this with our hearts? Believing in the fact that Jesus died and rose again to pay for my sins, my wrongs, my junk. To take that deep truth, and let it sink in, drink it in, soak it in, so it becomes a part of us. There’s peace; the separation is over, there’s no more distance. That’s the promise. We who were once far off are brought near by the blood of Christ.
It’s time to start living our lives in that outrageous promise. If you won millions in the lottery, would that change the way you lived your life? Well, this is better than winning millions in the lottery, this is more than that. This is believing that we are set free for eternal life. The war is over, peace has been declared and it may not feel like that, but that’s the promise that we can believe in. There’s no more gap – far off becomes near. It’s like a marriage covenant, a marriage promise. It’s a promise that God will never leave us again.
Father, I pray that each one of us would know this promise with our hearts. That we would learn to live in it and to walk in it and to rejoice in it, because it is a fact – it is a promise that cannot be changed. “But now through Christ, you who were once far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ.” What a promise!
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