I decided to write this in the closing hours of 2019.
For the last several weeks the discussions in my class
gravitated toward one topic: Truth.
The search for truth is nothing new.
When Jesus was brought before Pilate, Pilate asked Him a
question we could ask in the modern era.
John 18:38 (NET) - Pilate asked, “What is truth?”
The age in which we live has blurred the truth so much that
many are walking in darkness.
We live in an age of “fake news”.
The media, which is supposed to be nonbiased, often has an
agenda.
Politicians make promises to get elected never intending to
keep them.
Regimes willingly lie to the people to keep them in check.
Even the business world clouds the truth justifying it with
“It’s just business”.
Truth is absolute, yet people try to make it relative.
They say that what is true for one person may not be true for
another.
In my opinion, this is one of the most dangerous lies we can
spread.
Abandoning truth, for whatever reason, is wrong.
The prophet Isaiah had an ominous warning for those who
abandon truth.
Isaiah 5:20 (NET) - Beware, those who call evil good
and good evil, who turn darkness into light and light into darkness, who turn
bitter into sweet and sweet into bitter.
So, where can we turn in an age that wants us to ignore
truth.
Is there an answer to Pilate’s question: “What is truth?”
Fortunately the answer is yes.
About five years ago, I visited a church that was 150 years
old.
Over time, the congregation grew and built a new church but
kept the original as it was.
There is a sign above the door taken from scripture.
John 14:6a (NET) - Jesus replied, “I am the way, and
the truth, and the life.
The sign also includes “- words of Jesus Christ”.
Those who passed beneath this sign on their way inside knew
what awaited them.
Even after 2,000 years, these words can be trusted.
John 1:14 (NET) - Now the Word became flesh and took up
residence among us. We saw his glory—the glory of the one and only, full of
grace and truth, who came from the Father.
My prayer for the New Year of 2020 is that we will regain the
courage to stand up for the truth.
There are those who will say we are intolerant.
We must expect that.
Remember that Pilate asked, “What is truth?” even when Jesus
stood right in front of him.
We must re-learn that it is okay for us to disagree.
It is not, however, okay for us to be disagreeable in the
process.
After all Jesus, the source of truth, also tells us to love
our neighbor.
Even those who disagree with us!
Blessings,
Jim Pokorny
The Other Brother Jim
Look for me at https://otherbrotherjim.blogspot.com/ on
Friday, January 10, 2020.
I’ll be back here on Friday, January
17, 2020
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