I
am always amazed at the fabrications and stories about me that I hear others
have spread. I’m sure all of you have heard things about your life you had no
idea existed until your personal self-appointed experts revealed it to the
world. For example, I have found out through these experts that I
- was forced to marry because of Laci being pregnant
- was moving to a foreign country and leaving the church
- was a pastor from D.C. and commuted the 90 minutes every week
- had cancer and was dying
- demand money from grieving families to be paid to the church if I do their loved one's funeral
…
and a 100 other stories that were as or more preposterous as the ones I
mentioned above. Of course, none of them are true and would have been purely
laughable if gullible people wouldn’t have believed them. However, before I
feed self-pity and think I’m the only one to experience such a strange
phenomenon, let’s see if it happened to Jesus.
Jesus
was accused of being:
- A deceiver (John 7:12).
- An illegitimate child (John 8:41).
- Demon possessed (Matt. 9:34; John 7:20).
- Beelzebub, using the power of Satan to cast out demons (Matt. 10:25).
- Mentally ill (John 10:20).
- A blasphemer – witnesses were produced to reinforce this charge (Matt. 9:3; 26:65; Mark 2:7)
- A destroyer of the Temple in Jerusalem (Mark 14:58).
- An enemy to the Law of Moses.
Matthew
10:25 (KJV)
25
It
is enough for the disciple that he be as his master, and the servant as his
lord. If they have called the master of the house Beelzebub, how much more shall they call them of his household?
Jesus
made it clear that as they falsely accused him and fabricated stories that were
grossly untrue, so will they do the same to us as his followers.
Paul
was not immune to these false theories concerning his life and purposes. He was
accused of:
- Extorting God’s people (2 Cor. 2:17; 11:7-21).
- Being a false apostle (Gal. 1:11-2:10; 2 Cor. 11:16-12:12).
- Being a flatterer (1 Thess. 2:5).
- Blasphemy (Acts 24:6).
- Being a man pleaser and a coward (Gal. 1:10; 1 Thess. 2:4).
- Being greedy (1 Thess. 2:5,9).
- Being a deceiver and a crafty manipulator (2 Cor. 6:8; 12:16).
- Seeking glory from men (1 Thess. 2:6).
- Being a “cult” leader (Acts 24:5).
- Being a criminal (Acts 16:20-21; 24:5; 2 Tim. 2:9).
These
men dealt with these self-appointed judges almost on a daily basis. They
realized that when you are in a position of authority and leadership, it will
attract the ire of those in opposition. One thing the enemy knows – the power
of words. Words can change a person’s reputation overnight and castrate the
influence of that person from anymore opportunity to persuade others. If Satan
didn’t understand this, he wouldn’t waste the time in influencing opposition to
destroy reputations with the sabers of words.
What
do we do to rise above the attacks? Live your
life above reproach and with integrity so that when someone accuses you - no
one will believe it.
Remember,
you don’t have to answer every critic.
A lion doesn’t turn around every time a dog barks. If you do attempt to answer
every critic, your life will bog down in the unnecessary leaving your purpose
unattended. Remain focused on why you are here and pray for those who have
chosen dead-end lives with no production.
Learn
to laugh, smile, and keep your faith alive in Christ. In the end, He is the
only one that will matter.
- Dr. Reuben Egolf
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