Luke 9:51-55
When it came close to the
time for his death, he gathered up his courage and steeled himself for the
journey to Jerusalem. 52 He sent messengers on ahead. They came to a Samaritan
village to make arrangements for his hospitality. 53 But when the Samaritans
learned that his destination was Jerusalem, they refused hospitality. 54 When
the disciples James and John learned of it, they said, "Master, do you
want us to call a bolt of lightning down out of the sky and incinerate
them?" 55 Jesus turned on them: "Of course not!" And they
travelled on to another village.
Food for thought!
When the time came for him to
die, Jesus could no longer stay away from it; he had to go to Jerusalem, where
he would die. Going to Jerusalem meant certain death. Jesus knew it, and the
people in the Samaritan village not only knew it but didn't want to be part of
it. So they refused to cooperate; they refused thoroughfare to Jesus. The
disciples James and John didn't like the villagers' reaction either. Solution?
Call down fire from heaven to burn them alive.
In both instances, Jesus
shows us how to deal with our enemies, or better with our adversaries, or those
who disagree with us. In the first instance, the Samaritan villagers refused
him welcome. And what did Jesus do? He just switched course. Instead of
forcing his way thru the village, he just went thru another village. He clearly
avoided confrontation. THEY ARE SOME FIGHTS THAT ARE NOT WORTH FIGHTING.
Another lesson from Jesus, is
refraining from misusing our powers. James and John wanted to use their powers
to call down fire on the village. They thought Jesus would praise them for
that; he did not. ''Of course not'', he said. In other words, of course evil is
not fought with evil; of course rejection is not resolved with rejection; of
course eye for eye only augments the situation.
So what are we to do when
rejected? Just go to another village; change places; change jobs; leave your
opponent by themselves; don't fight your last war. Remember last week what
Jesus said in Luke 9:5? "If you're not welcomed, leave town. Don't make
a scene. Shrug your shoulders and move on." And you
remember Deuterenomy 32:35, where the Lord says, "To me belongs
vengeance." In other words, it is not ours to do vengeance; the
Lord well knows best when and how to do retribution on our behalf.
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