Luke 11:15-26
Once, when
Jesus cast out a demon from a man who couldn’t speak, his voice returned to
him. The crowd was excited and enthusiastic, but some said, “No wonder he can
cast them out. He gets his power from Satan, the king of demons!” Others asked
for something to happen in the sky to prove his claim of being the Messiah.
He knew the
thoughts of each of them, so he said, “Any kingdom filled with civil war is
doomed; so is a home filled with argument and strife. Therefore, if what you
say is true, that Satan is fighting against himself by empowering me to cast
out his demons, how can his kingdom survive? And if I am empowered by Satan,
what about your own followers? For they cast out demons! Do you think this
proves they are possessed by Satan? Ask them if you are right! But if I am
casting out demons because of power from God, it proves that the Kingdom of God
has arrived.
“For when
Satan, strong and fully armed, guards his palace, it is safe— until someone
stronger and better armed attacks and overcomes him and strips him of his
weapons and carries off his belongings.
“Anyone who is
not for me is against me; if he isn’t helping me, he is hurting my cause.
“When a demon
is cast out of a man, it goes to the deserts, searching there for rest; but
finding none, it returns to the person it left, and finds that its former home
is all swept and clean. Then it goes and gets seven other demons more evil than
itself, and they all enter the man. And so the poor fellow is seven times worse
off than he was before.”
Food for thought!
Have you ever
felt that there seems to always be a grouch (a person who is always critical)
in every crowd? This is the person who never seems to appreciate good and
goodness in life and in others. He recounts his tales of woe to anyone who
listens, telling about what’s currently wrong in his own life, or life of
others. While the crowd was excited and enthusiastic about Jesus, the grouch said,
“No wonder he can cast them out. He gets his power from Satan, the king of
demons!” The grouch know how to twist the good we do to something evil!
This is sad.
Calling good as evil; calling Jesus as agent of the devil. And this is not
uncommon. Normally when we don't like someone, everything that person does will
look evil to us; it is then that we resort to slander. Do you possibly have
anyone you slander because you dislike him or her? Are you a grouch to someone?
We can and must
change. Let us use positive words and positive thoughts in everything we do.
Remember that the spoken word is like a seed. It must grow. We can leave the
how, when, and where to God. Our job is to say what is good and to give forth
blessings, knowing that the moment we have spoken gratitude we may begin to
receive. Through the ages, the wise and thoughtful among us have said that
there is good in everything and everyone if we just take the time to look for
it. So let us not say defamatory words about others.
THE PERIL OF THE
EMPTY SOUL
Here is a grim
and terrible story. There was a man from whom an unclean spirit was expelled.
It wandered seeking rest and found none. It determined to return to the man. It
found his soul swept and garnished--but empty. So the spirit went and collected
seven spirits worse than itself and came back and entered in; and the man's
last state was worse than his first.
(i) Here is the
fundamental truth that you cannot leave the soul empty. It is not enough to
banish the evil thoughts and the evil habits and the old ways and leave the
soul empty. An empty soul is a soul in peril. We've got to fill our mind with
something. It is not enough to not think of evil; it is good to think of good
and goodness.
(ii) The best way
to avoid evil is to do good. Often we may be troubled with wrong thoughts. If
we go no further than to say to ourselves, "I will not think about
that," all we do is fix our thoughts upon it more and more. The cure is to
think of something else, to banish the evil thought by thinking a good thought.
We never become good by not doing things, but by filling life with lovely
things.
Phillipians 4:8
Summing it all
up, friends, I'd say you'll do best by filling your minds and meditating on
things true, noble, reputable, authentic, compelling, gracious-- the best, not
the worst; the beautiful, not the ugly; things to praise, not things to curse.
“You gotta
accentuate the positive; eliminate the negative; latch on to the affirmative;
don’t mess with Mr. In-Between!” so sang Johnny Mercer in the mid-1940s. This
message is still a good one for us today.
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