Good
Morning All,
Philippians
2:11; “and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God
the Father.”
Kaiser Kurios vs. Christos Kurios. It doesn’t look like it is that
different. You might even look at it and
say, “It is Greek to me” (it is). Yet in
that small difference is all the difference in the world. That difference is why the early Christians
were martyred. That difference was why
so many were tortured by the Romans at different times and places in the early
years of the Church. All that the Roman
officials wanted was for everyone to say “Kaiser Kurios” and all was fine. The early Christians refused, and some paid a
high price. The Romans wanted everyone
to confess that Caesar is Lord. That is
all the people had to do. The people
could keep their old religion and religious practices as long as it was
confessed that Caesar was the highest and greatest Lord. That is why when we read the Bible, we see cities
like Ephesus or Corinth with be hundreds of temples to different gods with
different religions; some we probably have never heard of. All the practitioners had to do was say
Caesar is Lord- Kaiser Kurios and everything was fine.
The Early Christians wouldn’t say
that. To them, Caesar wasn’t the Lord,
but Christ is the Lord. When asked,
their response was always “Christos Kurios.”
The Romans saw this as treason and dealt with it in a very harsh manner;
no dictatorship can afford for the people to confess anything but the official
government line. Look at North Korea,
China, Iran, Syria; take your pick, no deviance from the official line is
allowed. Because the early Christians
refused to submit, they paid a heavy price, some the ultimate price. Christos Kurios.
What about us? Do we confess Christos Kurios no matter the
cost? Most of us have never had our
life, the life of a loved one or even any sort of physical harm threatened
against us for claiming to be a Christian, but do we always confess Christos
Kurios? It can be tough; when you are in
a conversation with a group of people who say that we were lucky to get some
rain or that the fates were with us, for us to say Christos Kurios. When no one else is witnessing their faith,
it can be easy to hide in the background.
If it is just me, I’ll just be quiet.
I don’t want to make a scene or give them any fodder to poke fun at me
with after all I just want to fit in.
Yet by our silence, we are not confessing Christos Kurios; Christ is the
Lord.
We need to remember that without Christ as
our Lord, we have no hope. We have no
future. While we may come up short once
in a while, we need to continue to pray for God’s strength and courage to
confess Jesus’ name before men. We need
to trust the Spirit to move within our heart and life in order to confess
Christos Kurios. Trust in the Spirit;
trust in God for his mercy and his courage.
It is how the church grows, and souls are saved; by the confession of
faith: Christos Kurios, Christ is the Lord over all things.
Dear
Father, forgive us when we are slow to confess that Jesus is the Lord most high
in our life. Give us the courage to
witness and to speak with the confidence of the faith which you give us. Keep us in that faith which places our hope
in Jesus that we may be saved unto life eternal. In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.
God’s
Peace,
Pastor Bret
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