Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Badly Mistaken



“You are badly mistaken!”  Mark 12:27

Making a mistake is bad, but being badly mistaken is worse.  Such is so because while the first deals with what we do, the second relates to what we think—and what we think affects who we are which influences what we do, and round and round it goes.  In other words, the key to doing what’s right is believing what’s right, and never in our lives has believing what’s right mattered more than now as the cultural pursuit of things spiritual increases but the passion for things Scriptural decreases. 

Faith as a general acknowledgement of a supernatural divinity is hailed as a positive attribute, but a focused confidence in Christ alone and in what the Bible says alone is berated as close-minded and bigoted. Such criticism should never scare us nor surprise us for erroneous belief is nothing new under the sun, and sadly sometimes those who should know truth best seem to be the most blind.  We see this in our day, and Jesus saw it in His with a group of guys known as the Sadducees.

The Sadducees were members of a Jewish religious and political faction who believed that only the first five books of the Bible were divine revelation.  Since the rest of the Old Testament was disregarded, they did not believe in angels and demons, the resurrection, or any kind of life after death.  It was to this group of men, who disagreed greatly with Jesus’ doctrine and doings, that He spoke a phrase which shows up only once in Scripture—“You are badly mistaken!”(Mk 12:27).

They came to test him, trying to trick him and hoping to catch him in a contradiction, so they tossed out a hypothetical setup about a lady who subsequently married seven brothers in hopes of bearing children to carry on her first husband’s name.  And then they slyly and smugly asked, “At the resurrection, whose wife will she be, since all seven were married to her?”(Mk 12:23).  The Saducees were certain their supposed situation presented a puzzle with no plausible solutions, but Jesus sorted it all out and shook them all down all in one breath.

First there was the “talkin’ to” about their failures—“Are you not in error because you do not know the Scriptures or the power of God!”(Mk 12:24).  (Ouch!)  This was followed by some serious teaching on the afterlife—“When the dead rise, they will neither marry nor be given in marriage; they will be like the angels in heaven”(Mk 12:25).  Without pausing Jesus laid out the straight truth about the resurrection—“Now about the dead rising—have you not read in the book of Moses, in the account of the bush, how God said to him, ‘I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob’?  He is not the God of the dead but of the living”(Mk 12:27).  And while they were still reeling, there came the straightforward indictment on the sum of their beliefs—“You are badly mistaken!”(Mk 12:27).

“Badly mistaken” is not a different interpretation on a non-essential precept.  It is not a varied view on how God started this earth or how He will end it.  It is not whether you dunk, sprinkle, or douse in the name of the triune God.  “Badly mistaken” means you have missed the crucial and indispensable truth that God so loved the world that He became a man who lived a perfect life on this earth and tore Himself apart on the cross so we would not have to be separated from Him forever because of our sin.  “Badly mistaken” means you do not believe that Jesus conquered death physically and spiritually.  “Badly mistaken” means you’re trusting in your being better instead of God’s best.  “Badly mistaken” means you think that the paths of all religions lead to the same place.  “Badly mistaken” means you might believe in the existence of God and even the events of Jesus’ earthly life but you have never received His gift of salvation by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone.  

Believing what’s right makes more than just a big difference; it makes all the difference.
Stick with Scripture, and you’ll never be badly mistaken.