Monday, December 9, 2013
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The names we use to describe people all depend on which side we're on. For example, if there are leftists who are trying to overthrow a pro-western government, we call them guerillas or revolutionaries. If pro-western guerillas are trying to overthrow a leftist government, we call them freedom fighters. If someone comes to our side, they're defectors. If they leave our side, they're deserters. You're probably either coming or going right now.
I'm Ron Hutchcraft and I want to have A Word With You today about "Crossing Paths on Sodom Road."
Our word for today from the Word of God is in 2 Timothy 4:10-11. It's the story of two deserters going two opposite directions. Paul is writing from his final prison cell, and he says this, "Demas has deserted me, because he loved this world." In verse 11 he says, "Only Luke is with me."
All right let's look at Demas. It says he deserted because he loved this world. That word love is the agapao word which means highly valued. He highly valued this present world. I call it Sodom. That's my word to describe this world system; the culture we're in. You know, got a good income, good college, good job, good times, good image. And Demas saw the lights of Sodom, and the billboards, and he heard the music, saw the brochures, and the ministry was going through tough times.
Paul was in prison, and I can't help but believe that there had been a secret pull for a long time as Demas kind of glanced over his shoulder while he's in the ministry and said, "Boy, it looks exciting over there. I wonder if I ought to try it sometime?" And so he finally decided. He traded in forever payoffs for little while payoffs. He is deserter number one.
But he meets someone on the road to Sodom-Dr. Luke. Now, Dr. Luke is a physician. He's got all of Sodom's goodies: the income, prestige, comforts, just what Demas is apparently leaving to look for. And the more Luke tasted the values of Christ's kingdom, the more he's drawn out of Sodom. By this time-the time of this writing-he's left it all, and now he is totally the personal physician of one missionary named Paul. He's left the prestige, the income, the comfort, and he apparently has no desire to go back. Dr. Luke has lived in both worlds; the one Demas is deserting, and the one he is deserting it for. He has found peace and fulfillment in serving Christ that he never found when he was serving himself.
So Demas deserts the kingdom for Sodom. Luke deserts Sodom for the kingdom, and you can almost hear Luke shouting as they cross paths, "Don't bother! There's nothing there! You may love the world. But Demas, it won't love you back." You know, you're in here somewhere. Are you Demas, sort of drifting toward the world? Or are you Luke? You're wise to the hollowness of this world, and you're moving toward serving Christ more and more?
The final verdict comes from Luke's quotation from Jesus in the gospel that Luke wrote, "What shall it profit a man if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own soul?"