Fear Not, Fear God

Calling the Pharisees “fools” and the lawyers worse, Jesus did not endear himself to the leaders of the moral majority.[2] It was surely no shock that as a lot they sought “to catch him in something he might say” (Luke 11:54). Of course, they wouldn’t because they couldn’t, leading them eventually to fabricate testimony, illegally try, and falsely convict the sinless Son of God. But knowing what would come did not lead Jesus to dial back his criticism or concern, warning his disciples: “Beware of the leaven of the Pharisees.”

With Reverence and Awe

In his book The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self, Carl Trueman describes the age in which we live as “a world in which it is increasingly easy to imagine that reality is something we can manipulate according to our own wills and desires, and not something that we necessarily conform ourselves to or passively accept.”[2] We perceive it to be a world of our making, not God’s. This should not surprise us. Though it seems insignificant, the Disney movies that children grew up watching told them they could be anyone they wanted to be if only they followed their heart. Who knew they would take this mantra literally in interpreting human sexuality? But personal perceptions of self-creation and autonomy are prevalent not only in modern views of sexuality but a myriad of other matters, including Christian worship.