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Confronting The Scandal Of Our Prejudices Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 25, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Jesus came to buck the system and to reject the prejudices in all its forms. He goes against the grain of His culture and dares to love all people equally.
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Billy Graham has preached the Gospel around the world to
every race. In an interview with Diane Sawyer he was asked this
question: "If you could wave your hand and make one problem in
this world go away, what would it be?" Without hesitation he
replied, "Racial division and strive." This world is filled with civil
wars based on race and religion all because people have a
deep-seated prejudice against other people who are different. Hate
crimes abound for the same reason. If this was the limit of the
impact of prejudice in our world, it would be the number one sin of
mankind according to Billy Graham and many others. But this is
just the tip of the iceberg. Prejudice of one kind or another poisons
the heart of just about everyone. Masses of people do not
experience racial prejudice because they have no contact with any
but their own race. But nobody escapes all forms of prejudice.
The issue of male-female prejudice touches almost everyone.
Class prejudice is also nearly universal. Religious prejudice, not
only between the religious and non-religious, but between the many
religions of the world and the many denominations of each religion.
We could go on endlessly listing areas of prejudice down to such
trivialities as right-handers against left-handers and cassettes lovers
against CD lovers. There does not appear to be anyone who can
escape all forms of prejudice, and so to some degree we are all a
part of the problem.
The Apostle John tells us that he did not record all that Jesus
did, for the world could not contain it if everything was recorded.
But he did record the confrontation of Jesus with the woman at the
well, and he gave us a lot of detail. The reason for it is because in
this encounter Jesus demonstrates that He was free from, and
uncontaminated by the prejudice that dominated the fallen hearts
of men. Jesus rejects all the major prejudices of men in this
account. Racial, religious, and sexual prejudice are rejected in this
encounter. No two people could be more in contrast to each other
than Jesus and this woman, and yet we see Jesus reaching out to
break down all the walls of prejudice in relating to her.
It is hard for us to grasp the audacity of Jesus in this situation,
and to understand why the disciples were so surprised to see Him
talking with her. But just imagine if you walked into a McDonalds
and saw Billy Graham in a booth talking to a black prostitute
whom you knew had just started her own cult in the area, and
Graham is asking her to go get him a glass of water. If that scene
would not surprise you and draw out some feelings of prejudice,
you are ready for the rapture. Most Christians would be shocked
just as the disciples were shocked at Jesus. Why? It was because
they were prejudice. They were products of their culture, and so
they had the typical sexual, racial, and religious prejudices of their
day.
Jesus uses prejudice people like His disciples because that was
His only choice. They wanted to call fire down from heaven to
destroy the Samaritans. They wanted no part of eating with
Gentiles, and they were even prejudice against little children, for
they wanted mothers to keep their kids away from Jesus. He
rebuked them and told them to let the little children come, for of
such is the kingdom of God. Jesus had to fight all kinds of
prejudice in His disciples, and the fight goes on all through history
for Christians are full of all the prejudices that are popular in the
culture in which they live.
Jesus came to buck the system and to reject the prejudices in
all its forms. He goes against the grain of His culture and dares to
love all people equally. It is His dream that His disciples will be
people of the same spirit. It took a long time for Jesus to get His
disciples free of prejudice. Peter, even long after Pentecost, could
not bring himself to eat with Gentiles. It was a deep prejudice in
him, and even the Holy Spirit could not cleanse him of it. God had
to speak to him in a dream and tell him not to call anything unclean
that he had made clean. He finally got Peter to go and eat with the
Gentile Centurion Cornelius in Acts 10. It was one of Peter's
hardest spiritual battles in letting go of his prejudice against
Gentiles.
It is good that his battle is recorded, for we do not want to give
the impression that prejudice is easy to eliminate. It is very hard to
do so, and often the best Christians can do in the short range is to