Learn to be like Jesus (Matthew 26:64) June 29, 2016

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Today’s Bible reading plan:

Read it in a year – Psalms 75-77

see the whole year’s plan [here](http://www.bible-reading.com/bible-plan.pdf)

Today’s Devotional

Matthew 26:64
Jesus: So you seem to be saying. I will say this: beginning now, you will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of God’s power and glory and coming on heavenly clouds.

What do Jesus’ words mean for us today?

Everyone gather’s at Caiaphas’ house to figure out charges to bring against Jesus worthy of the death penalty. They all know He should die. He’s disrupted their playground. People don’t trust their teaching anymore. People turn to this Jesus for instruction on how they should follow God’s commands instead of listening to them. Jesus must die.

A few disreputable men come forward with evidence, paid by of chief priests to give their testimony. The problem is their testimonies don’t exactly agree, so Caiaphas doesn’t have what he needs to legally pass sentence against Jesus. So He questions Jesus himself. Don’t you have anything to say about these charges? Don’t you want to argue your own defense?

Nothing but silence.

Caiaphas tries something else. “Under oath, tell us right now, are you or are you not the Son of God?”

Jesus finally says something. “You seem to say so. But from this point on, you will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of God’s power and glory and coming on heavenly clouds.”

That was it. That was enough for Caiaphas. Sounded like blasphemy, even though it was Caiaphas who pronounced that Jesus was the Son of God. Jesus just didn’t disagree with him. Funny how that kangaroo court happened, isn’t it. Liars as witnesses. Blasphemy that the high priest attributed to Jesus, but he is the one who said the words. And they would only have been blasphemy if they were untrue. But since Jesus was the Son of God, they were not blasphemy in the first place.

So now Caiaphas had his charge. Jesus found worthy of death in the eyes of the Jewish leaders. Now how will that translate for the Romans so they will find fit to crucify this religious criminal. Rome doesn’t care. The number of gods around doesn’t concern them. It won’t be until Domician declares himself god and demands universal worship of himself that nations will suffer significant religious persecution under the Romans. So what crime against the state can Caiaphas and his fellow priest turn up against Jesus?

So what do we learn from this exchange between the chief priests, the high priest, and Jesus?

First, like Jesus, we must keep our behavior above reproach so no one can bring charges against us unless they hire liars and thugs to drum up false charges. As hard as the religious leaders tried, they could find nothing in either the civil law or their own religious laws with which to charge Jesus. His record remained impecable. They tried everything they could to find something, anything, to bring a guilty sentence, but foud nothing. We should live like that. We should live such outstanding lives that we can live as open books and nothing be found that could bring any discredit to God because of our actions.

Second, we should recognize that if we are followers of Jesus we can expect unbelievers to try to find fault in our living. They will look hard to find the tiniest crack in our armor and exploit it. The world will look for a word or an act or an omission somewhere and splash it in front of everyone they can to show our ungodly character. Whether true or not, expect the world to exploit anything they can to discredit our faith.

Third, when those things happen, sometimes, like Jesus, it’s just best to keep our mouth shut. I’m sometimes amazed at the arguments Christians let themselves get trapped in that really are meaningless arguments. We know the world is baiting us, trying to find that chink in our armor, trying to exploit some phrase, trying to twist some defense. But we need no defense when we walk with Jesus. He is already the victor. Why does the victor need defending? He’s already won! We can just let the world keep talking to themselves and keep on loving them. We can keep showing God’s love and sharing His message.

Finally, what happens if the world trumps up false charges against us and punishes us unjustly for something we didn’t do? What happens if we are imprisoned, persecuted, libeled, discredited, humiliated because of following Jesus?

Well, we join a pretty significant crowd, don’t we. If you read Foxx Book of Martyrs, you’ll find you’re in pretty good company. Thousands have gone before you imprisoned, persecuted, humiliated, libeled, discredited, and killed for doing what God asked them to do. They broke no laws. They threatened no lives. They did good to others. Yet the world hated them just as Jesus promised.

I won’t tell you it’s pleasant to be in that crowd, but it sure is a pleasure to be in that number. Jesus teaches us even in His encounter with Caiaphas. Learn to be like Him.

The Voice Bible Copyright © 2012 Thomas Nelson, Inc. The Voice™ translation © 2012 Ecclesia Bible Society All rights reserved.
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