We must pay more careful attention, therefore, to what we have heard, so that we do not drift away. (Hebrews 2:1)
Paying more careful
attention involves recognizing dangerous ways of drifting. Busyness that keeps
us from spiritual disciplines and promotes a neglectful lifestyle is one way.
Another way we drift away from God is by being "desensitized". When Satan cannot
tempt us to sin outright, he desensitizes us to sin, so that we live closer and
closer to the edge, rather than closer and closer to God. As we are desensitized
to sin, it does not look as horrendous, thereby not shocking us. I'm sure we
have all been in one of those, "I remember when that was considered terrible",
type conversations at one time or another. There are words that we use, things
that we watch, materials that we read, topics we discuss, activities we
participate in, that were once considered vulgar, or dangerous, but now we
consider them common place, no big deal. Our involvement and use of such things
was subtle. It is like a slow methodical poisoning. A person is not given a
lethal dose all at once. Rather they are given small amounts over a period of
time until the amount in their body is lethal and takes their life.
A newspaper in Georgia ran a story
several years ago about a young boy who had died in a local hospital. A police
officer was driving down the road when he saw this young lad walking along
carrying a long string of fish he had caught. The boy seemed to be laboring
under the task so the officer stopped and ask the boy if he'd like a ride. The
boy was delighted. As they traveled the officer ask the boy where he had caught
so many fish. The boy told the man with great delight. The officer said he had
fished there many times but never had a catch like that. The boy responded that
it wasn't the spot, but the wonderful worms he dug up that morning. They were
the best bait. As the boy was talking the officer noticed that the boys hands
were extremely swollen. He quickly ask the boy what the worms looked like. The
boy having a few left, opened the bag he had them in and showed the officer. The
officer looked in to find, not worms, but baby rattlesnakes. He ask the boy if
he had felt anything when he reached in to get the bait. The boy replied that he
felt very sharp pain at first, but the bait worked so well and after a while he
didn't feel it so much. The officer immediately changed his course and drove the
youngster to the nearest hospital. Sadly the boy died. One or two bites would
not have hurt him, but he had been bitten so many times that the poison was too
much for his system.
This is what is taken place in all
to many. We like to call these changes "openness", "enlightenment", or
"maturity". In reality, the majority of them are compromises and complacency. We
are drifting away from the holiness. We are been methodically desensitized and
deluded. It has come to the point where Christians aren't even recognizable.
Barnard took a poll and found that non-churched people saw no significant
difference in the way Christians live from the way they live. There are many
factors to this, but one is that we have drifted away from the center. Too many
Christians are more concerned how close they can get to sin and still remain a
Christian than they are how close they can get to God. We are frightened about
being considered a fanatic. Beloved, we need to pay more careful attention. The
snake is biting, but we're not paying attention.
Keep Close To Jesus
Pastor Gerry