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Lesson 54 |
Lesson Subject: Overcoming Evil with Good
Lesson Plan
Devils or demons.
The miracle of Jesus in healing dumb demoniac.
Why Jesus would not work another sign from heaven for the Pharisees.
The divided versus the united kingdom.
The teaching of the man from whom a demon had been cast out, with nothing good taking the demon's place.
Hiding our light.
The gain of letting our light shine.
Every person born into this world falls into a conflict between Good and Evil. The forces of Evil are on every side, as are the forces of Good. "For our wrestling is not against flesh and blood, but against the principalities, against the powers, against the world-rulers of this darkness, against the spiritual hosts of wickedness." Most children know early in life about this conflict. By means of it a child can hopefully grow strong and good. Early in life, it becomes our personal business to be arrayed on the side of right, under the leadership of Jesus.
Christian leaders should always be steadfast and determined to make this fact very clear and plain to the little ones among us. Help them see clearly the character of the two sides or forces. Keep in front of them the two contending powers, as set forth in the New Testament:
On the Side of Good: The fruits of the spirit (Gal 5:22) The ten commandments (Rom 8:16, 17, 26; Jn 1:12; Eph 5:9; Psa 46:7; Isa 41:10; many of the Psalms, Prophets, and Revelation)
On the Side of Evil: The works of the flesh (Gal 5:19-21) The ten commandments without the "not" Satan, demoniacs (1 Cor 6:10; Eph 5:6; Rev 21:27, etc.)
Illustration
The Dumb Demoniac on One Side, and Jesus on the Other
v 14 ... "And he," Jesus, "was casting out a devil," Gk. "a demon." Its especial characteristic was that it made the man dumb.
v 14 ... "was casting," as if the process was difficult, and required a little time.
v 14 ... "when the devil," "demon" as in all such cases ...
v 14 ... "was gone out, the dumb spake, and the people wondered." All three narratives (here, Matt. 12:22; Mk. 3:20-22) suppose a great throng to have been present, including hostile observers, and strangers. They wondered because the result was different from that of the common incantations of those who pretended to cast out demons.
To understand this miracle and the conversation that follows, it is necessary to make some real distinctions.
Jesus claimed that He was the representative of the kingdom of God; as shown by His teaching and His works.
The Scribes and Pharisees (Matt 12:24; Mk 3:22), the leaders of the Jewish church, who were looking for the Messiah Deliverer, claimed that they represented the kingdom of God. They bitterly opposed Jesus.
The Multitudes, when they saw the miracle Jesus had worked by casting out demons from the tormented man, "were amazed, and said, Is this the Son of David?" the Messiah whom they expected to bring in the kingdom of God. He is on the side of Good, and opposed to Evil.
The Scribes and Pharisees ...
v 15 ... "said He casteth out devils through Beelzebub
the chief of the devils." They charged that Jesus was in
collusion with the prince of evil, who permitted Him to cast
out inferior demons so that He would appear to be on God's
side while He was in fact undermining the real kingdom of God
of which the Scribes considered themselves the representatives.
They urged that under the cloak of seeming goodness, He was
seeking to gain currency for evil teaching.
v 16 ... "And others, tempting him," i.e., putting Him to a test, "sought of him a sign from heaven," i.e., some great marvel like those Satan proposed to Jesus in the wilderness temptations. But this, even if He had done it for them, would not have proved that He was from God; while healing the sick, and delivering men from the over-mastering power of evil, was the natural proof that He was serving the kingdom of God.
v 17 ... "But he, knowing their thoughts," perhaps not hearing what they said in v 15, but knowing their motives and designs ...
v 17 ... "said unto them, Every kingdom divided against itself is brought to desolation ... If Satan also be divided against himself, how shall hiskingdom stand?" Therefore it cannot be true that ...
v 18 ... "I cast out devils by Beelzebub." Beelzebub is too wily to do that.
Then again, their own conduct refuted the charge.
v 19 ... "If I by Beelzebub cast out devils, by whom
do your sons," i.e., the Jewish exorcists, "cast them out?"
Those men at least pretended to cast out demons, and the
Pharisees had never charged them with being in league with
Satan. Therefore the malice of their charge against Jesus
was evident. But our Lord does not stop with this negative
conclusion. His mode of casting out demons was ...
v 20 ... "with the finger of God," and very differentfrom the method employed by the Jewish exorcists. It proved itself divine in changed lives, purified hearts, as well as in transformed bodies and clarified intellects. The kingdom of God, and not the kingdom of Satan, showed itself by the result in all of Christ's miracles. This is a fundamental distinction.
Then Jesus makes His argument plain by the illustration of a castle, or palace. "The human soul may be justly compared to a palace, for it is a most beautiful, noble, and magnificent edifice, formed of imperishable materials, a house not made with hands, the masterplace of the all-wise and all-powerful Architect, Who formed and adorned it with His own use" (Joe Nisbet, Scottish evangelist and teacher). Satan has taken possession of this house, and holds it by strength and arms. Most evidently in the case of a demoniac, Satan had possession of the house. "Now how," Jesus asks, "could I enter the castle unless I were stronger than Satan? And how could I regain the spoil that Satan has stolen, the rich spoil of health and character and happiness, without proving Myself the enemy of Satan?"
Jesus finally clinches His argument by the simple fact that a person cannot be on both sides. He cannot serve God and Mammon. He cannot belong to both kingdoms at the same time. And since His character and teachings, and deeds, all were characteristic of the kingdom of God, He belonged to that kingdom.
Questions:
Jesus warned the man from whom the demons had been cast out, and who doubtless kept near the Master during the above discussion, that there was only one way in which his redemption could be permanent. If he did not fill his cleansed life with holy thought and good works, the devil would again seize upon his mind, and would bring with him seven others, all more wicked than the first.
v 24 ... "When the unclean spirit is gone out of a man, he walketh through dry places," i.e., deserts, where there is nothing attractive, and he is restless because he finds no congenial home. This explains why ...
v 24 ... "he saith, I will return unto my house whence I came out," to his familiar haunt in the man. The sinful heart is the natural home of the evil spirit.
v 25 ... "And when he cometh he findeth it swept and garnished." Nothing new, no great interest, no fullness of the Holy Spirit had taken his place. Here was the fatal mistake of the man. The emptiness of the house was an invitation to the evil spirit to return.
v 26 ... "Then he taketh to him seven other spirits more wicked than himself." Even bad spirits want company; sins grow in clusters. Evils are allied one to another.
v 26 ... "and dwell there." They knew they could remain in a heart that being once cleansed did not put good in the place of evil.
In this warning to the saved demoniac, Jesus laid down one of the great Principles of Reform, both of individuals and churches of Christ, as well as nations. Jesus Himself applied it to the Jewish nation -- "even so shall it be also unto this evil generation" (Matt 12:45). They had cast out idolatry, and the neglect of God's Word. The nation had become empty, swept, and garnished -- swept and garnished by the decencies of civilization and discoveries of secular knowledge, but empty of living and earnest faith. They had not filled the nation with piety, with good works, with labors for the salvation of men. The place of the old had not been filled. Then entered impurity and selfishness, ambition, hypocrisy, adultery, false swearing, narrowness, hate of what was good, love of money, and love of praise. The end was that the nation and the temple were destroyed, and destroyed by these very evils, as the story of the destruction of Jerusalem forty years later shows. If they had only taken Christ and the Holy Spirit into their emptied house, they would have remained unto this day.
Emptying by Filling
"We must empty by filling" (Ann Exum). "Nothing is ever
displaced until it is replaced" (Jack Exum). In these two
utterances lies the secret (if it be a secret) of all reform.
Here, as elsewhere, nature (which abhors a vacuum) teaches.
We cannot pump the darkness out of a room; we must empty it
by filling it with light. As was said a century ago, "One
tallow-dip will do more to exclude darkness than a thousand
steam-pumps." The only way to shut out disease is to fill our
veins with health. In morals we must banish the degrading
by the elevating -- not by prohibition but by substitution.
We must crowd out the night-club with Sunday Bible school,
family camp, the home, with its light and pleasant rooms,
games, and cheerful welcome.
The popular superstition which credits every deserted house with being haunted and filled with bad spirits has a germ of truth. If the demon be excluded and the soul be swept and garnished, yet, if it be empty, the demon will return with seven other spirits more wicked than himself. The Holy Spirit, by entering the soul, empties it of evil spirits; and, by dwelling in the soul, filling it to the utmost, he maintains the exclusion of the bad. (Dr. Fred B. Walker).
Illustration
A century ago, James Gordon Bennett offered the great
Norwegian violinist nicknamed, Ole Bull, the free use of the
columns of The New York Herald so he might reply to enemies
who were vilifying him. 'Ole Bull' responded to Mr.
Bennett's offer by saying, "I think it is best they write
against me, and I play against them." Fill the soul with the
music of the Gospel, and many a trying discord in life will
be drowned in the heavenly strains.
For parents and teachers this principle is a mighty power in saving children from bad habits and dangerous temptations. We are apt to give them too many "don'ts" and too few "do's." Fill their lives with interesting work, duties done for love's sake.
In the church of our Lord, as well as in our life and nation, we need to constantly strive to cast out the devils of selfishness, graft, bribery, fraud, war, anger, strife, hatred, etc. It is equally necessary to make duty, love, helpfulness, reform, etc., fill their places.
A little later Jesus gives another illustration and symbol of the two kingdoms between which we must choose -- the kingdom of Light, and the kingdom of Darkness. Light signifies truth and the revelation of the truth. It signifies life, beauty, comfort, peace, purity, blessing, health, power. It is for the soul and the spiritual world what the sun is to the earth.
The business of Light is to overcome and destroy Darkness, i.e., moral darkness. The darkness of a blind heart, a crooked and corrupt will, the shadow of death. The darkness that does not see God, goodness, heaven, salvation, or a pure and holy life; seeing only a hopeless, painful emptiness, full of dangers and sins.
Note:
There are two things necessary for light to accomplish its
purpose. It must shine, and it must be received by good eyes.
The Light must First Shine
v 33 ... "No man when he hath lighted a candle putteth
it in a secret place," i.e., a cellar, or dungeon. Jesus
was, and is, the Light of the World. His whole life and
teaching were the outshining of that Light. There was no use
in His coming unless He let His Light Shine. And the same is
true of His disciples.
The diffusion of light in our world is caused by the reflection of the rays of the sun from the particles in the air, from the clouds, from the earth and all that is on it. Otherwise we could see only the sun, and in all other directions would be darkness. But by the dispersion of light every particle becomes a miniature sun, and the world is full of light, even to those who do not live in the direct rays of the sun. It is this work which every Christian, and every Christian word or act, is to do for the moral world.
v 34 ... "When thine eye is single," pure, undeflecting, reflecting things just as they are ...
v 34 ... "but when thine eye is evil." There are many diseases of the eye which dim or distort, or deflect, or confuse, the rays that come to it; so that the eye sees things different from what they really are, or sees double, or is blind to them altogether.
Thus ...
v 34 ... "thy body also is full of darkness," groping in
ignorance uncertain as to what is truth and duty, but certain
to go astray; blind to the most important interests of life.
The heart, the eye of the soul, will mistake wrong for right.
But if the heart is "single," i.e., has one supreme purpose
to serve God and lay up heavenly treasurers, and is not
confused by seeking other aims, and by worldly attractions,
the path of duty will be clearly seen, and the questions
regarding what to do are easily decided.
It is only the pure in heart that can see God.
Light from Above
Not long ago I visited a beautiful building. There was one strange thing about it; some of the rooms had no windows. Perhaps you have already guessed what building it is -- an Art Museum. Why are there no windows in these fine rooms? Onereason is that the wall space is all wanted for pictures. But the chief reason is that paintings must be lighted from above to bring out their beauty. The windows are, therefore, in the roof, and the light comes through the ceiling. Sometimes paintings are lighted by electricity. The lights are then put at the top of the frame, never at the side. You see this would of ours is lighted from above, and artists try to show things as they are. If we will truly see their work, we must light it from above.Your life is like a painting. If you will see it truly, it must be lighted from above. Perhaps it seems to you just the same old round of study and play, work and sleep, with nothing grand or beautiful in it. In some of the greatest paintings, the artists have shown us the beauty hidden in just such everyday scenes. Splendor and beauty are all about us, if we can only see them. We shall not find them if we have only earthly side lights.
That is why it is so important to begin each day with prayer, and to open the Book of God and let the light from Jesus shine on our path. Then shall we see truth, honor, kindness, and love in every common day. Nothing can be more beautiful than these. They make the beauty of heaven. Open the windows of your soul to heaven and let the light from above fall upon your life (From a great sermon, preached in the late 1960's, by the late Dr. Fred B. Walker, in a tent-meeting located on Newtownards Road in Belfast, N. Ireland).
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