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"Just Turn Up The Radio" 12/02/01 Past/Future Articles |
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A comic strip depicted a conversation between two
small boys. One tells about his dad hearing a strange grinding noise
in the car’s engine. When asked if he stopped to fix it, he replies,
“No, he just turned the radio up louder so he couldn’t hear it!”
It struck me that this is how we “fix” a lot of our problems.
Take a sinner who knows what to do to become
a Christian, or one who has been a Christian who finds himself again entangled
with the cares of the world, whose lifestyle needs changing to again entertain
hope of salvation (Acts
8:22, James
5:16). Each realizes that major spiritual repairs are in order,
yet lacking courage to make them, he “turns up the radio.”
He may turn up the radio by criticizing
the hypocrites in the church or by poking fun at some Bible teaching.
He may divert attention from the truth with
a side-issue such as untaught natives on some far away island (cf. 2
Thes. 1:7-9) or the “thief on the cross.” Is the “What about
them?” more cover than concern? “What about me?” is a better
question.
He may attack the messenger in order to
ignore the message. With violent prejudice, some tried to muffle
Jesus by calling Him “a gluttonous man and a wine-bibber” (Matt.
11:19). Some on Pentecost “turned up their radios” by accusing
the Spirit-filled apostles of being drunk with new wine (Acts
2:13). Festus averted the issue by discrediting the teacher.
In a loud voice, he said, “...Paul, thou art mad; much learning is turning
thee mad” (Acts
26:24).
He may “turn up the radio” by procrastinating.
Felix turned out the “uncomfortable” message of spiritual subjects, like
righteousness, self-control, and the judgment to come, by appealing to
a more convenient season (Acts
24:25). So far as we know, it never came.
He may replace the teacher with one who
will say what he wants to hear. Paul prophesied that some would “heap
to themselves teachers after their own lusts.” (I
Tim. 4:3).
As you can see, “turning up the radio” has
been going on since before radios were invented. Why suppress the
truth? It does not change it to ignore it. Perhaps it is discomfiting
to see something in our lives that needs fixing - - and especially if it
happens to be something we don’t want fixed! That was the problem
with some about whom John wrote. They “loved the darkness rather
than the light; for their works were evil. For every one that doeth
evil hateth the light…” (Jn.
3:19-20). Satan has the remedy: fix the “noise,” not the ailing
soul. Others know soul “fixing” means admitting wrong and making changes.
Pride says, “Turn up the radio!” Courage and character say, “Speak,
Lord, thy servant heareth” (I
Sam. 3:9). Wise people want all the truth (Acts
20:27).