Living What We Teach

Living What We Teach

February 6, 2019

Jesus had amazing patience for all kinds of people: disciples who had difficulty learning, tax collectors who were greedy and selfish, people with physical and mental illness, and certainly children, whom adults considered a nuisance. But He showed no patience for phony religious leaders who knew the Scriptures but did not live by them.

In Matthew 23:1-3, Jesus taught the people to listen and obey the teachings of the religious leaders but not to follow their example because “they say things and do not do them.” He called those teachers “hypocrites.” Today we might use the term “phony.”

The familiar saying, “Actions speak louder than words,” applies to all of life, not just religious teaching. At a very early age, children use words and gestures that they observe in parents and caregivers. When they are appropriate, we rejoice in what they are learning. When they are not wholesome, we are embarrassed to admit where they most likely heard or saw them.

Our world today is not doing a very good job of offering examples of leaders living what they teach. In my growing up years, I remember hearing about people whom I admired making some very bad choices. One of my college professors, who influenced me greatly toward wanting to study the Bible, later made a choice that ruined his marriage. I felt ill when I heard about it. Fortunately, the story included repentance, but the damage was beyond repair.

I was challenged by a message from Andy Stanley to think about the story that we want our life to tell. When we make choices, what do we want to be a permanent part of our story? It would be commendable to be remembered as a helpful teacher of the Bible, but an even better legacy is to be known as one who lived what we taught.

Pastor Bill Ehmann

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RECENT POSTS

They Did It For Us

By wvbaptist | November 22, 2019 | 0 Comments

November 22, 2019 Currently, I am reading a fun history book, Out Where the West Begins, by Philip F. Anschutz. This is Part 2 in a series that makes American history come alive in easy reading with just enough detail […]

Bright Spot in a Dark Journey

By wvbaptist | November 15, 2019 | 0 Comments

November 14, 2019 The Book of Jeremiah makes me weary. I cannot imagine the life of this faithful prophet who spoke God’s message and was treated terribly. Then follows Lamentations, well named because Jeremiah is lamenting everything that has happened. […]

Squirrel Power

By wvbaptist | November 6, 2019 | 0 Comments

November 6, 2019 A squirrel that was running across power lines near our church campus stepped in the wrong place. It cost him his life and involved many human hours to get the campus back to full power. I thought […]

Falling Leaves

By wvbaptist | October 30, 2019 | 0 Comments

October 30, 2019 Reprinted from October 29, 2009 While enjoying breakfast with family in the historic Multnomah Falls Lodge and admiring the waterfall on a very stormy day in October, I found myself unusually fascinated with something I have previously […]

Daylight Saving Time

By wvbaptist | October 23, 2019 | 0 Comments

October 23, 2019 Two times each year we change our clocks – back one hour in the fall and forward one hour in the spring. Foolishly, I have allowed myself to be annoyed by this interruption, and I get excited […]

Scroll to Top