The
agnosticÕs way out is whatÕs called Òwillful ignorance,Ó and thereÕs an insidious
sin to it. It amounts to a rejection of anything that conflicts with a personÕs
own ideas and traditions.
ÒPeople say
they donÕt know, and then when you show them the truth, they respond, ÔWell, I
just donÕt know,Õ Ó reasons Jordan. ÒThatÕs exactly where the scribes, the Pharisees
and the leaders in Israel were in Luke 20: They knew; they just werenÕt willing
to say.Ó
As the
passage in Luke reveals, ÒAnd it came to pass, that on one of those days, as he
taught the people in the temple, and preached the gospel, the chief priests and
the scribes came upon him with the elders,
[2] And spake unto him, saying, Tell
us, by what authority doest thou these things? or who is he that gave thee this
authority?
[3] And he
answered and said unto them, I will also ask you one thing; and answer me:
[4] The baptism
of John, was it from heaven, or of men?
[5] And they
reasoned with themselves, saying, If we shall say, From heaven; he will say,
Why then believed ye him not?
[6] But and if
we say, Of men; all the people will stone us: for they be persuaded that John
was a prophet.
[7] And they
answered, that they could not tell whence it was.
[8] And Jesus said unto them, Neither
tell I you by what authority I do these things.Ó
Jordan
explains, ÒThe issue with them back there was, ÔWho gave you the right?!Õ and Jesus
says, ÔYou tell me something first—how about John the Baptist? He
testified of me.Õ
ÒNow, you
see, theyÕve got a dilemma. They reason, ÔIf we say John was a man sent from
God, the question will be why didnÕt we believe him. And weÕll be shown to be hypocrites.
If we say no, John wasnÕt a prophet sent from God, the people think he was and weÕre
dead meat there. So, we just canÕt say—we canÕt tell you.Õ
ÒWell, thatÕs
the agnosticÕs way out. ItÕs willful ignorance. IÕll show you why. Look at John
7:14: ÔNow about the midst of the feast Jesus went up into the temple, and
taught. And the Jews marvelled, saying, How knoweth this man letters, having
never learned?Õ
ÒThe
question was, ÔHow come He knows so much—He never went to school? He
doesnÕt have a degree from our approved, accredited institution.Õ
ÒDid you
ever read in Acts 4 when it talks about the apostles, it says (the scribes and
Pharisees) looked on them, and when they did they thought they were ignorant? Verse
13 says, ÔNow when they saw the boldness of Peter and John, and perceived that
they were unlearned and ignorant men, they marvelled; and they took knowledge
of them, that they had been with Jesus.Õ
ÒTheyÕre
saying, ÔYou guys didnÕt graduate from our school; you donÕt have our sheepskin
on the wall. YouÕre unlearned, which means you have to be ignorant. And, well,
following Jesus—thereÕs something not right there.Õ Ó
In John 7,
it says that when Òthe Jews marvelled, saying, How knoweth this man letters,
having never learned? Jesus answered them, and said, My doctrine is not mine,
but his that sent me.
[17] If any man
will do his will, he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God, or
whether I speak of myself.Ó
Jordan
explains, ÒYou see, theyÕve got the doctrine; HeÕs been given it for them. The
issue is their will; their faith and the truth thatÕs available to them. If any
man will, heÕd know. If a guy doesnÕt know, itÕs not because the information
isnÕt there; itÕs because he doesnÕt want the information thatÕs there.
ÒSo what
does Jesus do? He said unto them, ÒNeither tell I you by what authority I do
these things.Ó You remember that verse in the Sermon on the Mount—ÔdonÕt
cast your pearls before the swineÕ? Now, thatÕs not what this verse is about directly—swine,
or Gentiles—but itÕs the same principle.
ÒPaul said
it in I Cor. 4:14: ÔIf any man be ignorant, let him be ignorant.Õ That doesnÕt
mean, ÔIf somebody doesnÕt know, donÕt tell them.Õ By all means, go tell them; show
Õem the truth!
ÒChrist was
saying, ÔHey, you had John the Baptist. You had the opportunity to know. If youÕd
have wanted to know, GodÕs Word came directly to you.Õ
ÒUnderstand
that for 400 years prior to John the Baptist thereÕd not been one prophet in
Israel. ThereÕd been almost 400 years of silence. Daniel prophesied about it;
told them how long it would be.
ÒAnd then,
all of a sudden, there comes that Ôvoice of one crying in the wilderness,Õ
saying, ÔPrepare ye the way of the Lord.Õ Doing exactly what Isaiah 40 said he
would do. Doing exactly what Malachi 3 said heÕd do. Being the voice.
ÒYou know,
when thereÕs a lot of voices, itÕs hard to hear any one, but when there hadnÕt
been one for a long time, that one stands out, and it comes Ôin the spirit and
power of Elijah.Õ ThatÕs why John was dressed like he was with the funny garb.
ThatÕs why he was out in the wilderness.
ÒJohn the Baptist
was a priest, his daddy was a priest, his mother was a descendant of Levi. He
had the lineage, he had the pedigree, he had the sheepskin. But when he ought
to have been up at the temple getting ordained, he was out there in the
wilderness, crying, ÔRepent, the kingdom of heaven is at hand! Come out here!
DonÕt get baptized at the temple; come out here; confess your sins!Õ
ÒIt required
honesty on the inward parts and when they didnÕt want it, and they couldnÕt be
honest inside, Jesus said, ÔIÕm not telling you anything either.Õ Now thatÕs, ÔLet
him whoÕs ignorant be ignorant still.Õ Ó