Occasionally I see things like this appear on my facebook or twitter feed.
Saying that Jesus never said anything about abortion or birth control is like saying he never said anything about Internet pornography or sexting (Matthew 5:27-30). He hung out with wealthy tax collectors (Luke 19:1-10) as easily as with destitute hookers (Luke 7:36-50) and even with the religious elite of the day. So he wasn't anti-wealth any more than he was anti-poor. Rather he was unconcerned with socioeconomic status one way or another. He saw broken hurting people groaning under the burden of sin… a burden that he came to lift (Matthew 11:28-29). Jesus received everyone who came to him. Some of those people were rich, some of them were poor. Some were criminals (Luke 23:39-43) and some were religious leaders (John 3:1-3). Jesus came to save sinners (Luke 19:10, 1 Timothy 1:15) regardless of their social or economic status or their ethnic background (Galatians 3:26-28).
Every group tries to create a caricature of Jesus so that he looks like ‘one of us’. And I suspect that at its root posts like this are a reaction to the traditional caricature of “Jesus the Republican” or “Jesus the Democrat”. But in its place this posts creates a new and equally invalid caricature of “Jesus the Hippy”. One of the recurring themes of Jesus ministry is that he dismantles every barrier that we would put up. Peter was a fisherman, Matthew a tax collector and Paul a Pharisee.
Every group tries to create a caricature of Jesus so that he looks like ‘one of us’. And I suspect that at its root posts like this are a reaction to the traditional caricature of “Jesus the Republican” or “Jesus the Democrat”. But in its place this posts creates a new and equally invalid caricature of “Jesus the Hippy”. One of the recurring themes of Jesus ministry is that he dismantles every barrier that we would put up. Peter was a fisherman, Matthew a tax collector and Paul a Pharisee.
Let's stop trying to make Jesus look like us and instead allow ourselves to be remade in the image of the Son (Romans 8:29, 2 Corinthians 3:18).

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