Tag: Influence

Are You Protecting God’s Glory or Your Own?

The dramatic scene in Acts 19:23–41 paints a vivid picture of how the Gospel disrupts the power structures of the world. Paul’s ministry in Ephesus was so impactful that it began to undermine the worship of Artemis, the city’s central deity. But the uproar in the Ephesian theatre wasn’t driven by deep devotion to Artemis. Instead, it was fueled by financial loss and the potential erosion of influence. Demetrius the silversmith rallied others, worried that Paul’s teachings would not only ruin their trade but also diminish Ephesus’s status as the guardian of Artemis’s temple. Their reaction reveals that their real allegiance wasn’t to Artemis—it was to their own power and position.

How often do we find ourselves in the same trap? It’s easy to criticize the Ephesians, but their motivations are uncomfortably familiar. Do we make decisions to protect our influence or reputation? Are our choices shaped more by what maintains our comfort or standing than by what aligns with God’s will? Consider the times when serving God’s purposes would have cost you something. Did you hesitate because the price seemed too high?

Paul, in contrast, embodied the humility of Christ. He consistently laid down his own rights and desires to advance the Gospel, even when it meant hardship or rejection. This mirrors the attitude of Christ described in Philippians 2:6–8: “Though he existed in the form of God, he did not regard equality with God as something to be grasped, but emptied himself.” Jesus became nothing, willingly giving up His position so that we might share in His glory.

What would it look like for you to lay down your own power and position for the sake of Christ? Are you willing to let go of the things you hold onto most tightly—your reputation, your career, your influence? The Gospel invites us to become less so that Christ might become greater (John 3:30). It’s a hard calling, but it’s also a freeing one. When we stop striving to protect our own status, we find true security in the eternal treasure God offers.

The challenge is clear: let go of the things that keep you tethered to this world’s systems. Like Paul, be willing to risk it all for the sake of God’s kingdom. True glory doesn’t come from power or position in this life but from humbly following Christ, trusting that He will exalt you in His time (1 Peter 5:6).

Influence

Influence. We are all affected by it. Whether we are subject to it or exerting it.

Such is the case with Lot and his family. When two angels of the Lord come to Sodom to test Lot’s righteousness, he takes them in offering to wash their feet and house them for the night. But the townspeople want Lot to deliver these strangers over to be sexually abused.

Lot instead appears to offer his virgin (engaged) daughters. APOLOGETIC NOTE: How is this a righteous man!? What a monstrous thing to do! It is unlikely that Lot was actually offering up his daughters to this mob. In reality he was making such a statement only rhetorically as if to say, “please treat these foreigners with the same care you would treat the most vulnerable members of our own community”.

The angels of the Lord protect Lot and his family, but both of the daughters’ fiancés refuse to leave the city and are destroyed. Lot’s wife looks back at what she is leaving behind and is destroyed. And some time later, Lot’s daughters get him drunk to commit incest with him. Their children become tribes that would be enemies of Israel.

Be careful with whom you associate, what you read, and what you listen to. We can be influenced by cultural ideas slowly and seditiously, often without even realizing it. Does this mean we should hide in a Christian bubble? Hardly, but make sure those people and things which have the most influential roles in your life and spurring you on toward Christ.

Genesis 18:1-21:7 | 006/365