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Liberating Innovation
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Liberating Innovation
By Derl G. Keefer

Luke 4:14-21

Galilee is geographically north of Palestine and surrounded by non-Jewish nations. Those nations influenced the outlook, philosophy, progression and theology of the Jews. William Barclay tells us that Josephus — the Jewish historian and former governor of the area — said that he governed 204 villages or towns, none of them with less than 15,000 people. The three million people of the area were the least religiously conservative of the Israeli nation.

Josephus writes of the Galileans that, “They were ever fond of innovations and by nature disposed to changes, and delighted in seditions. They were ever ready to follow a leader who would begin an insurrection. They were quick in temper and given to quarrelling . . . they were never destitute of courage.”1

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Their search for something innovative gave Jesus a forum to begin His ministry in the synagogues. However, it also led to an insurrection when He boldly proclaimed Himself Messiah after reading from the Isaiah scroll. His liberating proclamation included several themes that are applicable today.

I. Jesus came to proclaim help for the poor (Luke 4:18a)

The financially hurting poor groveled for subsistence. Their meager earnings kept them in an economical prison that they felt could never be overcome. Governmental and religious leadership seemed to overlook their plight and exploited their poverty by keeping a strangle hold on them. The poor seemed to be invisible and little was done to help them. Jesus boldly proclaims that good news had come to the poor . . . He came to help them to see the richness of a better life.

I was a freshman at a Christian college that believed in evangelizing the poor. One day our group went out to share with the poor of the city. Traveling a few miles from the college, we made our way to a section of the poorest neighborhood. Some lived in cardboard homes, others in burned out buses, while some lived in small, but neat little places that were well kept. I discovered that those neat little houses and yards were the families who had come to know Christ. What impressed me that day and has stuck with me for decades is that these people had a self esteem that developed from their relationship with Jesus. I understood that Christ took the “poor me” out of them and replaced it with a “rich me” in the heart. Though the financial problems did not change, a new outlook did change their perspective.

We still have the poor with us. As Christians we have a responsibility to help those who are less fortunate, struggling for financial help, needing a hand up and not a hand out. How is that accomplished?

1. Quit giving lame excuses not to help. Ask what can be done to help the poor.

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