In 1927,
the famous director Cecil B. DeMille filmed his epic story of the life of
Jesus, The King of Kings. He chose English actor HB Warner for the
role of Jesus. Warner is best known
today as Mr. Gower, the druggist in It’s
a Wonderful Life. DeMille wanted to make sure that Warner projected a
completely holy image to the world. So
he made him sign a contract that said for five years, he wouldn’t appear in any
roles that would harm his image as Jesus.
Every day, he was driven to the movie set in a car with the windows
blacked out, and he wore a veil. No one
was allowed to speak to him off set aside from the director. He was forbidden from going to ball games or
night clubs, playing cards, swimming or riding in convertibles. Did all of these restrictions make Warner a genuinely holy
man? No.
During filming, he was involved in a scandalous relationship with a
woman who threatened to ruin the movie, until the DeMille paid her to keep
quiet. And Warner later said the
pressure of playing Jesus drove him back into alcoholism. That’s what it’s like when we try to become
holy by simply following rules and being religious. It doesn’t work; in fact, it can make us
legalistic and hateful, which is a warped perversion of holiness.
Last
Sunday, we looked at the life of Daniel, a man whose holiness changed two
empires. True holiness is one of the
most compelling things you will ever see.
But how do we live that way? For
the next few weeks, we’re going to take a look at Colossians. Why Colossians? Well, look at Colossians 1:9-12. That is Paul’s prayer for the Christians in
the town of Collosse, and the reason why he wrote this letter. You might say the book of Colossians is a
guide to living a life of irresistible holiness. So how does Paul begin in leading us to the
holy life? By describing Jesus in 1:15-23. Why would He do this? We’ll get to that this week. This is an amazing, majestic, awe-inspiring
text. We could spend weeks on this, but
we’re going to fly through it in a half hour. This passage tells us four very controversial
things about Jesus. Then it tells us why
knowing Jesus will change your life.
Thursday, May 23, 2013
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2 comments:
Jeff,
That is true. Trying to obtain holiness by living by rules will make us legalistic, and tired. I've been there. True holiness is Christ in us !!!!
Great post!
Scott McMillan
Thanks Scott!
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