2007 picture of Ray Sparre

Insightful Musings on the Scriptures

by

Raymond P. Sparre
Northwest University class of '67



March 11, 2012

Good afternoon, dear ones.

You’ll notice the time I put on the subject line…1:45pm. Would you believe it is now 4:13pm? That is evidence of how interruptions are the norm around here…and I’m such a good multi-tasker. Oh well… We actually just returned from our Gospel Sing at Pheasant Pointe Assisted Living Center. We took little Nicholas along, because when Becki checked on Thano about the time we needed to leave, both he and Kaden were sound asleep. We didn’t have the heart to wake Thano, so took the little guy with us. He did pretty good there…and the seniors seemed to thoroughly enjoy having him there…watching him play with a box of dominoes while we sang.

So goes life in these here parts. Be blessed in your parts.

Love, Dad/Ray


11 March
Passage: Acts 17:1-15
Focus: “These men who have caused trouble all over the world have now come here…” Acts 17:6.

I remember my dad telling about the little boy who was reprimanded by his mother, “Johnny, stop pulling the cat’s tail!” Johnny countered, “I’m not pulling his tail—I’m just holding it—he’s doing all the pulling!”

In the case before us, who is doing all the pulling and reacting and causing of real trouble? Who was inciting the mob to riot against Paul and the Gospel message? Were they objective lovers of truth? Were they people who were passionate about seeing lives freed from the bondage of sin? Were they people who represented and demonstrated “the fruit of the Spirit?” Hardly. But, ironically, it is important to recognize again that they were the very ones claiming truth and godliness—religious leaders. It says, “But the Jews were jealous; so they rounded up some bad characters from the marketplace, formed a mob and started a riot in the city.” What noble upstanding citizens they were! Jealous of what? They were jealous of the fact that these preachers of the crucified and risen Christ were tampering with their traditional “sacred cows” and their questing for power, control, and importance. (Parenthetical note: The tenets of witchcraft come in many different packages. The basic core values of that diabolical orientation are fear, manipulation, and intimidation for purposes of control. In this sense, have you ever seen witchcraft in the church? I have.) Paul was simply holding to the truth of the Gospel. They were doing all the fighting and reacting. They were the ones cooperating with behind-the-scene kingdom-of-darkness influences.

On the other hand, there is truth in what the riot ringleaders said: “These men…have caused trouble all over the world.” In the sense that Jesus spoke in Matthew 10:34, the proclamation of the Gospel is SUPPOSED to make trouble—at least the kind that riled the Jewish leaders. Jesus said, “Do not suppose that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I did not come to bring peace, but a sword.” (See Heb. 4:12 and Eph. 6:10-17) So perhaps it would be appropriate to call Jesus THE GREAT TROUBLEMAKER. And in this vein, maybe the Great Commission could be reworded to say, “Go ye into all the world and MAKE TROUBLE”—because this kind of TROUBLE is man’s only SOLUTION.

May the Lord bless, inspire, and encourage you to be a very good and effective TROUBLEMAKER.


“We who know the need must be diligent to sow the seed.”