Jude is a short letter written by Jesus' brother, Judah, who had at
the time of his writing had become an influential teacher in the early
church. It's message is concise and somewhat hard to appreciate because
of the many references it makes to Jewish literature (such as texts of
Enoch and the testament of Moses) that are not part of today's canonised
Bible.
Jude, however, is still a necessary part of the Bible and has a
powerful message for Christians today. The book is first and foremost a
letter in response to false teachers who were going around teaching a
message of licentiousness and thus destroying the foundation of faith
for many Christians.
In
his message, we are exposed to truths that still hold bearing today and
remain as great reminders for us as we build up our faith. Here are
three core messages in Jude that can help build our faith.
1. Jude Warns Us Against Licentiousness
Jude 4 New International Version (NIV) states: "For certain
individuals whose condemnation was written about long ago have secretly
slipped in among you. They are ungodly people, who pervert the grace of
our God into a license for immorality and deny Jesus Christ our only
Sovereign and Lord."
Jude was
speaking against the message being spread by some people that it's okay
to live in sin because Jesus had already forgiven all sin.
This message destroys our faith because it tends to put us, instead
of Christ, at the centre and leaves the truth in us choked by the
bondage to sin and its consequences. This serves as a reminder to us
today to be careful of false teaching that will condone the sins that so
obviously pull us away from God's presence.
2. Jude Encourages Us to Build Our Own Personal Faith
In Jude 20, it says, "But you, beloved, building yourselves up in your most holy faith and praying in the Holy Spirit."
While our faith is built up first and foremost by the inspiration of
the Holy Spirit as we pray to Him, Judah emphasizes that that doesn't
mean we shouldn't do our part.
The building of our faith is not something we are to completely
outsource to disciples, mentors and pastors. We have to do our part by
building our own spiritual disciplines, reading the word individually
and seeking God firsthand.
3. Jude Teaches Us to Love Others
Towards the end, Judah says to his readers: "And have mercy on those
who doubt; save others by snatching them out of the fire; to others show
mercy with fear, hating even the garment stained by the flesh." (Jude
22-23)
This is a reminder for us today to not just look to our own needs but also help others build their faith as well.
Proverbs 11:25 reminds us, "Whoever brings blessing will be enriched, and one who waters will himself be watered."
It's not enough just to receive God's blessing. Our true purpose is
to be a channel of blessing to others as well. As we continue to do
this, our faith will grow along with the faith of those we refresh.
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