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The Prison of a Good Reputation

The Prison of a Good Reputation

Update: 2025-11-10
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WATCH TODAY’S EPISODE ON YOUTUBE.


CONSECRATE


Wake up, sleeper, rise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you. 


Jesus, I belong to you.


I lift up my heart to you.

I set my mind on you.

I fix my eyes on you.

I offer my body to you as a living sacrifice.


Jesus, we belong to you. 


Praying in the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit, amen. 


HEAR


John 3:1–3 NIV


Now there was a Pharisee, a man named Nicodemus who was a member of the Jewish ruling council. He came to Jesus at night and said, “Rabbi, we know that you are a teacher who has come from God. For no one could perform the signs you are doing if God were not with him.”


Jesus replied, “Very truly I tell you, no one can see the kingdom of God unless they are born again.”


CONSIDER



We are about to witness our first defection. We would call Nicodemus a pillar of the synagogue. He was the guy who never missed. Everyone knew exactly where he sat, and should the rare occurrence happen and he not be there, the seat remained empty. He was among the top givers. He was a member of the Sanhedrin, which for us would be a mix between a federal judge and a United States senator. He was a man of great esteem and honor. We cannot speak ill of Nicodemus. He had been a paragon of faithfulness to all he had been taught.


People like Nicodemus don’t tend to risk their status and standing in the community. So why did he do it? Henry David Thoreau once wrote: “The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation.”1 I think Nicodemus had gotten in touch with the quiet desperation just under the polished surface of his life. Though he had everything, he knew deep down he was missing the most important thing.


It may not be as hard for a non-churched pillar of the community to awaken to faith as it is for a leader or a respected pillar of the church to be awakened. Why is it so hard for leaders in the church to admit that they aren’t quite the people everyone thinks they are? What keeps us from mustering the humility it takes to confess that, though we may be seminary-level Bible readers, we remain stuck in junior-high faith? Why do we choose to be admired at the expense of being known?


Though he came under cover of darkness, it seems Nicodemus was done with such charades. He knew there must be more than what he knew, and he was ready to sacrifice his pride to know it. This was the day Nicodemus broke free from the prison of his good reputation.


Why is it so easy for a sinner to come to the Lord and so hard for a saint?




PRAY


Abba Father, thank you for your Son, Jesus, who invites us to come out from under the covering of our reputation and get honest about our own souls. Come, Holy Spirit, and fill us with the courage to be real, that we might grow in the Lord beyond our imagining. We pray in Jesus’s name, amen.


JOURNAL


How do you see yourself in Nicodemus? Can you identify the quiet desperation in your own life? Why is it hard for those of us who have been in the church so long to find our way to the altar of humility and honesty about our real condition? Are we worried about what others might think?


SING


Today, we will sing “Come, Christians, Join to Sing” (hymn 36) from our Seedbed hymnal, Our Great Redeemer’s Praise.


For the Awakening,

J. D. Walt


NOTES



  1. Henry David Thoreau, Walden (Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1906), 8.


 


John David (J. D.) Walt Jr. is the Sower-in-Chief for Seedbed and the pastor of the Gillett Methodist Church in Gillett, Arkansas. 




The post The Prison of a Good Reputation appeared first on Seedbed.

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The Prison of a Good Reputation

The Prison of a Good Reputation

J.D. Walt