God’s Mad History And The Value Of Your Madness
God’s Mad History And The Value Of Your Madness
âRich-ieee!â the gleaming Caribbean, 30 year-old, ex-addict sings my name as the worship music soars and pounds to start the service. We embrace and I can feel the crazy coming off of him. We stand back and I look wildly into his wild-eyed grin, yelping, âYeah! God likes the crazy people!â And he yelps
back, âRich-ieee! Because weâll get crazy for him!âAnd I let out a cackling howl as the music blares.
This man knows something about âcrazy.â He decided to get clean only after a drug deal got him thrown into the trunk of a car; driven into a field in Middle-of-Nowhere, New York; beaten, broken, bloodied, and left for dead until a woman â who just happened to be a Christian â came to the rescue. He is now
every bit as rabid and raving for Christ as he ever was for crack-cocaine.
My Caribbean brother and I rejoice that God has so equipped us to get crazy for Him.
What am I getting at here? Well, my God has a long history of doing things that cause the world to shake its head and cry out, âMadness!â And sometimes He uses a willing wing-nut to carry out His mind-blowing plans.
Now, let me be clear. When I talk about âgetting crazy for God,â I am not talking about doing something stupid like taking a leap off of a third-story ledge to prove that God will send His angels to bear you up lest you dash your foot against a stone. Satan failed miserably when he tried to tempt Jesus with that
perversion of scripture. God is not going to ask you to do something stupid, suicidal, or needlessly harmful. He does not need you to handle snakes or drink poison to prove that he is God.
However, God does sometimes call us to do things that seem to set the world ill-at-ease; praying in public, telling a stranger in a bar that Jesus rose from the dead and lives today, speaking out against gay marriage, lifting your hands in worship when the rest of the church is sitting on theirs, firmly but gently
confronting a brotherâs false doctrine.
We crazy people are already familiar with the worldâs response to that which it deems not quite normal. Therefore, we might have a small advantage when called to some oddball mission. Iâm not bragging. Itâs just the natural, logical consequences of our rollicking cyclothymia.
Consider Godâs mad history. Think of the many biblical characters who did great things at the Lordâs command. How ânormalâ did they look in the eyes of the world?
Noah built an ark before the world had ever seen rain.
Abraham believed that his wife would conceive a child at the age of 90 and reasoned that God could â and would â raise the dead. And that was a couple of thousand years before Jesus proved it.
Moses went to Pharaoh and demanded, âLet my people goâ â Â because a burning bush told him to do it. I have bipolar disorder, so, I donât always seem ânormal,â but I have never followed the orders of a shrub.
David, a little boy, took on Goliath. Think of a 14 year-old kid taking the football field, lining up against Baltimore Raven linebacker Ray Lewis or Steeler James Harrison, and telling him that he is going to hand him his head. Thatâs nuts! But on the scale of craziness it measures a little shy of what David
believed he could do when he teamed up with God. Ray Lewis is a hall-of-fame-type linebacker, but he is not 9 feet tall.
John the Baptist lived in the desert, eating locusts, wearing camelâs hair, and telling Scribes and Pharisees to repent. Sounds a little crazy, doesnât it? Of course, that did get The Baptizer his head handed to him â literally. There was, however, none born of women who was greater than John. (Matthew 11:
11) Why? Because he was anointed by God and followed Godâs command to do what looked crazy to the world.
Paul went out and told the world that he had been taken up into the third heaven where God revealed to him unspeakable mysteries. He ended up writing much of the New Testament. (Yes, from prison. He suffered much for looking and sounding crazy.) And he is still reaching the world for Christ. Being
willing to look crazy was a good deal for him â even though it landed him shipwrecked, whipped and beaten, and sent to prison.
And get a load of this rarely quoted gem about Jesus:
âWhen Jesus family heard what He was doing, they thought that He was crazy and went to get Him under control.â (Mark 3:21, CEV)
We who have bipolar disorder are being prepared to do great things for God. We can praise wildly, witness boldly, pray publicly out loud, touch âlepersâ in their pain, and carry Christ where the faint of heart dare not go â without concern for what others
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