What was Wrong with Brooke?

They had had enough time, indeed more than enough. But they had gone backward rather than forward. They still needed a teacher. They still needed to be taught…

Brooke20x

BROOKE WAS A medical enigma.

She was unique–an actual one of a kind; there was no other person like her in the world.

Brooke weighed 16 pounds–the typical weight for a child between the ages of 6-12 months.

But Brooke Greenberg was not a toddler; she was a 20-year-old.

No, that’s not a misprint.

She was born in 1993 and remained a baby.

In a manner of speaking, her body and mental facilities were frozen in time.

Mentally and cognitively she was a one year-old.

She still had all of her baby teeth.

Her hair and nails were the only parts of her body that actually grew.

Medical experts searched in vain for some sort of a causal agent.

They were baffled by this woman in the mind and body of a child.

“Why didn’t Brooke grow?” they inquired?

She had no apparent abnormalities in her endocrine system, no chromosomal aberrations, and no other observable disruptions which ought to have prevented her from growing and maturing as all other people do.

Doctors conjectured that there was some sort of a gene mutation during the time she was developing in her mother’s womb.

They created a whole new malady in her honor–Syndrome X.

Ironically, Brooke’s family insisted that there was nothing wrong with her.

Her father, Howard, said, “If somebody knocked on the door right now and said, ‘It’s a guaranteed pill.  Give it to Brooke and she’ll be fixed,’ I would say to him, ‘She’s not broken.’”

We can dicker kindly over semantics and whether or not it’s appropriate to say Brooke was “broken,” but there was clearly something amiss.

Normal 20-year-old women function far differently than she did.

The Hebrew writer once struggled with a type of Syndrome X.

He wrote, “…By this time you ought to be teachers…” (5:12a).

Some Jewish Christians were Brooke Greenberg.

They hadn’t matured; they still needed milk (v. 12b).

They were spiritually stunted and had failed to grow.  One author observes:

“In saying you ought to be teachers, the author, rather than harassing them because they were not all teachers, is shaming them because they had not grown up in Christ. To be a teacher meant to the ancient mind that one was able to think and to act maturely–the very thing that these Christians could not do. They had had enough time, indeed more than enough. But they had gone backward rather than forward. They still needed a teacher. They still needed to be taught, as literally rendered, ‘the rudiments of the beginning of the oracles of God’ (e.g., the very ABC’s of God’s oracles).”/1

Good reader, are you growing and maturing in your faith?

Do you spend more time in personal Bible study and prayer than you did when you first were born into Christ?

Are you more active and is your faith exhibited in the way you serve in the kingdom?

Can you make better decisions about how to interact with and in the world? Can you observe and trace your walk into spiritual adulthood-or do you still need a bottle to suck on?

It breaks my heart to think about Brooke.

She never knew the joys that come with maturation.

But it’s even more heartbreaking to think about children of God who are like her.

Who wants to stay that way…?

1/ Neil R. Lightfoot, “Spiritual Childhood,” Jesus Christ Today, page 112.

“God loves you and I love you and that’s the way it’s gonna be!” – Mike

INCARNATE – Is Sincerity Important?

Are we saved by sincerity alone…?

pitcher

QUESTION:  “If a person is really sincere and loves Jesus, why does it make any difference what he believes or practices in religion?  What do you think?”

ANSWER:  Rather than learning what I think, let’s go together to the Word of God and see what He thinks (Isa. 55:8-9).

Sincerity is certainly important, in fact, it it essential to salvation.  “That you may approve the things that are excellent, that you may be sincere and without offense till the day of Christ” (Phil. 1:10; cf. 2 Cor. 1:12; 2:17; Col. 3:22).

However, we must never forget that it’s possible for a person to be sincere, and yet be sincerely in error.  Years ago, a preacher friend of mine who preached in Chattanooga drove to Pensacola for a speaking/preaching engagement.  We he arrived at his destination, he decided to first go in the hotel restaurant for a bite of dinner.  He’d been driving for several hours and was looking forward to a nice meal and a tall glass of ice tea.

After he had placed his order, his waitress came back to his table, poured his drink, and then left the pitcher on the table.  Unfortunately, what my friend thought was a glass of tea – in reality, turned out to be a tall glass of ice-cold bleach!

Someone had set a pitcher of bleach next to all of the tea pitchers, and my friend was obviously given the wrong one.  Imagine his shock when he took that first big drink!

“So Mike, what’s the point of the story?”  Just that this was a simple, honest mistake of where the waitress THOUGHT she was serving tea, and where my friend PRESUMED he was drinking tea.  Both of them were sincere in their convictions, but both were very wrong.  Their feelings were unreliable.

Many religious people are just as sincere in their love for the Lord, and yet their worship and service is in error.  Does sincerity alone save?  Does sincerity guarantee that a person is automatically in a right relationship with Jesus?  The Bible says, “There is a way that SEEMS right to a man, but its end is the way of death” (Prov. 14:12; cf. Mat. 7:21-23).

The Lord requires obedience based upon truth.  Jesus said, “Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven” (Mat. 7:21).  Joshua urged, “Now therefore, fear the LORD, serve Him in sincerity and in truth…” (Josh. 24:14–emphasis mine, mb).

Thank you for this good question.  I hope we can continue to study together soon.

“God loves you and I love you and that’s the way it’s gonna be!” – Mike