It is wonderful to teach the truth of God's word and for people to receive it gladly and run with it. Years ago I led a course to equip people to share Christ, and it was great to see people put what they had learned into practice and exert more effort in doing outreach I never thought to do. The people of Nazareth could have been impressed and pleased to hear the gracious words of Jesus as He read from teh scroll of Isaiah and addressed them in the synagogue. "And to think--this is the son of Mary and Joseph who never went to proper school!" Sadly for them, blinded by unbelief, they were offended by the Messiah who outshone them and sought to kill Him.
Another kind of "running with" suggests something is carried beyond what was originally intended. I have seen this when Christians embrace a particular doctrine to the point they become divisive and sow discord among the brethren. Verses out of context can be "run with" to support extreme and even erroneous views. The works of Luther and Calvin I have read where they sought to push back against the "papists" were embraced by their followers and run with to the point we now have Lutherans and Calvinists. In one sense Luther was not a Lutheran; Calvin was not a Calvinist. I do not fault these reformers because their adherents carried their words further than they did. These distinctions came later as their theological works were examined, further refined and more precisely defined.
Finally, the prophet Jeremiah spoke of prophets who ran to speak though God had not sent or spoken to them: they ran bearing a deceitful message of their own hearts. Jeremiah 23:21-22: "I
have not sent these prophets, yet they ran. I have not
spoken to them, yet they prophesied. 22 But if they had stood in My counsel, and had caused My people to hear My words, then they would have turned them from their evil way and from the evil of their doings." Rather than running without being sent or spoken to, prophets in Jeremiah's day would have done better to stand in God's counsel and cause God's people to hear His words. There is a literal example in 2 Samuel 18 of a man who ran without a message after the death of Absalom. Ahimaaz was very keen to run and bear tidings to king David that the LORD had avenged him of his enemies. Joab refused to send Ahimaaz and instead directed Cushi: "Go tell the king what you have seen." Still Ahimaaz was undeterred, for he wanted to run. Apparently he liked running, and from happened later he was known for his running--for his stride and gait was recognised from afar.
Joab asked, "Why will you run, seeing you have no message ready?" Ahimaaz did not answer. He just said, "Let me run." So Joab permitted it: "Run." Ahimaaz was a very good distance runner, but he had not been given a message. Cushi, on the other hand, had been an eyewitness of what occurred and was sent by Joab to tell the king what he had seen. While Cushi bowed and obeyed, insistent Ahimaaz continued to pester Joab to let him run after Cushi--whom he overtook by way of the plain. In the passage we have two runners who went two different paths, one who loved to run and the other with a message. What this section of scripture illustrates to me is the importance of being sent by God, hearing His words and speaking them accurately. We are called to carry the good news of the Gospel wherever God sends us, but we must take caution we do not run with God's words to justify going beyond what He has said. We disciples who have received the Great Commission and go into all the world ought to stand in God's counsel and cause people to hear God's word--rather than running because we want to run, competing with others when we ought to compliment. Standing in God's counsel is what we ought to run with.
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