The Fighter

We’ve sanitized Jesus. Yes, He was the kindest human to ever live, always willing to extend God’s mercy to those in need. Yes, He welcomed children and was humble enough to wash His disciples’ feet. He brought grace to the woman at the well, healing to the blind, and removed the shame of many sinners. We could go on and on with His displays of love to those He encountered. But He was more than just Mr. Rogers with miracles.
He fiercely attacked sin; He stood his ground against bullies; and He wasn’t afraid of a fight. Yet in all of this, He never sinned. We see a clear example of this when fatherhood is brought up in His argument with the Pharisees. Listen for yourself:
They answered him, “Abraham is our father.” Jesus said to them, “If you were Abraham’s children, you would be doing the works Abraham did, but now you seek to kill me, a man who has told you the truth that I heard from God. This is not what Abraham did. You are doing the works your father did… You are of your father the devil, and your will is to do your father’s desires.” (John 8:39-41, 44)
Don’t skim over verse 44 too quickly. He just called devout, religious leaders sons of the devil. He didn’t tiptoe around the truth or concern Himself with their feelings. There was not a ‘nice’ way to say what needed to be said.
And let me say this once again, this was not sinful. He was always motivated by perfect holiness and love, even if that doesn’t fit the sanitized version of Him we sometimes have.
Why does this matter? We need that same fighting spirit in our lives at times. This isn’t a call to physical violence, vigilantism, or verbal attacks toward those who disagree with us. It is a call to fight the sin we see in our own lives first, and then lovingly confront it in others when appropriate. It is a reminder that we “wrestle against the spiritual forces of evil,” (Ephesian 6:12) so we must be ready for battle.
Are you being passive with the sin in your life? If so, repent and fight.
Are you staying silent at the injustices you can fix or influence? If so, loving confront the evil.
Take heart that Jesus was a fighter in the best way. And remember, He is still fighting to this day. Be courageous, knowing “the LORD your God fights for you” (Deuteronomy 3:22).
By Philip Jones
Philip and his wife Stacy have been attending Immanuel since 2015. They are blessed to be raising four kids. His passion in ministry is to help others follow Jesus through teaching, preaching, and personal discipleship.









