Many people picture
“deception” as something loud, dramatic, or dripping with noticeable evil. Yet
John warns us in 2 John 1:7 that the most dangerous lies don’t shout—they
whisper. He speaks of “many deceivers” who deny that Jesus Christ came in the
flesh. He’s saying the deceivers deny that the real, incarnate, flesh-and-blood
Jesus ever truly came. At first glance, that sounds like a dusty, first-century
squabble. But the deeper danger is shockingly alive today: anything that pushes
the real Jesus out of real life is simply the ancient lie dressed in modern
fashion.
And oh, those fashions come
in every style imaginable. There’s the Good Teacher Jesus, who inspires but
never commands. The Therapist Jesus, who comforts but never corrects. The
Private Jesus, who politely stays out of your choices, habits, and
relationships. The Symbolic Jesus, who shrinks into a poetic metaphor or a
necklace charm instead of the Incarnate Son of God. The Prosperity Jesus, who
mainly exists to upgrade your lifestyle. The “Christianity as religion but not
reality,” where faith stays on the lips but never touches the lifestyle. And
perhaps the sneakiest of all—the Busy Christian Deception, where Jesus isn’t
denied with words but simply squeezed out by your calendar.
John isn’t just pointing at
false teachers; he’s spotlighting a subtle sabotage—when Jesus becomes less
tangible, less personal, less intrusive, less embodied in your daily decisions.
The deceiver’s tactic hasn’t changed: make Jesus feel abstract instead of
incarnational. Make Him Son of God in concept but deny His genuine presence. Keep
Him distant. Keep Him “spiritual” but not Lord. Keep Him inspirational but not
authoritative. Keep Him admired but not obeyed. The moment Jesus is reduced to
an idea instead of the living, risen Son of God who shows up in the grit of
your Tuesday afternoon, deception has already begun its quiet work.
This is why the Incarnation (the
Biblical truth that the eternal Son of God took on real human flesh, becoming
fully God and fully man in the person of Jesus Christ) is not merely a
Christmas doctrine—it is your everyday lifeline. Jesus didn’t hover above
humanity; He wrapped Himself in it. He ate, touched, wept, laughed, and bled.
He didn’t send a memo—He came Himself. And He still does. Every time the Spirit
convicts, comforts, redirects, or confronts, the Word made flesh is stepping
into your world again. Every deception crumbles when the real Jesus enters the
room.
So today, resist the whisper
that tries to shrink Him into a distant concept. Push back against every
version of Jesus that is less than Lord. Invite Him—really Him—into your
choices, your worries, your habits, your joys. The safest place in a deceived world
is near the One who came near to you.
May the Lord guard your mind, steady your steps, and keep your heart anchored to the real, living Jesus Christ, full of grace and truth.


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