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Tuesday, March 22, 2022

Breakfast Club


 “Another great movie from my high school days is “The Breakfast Club” written by John Hughes, who probably wrote so many of my favorite movies. The movie, if you haven’t seen it, centers around Five different people who come from different backgrounds. One is a rich young girl who is very popular, one is a jock that is also popular. One is a rebel punk rock bully, who gets high and lives in a broken home, and one is a “nerd” who is driven to get straight “A’s” in his class work. The last one is an introvert, who isn’t anything or anyone, other than another body at school. The teacher is also a bully, who just is there to watch the kids, and basically get paid for babysitting on a Saturday. The cool thing about this movie is that; I think most of us can relate to at least one of these characters, whether in high school or even as grownups. We all want or need a sense of belonging, and sometimes it’s easier to hide behind our persona than to actually be who we are supposed to be.


The Apostles were a band of misfits; that in the “religious” world, they were not wanted or not thought of as anyone. In the real world they were men of different backgrounds of different status, and like the movie, would not have been seen with each other outside of “detention.” Now that’s the way the world looks at us as Christians that we are being held by rules and restrictions that make us outcast, and of no value, or that we can’t have fun. We are mocked in movies, lumped into narrow minded, hypocritical, unloving, and zealot nuts. We’re stereo-typed as money grabbing, child pedophiles, and doomsday outcasts, that can’t live in the world and be successful.

The enemy watches us and isn’t really there with us, as most of us are not in the “work” of God. By this I mean, Satan isn’t the reason for all the bad that happens to us on a daily basis, most of it is our own actions of not following God. (I just laugh at all those, “Not today Satan” shirts) We talk the right words and go to the “in” churches, and can help here and there, but our hearts are just not committed. Too many times we allow the way the world looks at us to define who we are and we shy away from who God says we are, His children. 

The kids in the movie were asked to write an essay, and Brian the smart one, writes it and says at the end which I love, “You see us as you want to see us in the simplest terms, in the most convenient definitions!” People see us as they want to, and this also translates to their version of who Jesus is. Peter reminds us that we need to see ourselves in the light of Jesus, in First Peter Two, he writes,

 “But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for His own possession, that you may proclaim the excellencies of Him who CALLED YOU OUT OF DARKNESS into His marvelous light.” ‬ ‭(ESV‬‬) 

I see Peter, when he wrote this remembering when he was denying Jesus, and how secluded and in darkness he must have felt. I have been there, feeling like no one can love me, and that even Jesus wouldn’t and couldn’t love me. The kids entered detention as strangers, but left as friends because they saw their value above what the world or teacher thought of them. Peter saw Jesus look at him with compassion, and he cried bitterly, knowing he was Jesus’, and that he would no longer care what the world thought of him. Darkness can do that to us,  if we stay in our separation from God and not fellowship, we too can deny Jesus and walk away. 

The world will knock you down, and kick you while you’re there, but Jesus knows this and realizes that all you have to do is trust in Him. He knows our hurts and our past, and yet He still loves us. He desires that though we all come from different upbringings and backgrounds, there is nothing He can’t fix you from. 

So my question is, are you a brain, an athlete, a basket case, a princess or a criminal, it doesn’t matter for Jesus doesn’t judge where you are, but desires to change where you are going! I love what Isaiah one says beginning in verse sixteen, 

“Wash yourselves and make yourselves clean. Stop doing the evil things I see you do. Stop doing wrong. Learn to do good. Seek justice. Punish those who hurt others. Help the orphans. Stand up for the rights of widows.” The Lord says, “Come, let us talk about these things. Though your sins are like scarlet, they can be as white as snow. Though your sins are deep red, they can be white like wool.” (NCV)

The stains of our past can be washed and renewed in Jesus, but you have to come in repentance, and talk with Jesus. He knows it anyways, and He won’t judge you here on earth. In the simplest terms, He sees us as we are and He still loves us, because that is why He held the nails for us. Won’t you let go of whatever you’re holding onto, and let God’s light shine on you?” Jose Barajas

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