Good
Morning All!!
Acts 4:34; “There was not a
needy person among them, for as many as were owners of lands or houses sold
them and brought the proceeds of what was sold”
There are many powerful verses or phrases in the Bible that can and
should cause us to wonder and to be in awe of.
When Jesus said, “It is finished.” Or when the angel said, “He is not
here; for he has risen!” These are a
couple of those verses. “It is finished.” The job is done, the debt is paid in full;
the last payment on the mortgage is made.
“He is not here; for he has risen!” Forever, our life is changed. We are entirely different creatures now. With our debt fully paid and with Christ raised
from the dead and reigning forever; our life is changed or is it?
Our verse for today is one of the powerful verses. “There was not a
needy person among them,” can we say that?
Can we look at our church family and our neighborhood and say, “there is
not a needy person among them?” I know
our response, “I do the best I can.” I know we do. I know that to many of you this is going to
sound like a plea (demand?) for money for the church but it really isn’t. This verse, although easily twisted into a
plea for more money, is more than that.
It moves much deeper into what our life as a Christian should be. It is about compassion.
For many of us, giving to the church is a matter of duty or of guilty
conscience or of selfish desire. We give
to get others off our back and to make it easier to sleep at night. Some of the church’s largest donors were
mafia kings and drug lords trying to appease their guilt and buy their
redemption; neither worked. This verse
is not about money; it is about compassion.
The members of the church body looked around, saw needs and met
them. In our verse, apparently the needs
were physical, food, clothing, shelter and the like; so many sold some things
to provide the funds. It doesn’t say
they sold everything; it says they met the needs of the people among them. Do we meet the needs of the people among us?
I read the story a few days ago about the third grade boy who answered
the question “What I want my teacher to know...” with the answer “that I don’t
have anyone to play with.” That is a
needy person and money won’t really solve anything. What this little boy needs is someone’s
time. Maybe this would be the best
compassion to show. You may be the
parent or grandparent who ends up being talked into coaching the local t-ball
or soccer club. As hectic as that is, be
sure to watch for the young ones who need your attention because it may be
lacking at home. Look around your church
and your neighborhood; is there someone who always eats alone, sits alone and
goes home to an empty house? They may
prefer that or they may be as lonely as it looks. For us as Christians, the challenge of “there
was not a needy person among them” is great.
Ask the Lord for guidance and courage to meet this need. God be with you as you do.
Father,
you give us all we need to support this body and life. Give me the courage and the wisdom to aid my
brothers and sisters and all those around me in need to come to their aid and
comfort. Bring us closer as a community
that we may share your love and mercy with all.
In the precious name of Jesus, our risen Savior and King we pray, amen.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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