Good Morning All,
Colossians
3:12; “As holy people whom God has chosen and loved, be sympathetic,
kind, humble, gentle, and patient”
“You shall be a holy people.” or “You SHALL
be a holy people!!” or “YOU shall be holy??”
It is interesting how we can read the exact same sentence and different
people can interpret it differently. How
you read a sentence goes on to determine how you respond and react to it.
There are those who read this and see only
God’s law. These people then turn around
and show only God’s law to people. These
people will see a situation and say,” your sin caused it and now God is
punishing you for it.” Unfortunately,
this is the voice that many non-Christians hear. They see the church as quick to judge and
slow to aid. Perhaps they have even
experienced it. A woman who had an
abortion a few years ago and now is having other related health issues, a
homosexual who has AIDS, a drug addict who is homeless; these are examples of
people who may only hear the church say “Thou shalt not..” They have needs and seek comfort but are we
there to offer them God’s Gospel?
Some read this as a promise to great
prosperity. If we are holy like God is
then we should be powerful and wealthy like he is and since God does as he sees
proper; and so can we. These people read
this as a license of entitlement. They
see it as “what God owes me.”
We read it differently. This verse doesn’t speak of our actions or
character; it speaks of our relationship with God. Because of what God has done, we are set
apart from the rest of the world. This
doesn’t mean we are better or superior.
It does mean that God has blessed us far beyond any measure that we can
conceive of. We have been redeemed and
called the children of God; we are declared heirs of his eternal kingdom. Because of God’s grace, we have a
relationship with him that is different than the unbeliever. In the Old Testament, the Israelites engaged
in many ceremonial rites and laws which clearly set them apart from their
neighbors. We too, should be seen as set
apart not so much by our ceremony but by our actions within the society in
which we live. God gives to us the
vertical relationship with him and then he calls us to live in a horizontal
relationship with our fellow man. We
might call the relationship with God “liturgical” (church speak) and a
relationship with our neighbors as an “ethical” (world action).
The world should see the results of our
relationship with God. In that
relationship, we are forgiven entirely by God’s grace. We should therefore deal with our fellow man
with the same grace. God has chosen you
and he has chosen to reach out to the world through you. You have been called to a wonderful task; the
same task that Jesus lived while here on earth.
We are blessed and privileged to carry it out. Go with God’s blessings in touching the
world.
Dear Father, by your grace you have set us
apart; you have declared us holy. Give
us the courage and the wisdom to live our holy life-giving glory and honor to
you. In Jesus’ precious name we pray,
amen.
God’s
Peace,
Pastor Bret
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.