Good Morning All!
Zechariah 7:10; “do not oppress
the widow, the fatherless, the sojourner, or the poor, and let none of you
devise evil against another in your heart.”
God’s law requires us to treat others, all
others, well. We are never ever to treat them with disdain or ill will. We are
to love one another, and this is how we are to display it. God introduces this
to the Israelites on Mount Sinai with the 10 Commandments. With the
commandments, God gives us to levels of action. The first is the vertical
relationship we have with God. This is a liturgical or worshipful relationship
we have with God. We owe to God our total and complete praise, thanksgiving,
honor, reverence; we owe him our love.
The
second level of relationship we have is on a horizontal level which we share
with other people. Here God tells us to live an ethical relationship with our
neighbor. This involves what we should not do to our fellow man, but it also
includes what we should do for our fellow man. God reminds the children of
Israel that they were once the suppressed, oppressed people. God chose them to
be his people. Through them, God will bless the nations of the world.
This now applies to us as God’s chosen children.
He tells us that we are not to oppress the widow, the fatherless, the sojourner
(alien) the poor or anyone else. We are to love them. We too, were once oppressed,
not by men but by the devil and our sinful nature. We too, were once enslaved
and we are to remember this and not enslave others. We are to be God’s freeing
agents. We are to free men from the enslavement by the devil. We do this by
proclaiming the Gospel of Jesus to them but our commitment to our neighbor does
not stop there. We are to aid, comfort, defend and protect those who are unable
to do so themselves. This is the message from many of Jesus’ parables.
The parable of the Good Samaritan, the
unforgiving servant, the rich man and Lazarus, the rich farmer all play to this
theme. We are to take care of our neighbor. So, as we look at this theme, we
can see the answer to these questions: am I my brother’s keeper? Yes. Who is my
neighbor? Anyone in need. The color of their skin, their gender, their
socio-economic status, their wealth, or power, none of these are to be factors
in who we help. We are to come to the aid of any who need it. This can be a
daunting task, but it is one which God calls us to, which God will enable us to
do and to which the world needs so desperately. Follow God’s will to treat
others ethically and with his love; just as he treats you with mercy that we do
not deserve.
Gracious
Father, your wondrous mercy flows over us like a river. Grant us the strength
and wisdom to love those whom you have placed into our lives and who are in
need of the mercy we show because of your Spirit and will. Bless those who obey your will through your
love and grace. In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen
God’s
Peace,
Pastor
Bret
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