Thursday, August 14, 2014

weird

A Sabbath School teacher was teaching a class of 4-year-olds.  The lesson dealt with one of the widows in the New Testament and the teacher asked the children if they knew what a widow was.  When they responded to her question with blank stares, she explained a widow like this:  "If a man and a woman are married and the man dies, then the woman would be a widow."  The children seemed to grasp the concept.

 However, one of the little girls went home and, in the course of explaining what she learned in Bible class, told her mother, "I learned that if Daddy dies, then you'll be a weirdo!"

 The truth is, God calls all of us as Christians to be "weirdos".  A life of faith has always meant living a life that's different from everyone else.  The  Hebrew writer tells us that our faith takes us "outside the camp" (13:13).   We need to come to see ourselves as "outside the camp" of the world's value system.   We must accept the fact that in doing so we will be seen as different from the world -- sometimes radically different.

 I'm not talking here about isolation from the world.   We can't be salt and light to the world if we isolate ourselves.  But it's a serious problem when  we begin to adopt the same goals of the world, when we're immersed in the things of the world, when we talk like they talk and have the same priorities they do.  When that happens, then we become totally indistinguishable from the world.   We're no longer different and we've become comfortable "inside the camp".

"But you are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, His own special people, that you may proclaim the praises of Him who called you out of darkness into His marvelous light." (I Peter 2:9)

Just a little food for thought:  Are we prepared to be seen as "weirdos" when our faith takes us "outside the camp"?
-alan smith

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