
Scripture Reference: Isaiah 11:1-9; Ephesians 3:1-13
In spite of our verbal commitment to reach out to others in Jesus’ name, Christians have spent a good deal of our evangelistic and missionary energy trying to get persons not just to come to God in Christ, but to fit in with our system. We could reach out to people on the foreign mission or home mission field. We have not done much for people of different cultures who might get seriously interested in joining our churches and seeking the same kinds of leadership opportunities the rest of us want. You see, Paul wasn’t proclaiming a Christian community in which people have their places and have churches built for them in their part of town. Paul didn’t preach a “they-have-their-place” gospel; he preached a “come-in-and-sit-with-me” gospel.
Much of Christendom has yet to deal fairly with the issue of the equality of women and men before God. They don’t always have to be on one side or another of a husband to have status and a voice in the church. They don’t always have to be on the front side of the pulpit either. We haven’t fully believed or accepted it yet, but someone once summed up the whole matter: “At the foot of the cross, all are equal.” When the church decides to move away from the foot of the cross of Jesus, it may be a great organization, but it is no longer the church of Jesus Christ.
The message of inclusiveness burned deeply within Paul, and it colored all he said and did. He was bold enough to preach it. He was God’s spokesperson for that hour. Notice that his place in God’s plan didn’t make him peerless or entitle him to any position of exclusivity.
If, in any way, our nation, church, or families have been blessed of God, this has not come because we have earned it or God likes us better than anyone else; it is for the purpose of greater service. That’s the way things work in God’s system. Any blessing or talent or special calling is not for the recipient’s personal acclaim, to set her or him apart; it is for use in ministry to God’s people, either those in the church or still outside the church. This means that if God has brought you through some dark valley like depression, alcoholism, or bereavement, your job is only half done when you rejoice and praise God for His gift. You haven’t done what you need to do until you make yourself available to others who need help out of the same bondage from which you’ve been freed. All this implies that we refuse to see those groping in darkness (for whatever reason) as God-forsaken. No human being is or ever has been God-forsaken. We have repeatedly forsaken God, and God has repeatedly given us the freedom of our choices. God is not in the business of forsaking people, no matter what their plight, because of a divine and eternal love beyond our understanding.
The Jews and most of the early Jewish Christians thought the Gentiles were God-forsaken. Here were God’s people busily involved in leaving people out and often saying that there simply could be no place for them in the churches.
To Be Continued























You must be logged in to post a comment.