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| Copyright © 2003 by The Voice of Prophecy |
| David B. Smith |
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P.O.
Box 53055 |
| September 26, 2003 |
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SAINTS TO MY RIGHT, SINNERS TO
MY LEFT #5
SHALOM IS EASY TO SAY AND HARD TO DO For some six thousand years, God has been waiting for
His people, His Church, to simply demonstrate heaven’s plan. Feeding the
hungry. Drinks for the thirsty. Clothes for the naked, homes for the homeless,
visits for the prisoner. Does He delay His coming until we finally get
it right? “Come, you who are blessed by My Father,” says Jesus, the righteous Judge. “Take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world.” The hard half of the equation is this, then: do mean, stingy people — who ignore the poor in their midst, who mind their own business when a New York City stalker stabs a nurse 50 times while she’s screaming for help — do they end up going to hell? And it appears, if we accept the transcript of Matthew 25, that the answer is yes again. “Then He [Jesus] will say to them, ‘Depart from Me, you who are cursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels.’” Well, we want to stay away from Destination #2, and
we’ll return to the “how” in a moment. But we want to grapple today with
a larger question, which is this: Why, in a Christian gospel of grace,
is such an emphasis put on this story? This legalistic “cups of water”
story? We’ve already tried to understand and accept that a true Christian,
one who has real faith — not just words, not just show, not just pretend
— will actually do what Jesus says. Follow His example. Obey His commandments.
Adhere to the objectives and Magna Carta of His kingdom. So grace is still
alive as we head toward home. “I went to DuPont headquarters,” Carter writes in his book, “to report on our progress, where President Ed Woolard and about 600 top managers, scientists, and salesmen were assembled under a large tent. When I thanked them for their gift and showed a brief film demonstrating its almost miraculous results, most of them were weeping — and so was I.” What do you make of that? It’s a great story, but friend,
is this how people get to heaven? By fighting guinea worm? “Shalom refers to peace in a positive sense,” he writes, “the result of a rightly ordered community. . . . The Bible teaches that we are not autonomous individuals. Instead, we are created in the image of the One who in His very essence is a community of being — that is, the Trinity. God’s very nature is reciprocal love and communication among the persons of the Trinity.” And notice this concluding line, with its shades of cups-of-water and prison visits: “We were created as inherently communal beings, and the God-ordained institutions of society make rightful, normative demands that we are morally obligated to fulfill.” Friend, I’d like to suggest that hiding in the core of this sheep-and-goats story is the powerful reality that the entire history of this planet is simply God’s cosmic experiment, or demonstration, to a watching universe regarding this blueprint. God is saying: “Here’s the formula. Love. Caring. Unselfishness. Generosity. Putting others first.” All through the Old Testament, that was actually the mandated plan. There were rules — you can read them for yourself — about how to treat the poor. How to care for the widows. The great hero Job had it down pat. In chapter 31 of his long lament, he is able to say this: “But no stranger had to spend the night in the street, for my door was always open to the traveler.” In the New Testament, it was the plan again. Jesus preached it over and over. The early Christian church demonstrated it. Paul, often a lonely prisoner, wrote in his second letter to Timothy: “May the Lord show mercy to the household of Onesiphorus, because he often refreshed me and was not ashamed of my chains.” And for 2,000 years — with many ups and downs, with
many successes and many failures — the Church has continued to struggle
and stumble its way through this matter of caring for others. Sometimes
we’ve done it; sometimes we’ve failed. Sometimes we roll up our sleeves
and help solve the guinea worm challenge and donate to Teen Challenge
and help fight global warming; sometimes we look the other way and do
our own selfish thing. Sheep and goats. “The cursed are going to a fate that was not meant to be theirs!” he writes. Listen, friend. Hellfire was never meant to be a destination
for human beings. From the very beginning, God intended that His children
would live by this Golden Rule of generosity, of caring for one another.
That was the hallmark of Eden, where a man WAS his brother’s keeper. You
have to deliberately step outside God’s plan before you end up sharing
in Lucifer’s retirement plan instead. “Come,” says this proud King to His good subjects. “Come, you who are blessed by My Father; take your inheritance” — now notice this — “the kingdom prepared for you SINCE THE CREATION OF THIS WORLD!” Isn’t this an exciting truth! God has had this plan
in place since before He made this world! He planned the reward for the
sheep of this story before He ever created a single sheep! He began preparing
mansions, heavenly homes, for those who would unselfishly share their
earthly homes before Adam and Eve even had a home. He created the River
of Life for you and me to drink from centuries before the first Christian
ever offered his neighbor a drink. This plan of “Love your neighbor” was
carved in the halls of heaven when Planet Earth was just a twinkle in
the Creator’s eye. |
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