Whoever is generous to the poor lends to the LORD, and he will repay him for his deed. -- Proverbs 19:17
I would expand upon this verse a little, and you are going
to think I’m weird for bringing these two things together. I am weird, so it’s OK:
For anyone who eats and drinks without discerning the body eats and drinks judgment on himself (1 Corinthians 11:29); and, So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God (1 Corinthians 10:31).
Once we begin to realize how connected and “one” the cosmos
really is we experience liberation. The
old burden, bondage, and limitations of the sin nature are removed in
Christ. However, though, as Jesus said
in His offer of rest to us, His yoke is easy and His burden light, we have a
new and proper responsibility that goes with our new freedom. We must recognize that we are always living,
working, acting, and speaking to the Lord, on the Lord’s behalf, and for His
glory. Those are God’s children we are
teaching; it’s a person made in the image and likeness of God that cut us off
in traffic; and, when we help someone financially or in other ways, if we are
willing to acknowledge and accept it, we are, as the proverb puts it, lending
to the Lord.
If we can put aside self, our penchant for
self-aggrandizement, and our selfish motives, it may not change our actions all
that much. A lot of times we do the
right thing, yet the veil is over our hearts and we fail to discern the Lord
behind the one He has brought into our path or fail to recognize that He has opened this door for
us to know Him more intimately.
As we have talked about before, sometimes we pass by the guy
with a cardboard sign while other times we might find ourselves handing him a
dollar or two. Rather than concerning ourselves
with whether he is going to buy a bottle of Night Train or a bag of beans to
feed his kids, we know we have given it to the Lord. The other soul, like us, is a free moral
agent who must give account for his own actions and intentions.
None of this makes me passive or a pacifist. Sometimes the Way (still reading The Tao of Christ) leads us into
confrontation, but we are not defending or protecting self. We, as Paul told Timothy, may have to be God’s
instruments to reprove, correct, and train in righteousness (2 Timothy
3:16). Sometimes the righteous have to
defend the innocent against those who have chosen to make their good the doing
of wickedness. Sometimes we all need our
butts kicked. Sometimes wickedness must
be stopped. Nevertheless, regardless of
the means we have to use, we are to do it God’s way, at His time.
As Jesus explained in the parable of the Good Samaritan, if
we are walking down the road and see a guy in the ditch, we can be sure right
away that he is our neighbor. God didn’t
throw that man into the ditch, but He did put us on that road.
4 comments:
This is such a great post, Mush! Thank you!
Taking responsibility for our choices and being like Christ should be our number one priorities. Without it, the love we give is for naught.
Charity begins with the desire to please the Lord. We cannot accept the responsibility fir choices that other folks make, only our own.
Thank you, Ben. That's very true.
"A lot of times we do the right thing, yet the veil is over our hearts and we fail to discern the Lord behind the one He has brought into our path or fail to recognize that He has opened this door for us to know Him more intimately."
Good point. It's a step in the right direction though.
"Charity begins with the desire to please the Lord. We cannot accept the responsibility fir choices that other folks make, only our own."
I suppose the next level up is actually loving that undesirable wretch you have just helped. -Can't say I've been there.
Good post Mush and good comment Ben.
Yeah, you have. Love is not a feeling.
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