Well…..that was over a month ago now…but I am finally enough
into the swing of my semester that I am going to take some time off from school work and try to finish this up.
On our way back from D.C., my parents and I visited a church
in Virginia. We literally went to the town’s visitor center and asked the lady
there where a church was located. You can’t get much more random than that,
right?? But guess what? The God who created the Universe can orchestrate even
seemingly chance happenings. And the church we visited “just happened” to be
doing a sermon that relates to this same topic which has been the theme of my
summer.
The pastor used Matthew 6:24 as his jumping off point. His
sermon centered around the question of “Who is Your Master?” which tied in well
with both this summer’s main idea and the Spiritual Emphasis speaker from last
year (this post talks some about that).
Now, I have naturally heard about the whole idea of not
being able to serve two masters before. But God knows I can always use a
reminder! This pastor made a point of saying that there is no middle ground. “You
are not free,” he said. “You are owned by someone—either God OR Satan/Sin/Self.”
The question is not whether I will be a slave, but rather who I will be a slave
for.
Christ redeemed us from our enslavement to the world, the
flesh and the devil. The word redemption, he said, refers to purchasing a slave
out of the market. God is not an evil Master. He redeems so that we can have a
relationship with Him, not only so that He can benefit from our slave labor.
At the same time, the natural reaction of someone purchased
out of slavery to an evil master is to want to serve the giver of freedom, the
pastor said. We should be eager and willing to serve God because of everything which
He has done for us!
When we do not choose to put Christ first and above all
else, that means that there is something else to which we are giving that
priority. He pointed to Deut. 6:4-5 as a call that we cannot simply coast
through life. The choice to serve God must be an active choice throughout our
days, months, years.
He did also make a point of saying that what we receive from Christ (salvation plus!) is many times more valuable than anything we can ever bring to Him. This ties into another topic (the focus of my next post) which has been an issue for me and which I have finally heard this summer explicitly stated from a church pulpit for the first time that I can remember.
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