Saturday, October 3, 2009

Acts 10

1 comment:

Unknown said...

What strikes me from this passage is; "But God has shown me that I should not call any person 'unholy' or 'unclean'. v29 and "Can anyone keep these people from being baptized with water? They have received the Holy Spirit just as we did." v47

What struck me from this passage is that these are gentiles. They are unclean in every way by Jewish standards, "NOT" the elect, chosen people. And yet Peter was given the clear message that salvation by faith in Christ is for all people. There is no longer clean and unclean, the veil has been torn, and not just for the Jew.

How often do *I* look down my nose (figuratively speaking of course), at certain denominations of christianity? Peter didn't look down his nose at these gentiles. There would have been a vast chasm of culture and biblical worldview between them, but he knew there was a unity that he could not deny. God was giving His spirit to these people, saving them by grace through faith.

Can we do any less? Max Lucado writes,

"The Father sighs because he has a dream. "I have other sheep that are not in this flock, and I must bring them also. They will listen to my voice, and there will be one flock and one shepherd." JOhn 10:16.

God has only one flock. Somehow we missed that. Religious division is not his idea. Franchises adn sectarianism are not in God's plan. God has one flock. The flock has one shepherd. And though we may think there are many, we are wrong. There is only one.

Never in the Bible are we told to create unity. We are simply told to *maintain the unity that exists*. Paul exhorts us to preserve "the unity which the Spirit gives." Iph 4:3. Our task is not to invent unity, but to acknowledge it.

I have two sisters and a brother. We are siblings because we came from the same family. We have the same father and mother. I'm sure there have been times when they didn't want to call me their brother, but they don't have that choice.

Nor do we. When I see someone calling God "Father" and Jesus "Savior" I meet a brother or a sister - regardless of the name of their church or denomination...

What if any reference to any denomination were removed and we were all just Christians?... And then we Christians wouldn't be known for what divides us; instead we'd be known for what unites us - our common Father. Crazy idea? Perhaps. But I think God would like it. It was His to begin with.

A Gentle Thunder, Max Lucado