Pastor Andy Stanley recently used these famous words to illustrate an incredible truth about the life of Jesus. In western thinking, oppressing those weaker than you is unacceptable. Bullying is reprimanded, minimum wage ensures workers can't be taken advantage of, and shelters are available for the homeless. It seems normal to us in America, but that's not the way the world works. Human nature suppresses the weak, and seeks power at the expense of the powerless.
The reason our nation is so different is because it was set up on Biblical principles. I'm not saying it's perfect, at its founding or today. But look at the American value system, compared to the ancient Roman culture. People are no longer seen as a monetary measure, to be exchanged and owned. Rights are acknowledged, and violators are punished. The foundation of those values is the Christian worldview.
Jesus came to love individuals.
It's amazing, to look at what Jesus was trying to build, in the context of his culture. He was born into the oppressive Roman empire, which would stop at nothing to build their kingdom and expand their power. They sent anyone who might have threatened them to torturous deaths, commanded their armies to conquer neighboring lands, and turned their captives into currency, to build an even greater regime.
Jesus was on a mission to build a kingdom, too. But He did it by loving individuals; by seeing people as image-bearers of God, and caring for them. Not just the clean, organized, pure members of the religious community, but the harlots, the cheating tax collectors, the lowly fishermen, the convicted criminals. He came for the least of these and cherished them. His first sermon made it clear that it was the poor in spirit, the mournful, the meek, the hungry that would receive this Kingdom. It was not an empire built by human hands, and limited by human values. God's hands were not tied by power; He loved in the lowest places, and called individuals to Himself.
This is the Kingdom He has called us to build as well. How often do we overlook people, when we're distracted by the things the world has to offer? I've been so convicted of how often I do that in my own life. I am so quick to ignore the fact that an image-bearer of God is standing right in front of me, when something shiny and new appears in my peripheral. So often, I turn away from those around me, and fail to see the value they have in God's eyes. I want to be able to look at people, and see the beauty that God sees; not their appearance, not their mistakes, not what they can do for me, but who they are to Him.
Do you know that people are not "safe"? They're not neat, organized, tidy packages of perfection. Even the people who you subconsciously categorize as those you should spend time with have the ability to hurt you deeply. I guarantee you some of them have. For me, my first inclination is always, always to pull back; to remove trust, put up my walls, and avoid having to love them. And I'm definitely not saying that you should trust those who have proven they're not trustworthy. Love and trust are two different things; God doesn't call you to trust everyone, but He does call you to love them unconditionally. That's what the Kingdom is built on. Does it hurt? Definitely. It hurt Jesus so much He bled over it on a Roman cross, and had to die. But He faced that death with confidence, for the joy that was set before Him.
That joy was a broken, messy, beautiful person like you.
He knows you; as one worship song by Amanda Cook put it, He has memorized you. He knows you, individually, better than anyone else on earth. If you haven't experienced that, ask Him in faith to reveal it to you; He delights in showing you His goodness.
He has called you by name. Are you willing to follow?
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Worship Song:
"Sea of Faces",
by Kutless
"Sea of Faces",
by Kutless