Wednesday, March 25, 2009

A Slave for Christ

"Let a man so consider us, as servants of Christ." I Corinthians 4:1

The apostle Paul was a "servant" of Christ. It was a role he chose out of love, not fear.

There were perhaps millions of slaves in the Roman Empire. For the most part, they were treated not as persons but as objects. If a master wanted to kill a slave, he could do so without fear of punishment. Thought it was a negative term to the Romans, the word slave meant dignity, honor, and respect to the Hebrews, and the Greeks considered it a term of humility. As a servant of Christ, then, Paul paradoxically finds himself both exalted and debased. This is the ambivalence every representative of Jesus Christ must face.

When I think of the honor I've been given to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ, I am sometimes overwhelmed. There is no higher calling in life than to proclaim the gospel from the pulpit and to be able to teach the Word of God under the power of the Holy Spirit. Yet there is also a paradox that requires a minister of Christ to realize he does not deserve to minister. He must have the proper perspective of being an unworthy slave who has the incomprehensible privilege of proclaiming the gospel.

By John MacArthr, taken from "Truth for Today"


Bible Reading Guide:

Beginning to End: Judges 19-21
Old and New Testaments Together: Judges 19-21 & Luke 2:25-52
Historical: Judges 19-21
Chronological: Joshua 9-11
Blended: Proverbs 6-7 & I Cor. 15:29-58

The Bible reading guides will be taken from Back to the Bible

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