West End Church of Christ

4909 Patterson Avenue

Richmond, Virginia

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 The Cornerstone 


This is the Stone which was rejected by you builders, which has become the Chief Conerstone." Acts 4:11

Pulbished to Support the Work of the West End Church of Christ, Richmond, Virginia

Volume 9 *   Number 11*  March 18,  2007


What Does the Lord Require?

Micah 6:8 "…O man, what is good; and what doth Jehovah require of thee, but to do justly, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with thy God?

What does the Lord require of us? That is a good question and here is a great verse to supply three important answers.

First, God requires that we do justly. God demands fairness no matter the person, gender, color or race. God is blind to these things, and so should his people be. A since of fairness is known at an early age. We hear children fussing and will often hear, "Hey, That’s not fair." God would have be fair.

Second, God requires a love for kindness. Kindness is also rendered "mercy" in the King James version. God’s people should be kind people, compassionate people, and a people of love. So not only a fair people but also a kind people. This is summed up in "Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. Love worketh no ill to his neighbour." (Romans 13:9b-10)

Third, God requires that we walk humbly with Him. We do not walk with God as an equal. We must understand, that God only exalts those who are humble. (I Peter 5:6) We must not walk ahead of Him, we must not lag behind, we must walk with Him in humility.

The Lord requires justice, kindness and humility. No doubt, a challenge for all of us to daily meet.

Stacy Crim

 

The Committed Heart

Paul Earnhart

With Matthew 6:19-24, Jesus outlines His theme of the Christian’s absolute love of God, but from a new direction. The first and fundamental threat to that love arises from self— the pride and arrogance which corrupt all our attempts at piety (6:1-18). Following closely upon the problem of ego is the challenge of "the world" — not the universe, or the people in it, but the "world" as a mindset, a system of values, a way of looking at life that treasures the present and the tangible above everything (Luke 12:15).

The section of the Sermon is a call to unreserved commitment in the choice between earth and heaven. Jesus begins by demonstrating why that commitment ought to be made to God and continues with two illustrations calculated to show the wretchedness and impossibility of trying to "ride the fence".

"Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon the earth..."

Jesus’ warning about earthly treasures must not be trivialized into a prohibition of bank accounts or the mere possession of anything material. This admonition does not address the question of how much of this world’s goods the kingdom citizen ought to possess but is concerned with his attitude toward them. The "treasures" of this text are understood to be whatever a man puts his whole heart into. They are not just things we value but things we value above all else. Our treasures and our persons become one.

 

Jesus’ observations about the temporaries and uncertainty of such things as clothing, food and money constituted no news to His hearers. The world of our Lord’s day was even more visibly fragile than our own. In their simple living conditions, rot and mildew, insect and worm attacked their storehouses with a vengeance and their mud-brick walls offered no deterrent to thieves who could wipe out a lifetime overnight. Our modern refrigeration, closely guarded banks and casualty insurance often cause us to feel safely removed from the impermanence of the ancient world — but we should all know better. All "things" are subject to ultimate decay, the genius of man notwithstanding. It is impossible to secure material wealth against the ravages of time and circumstance. It is removed from us or we are separated from it (Ecclesiastes 6:13-15; Luke 12:20), and if we had it forever it would not bring us lasting satisfaction (Ecclesiastes 5:9-10; 6:7). Jesus means to protect us from the horror of seeing our whole lives go up in smoke (2 Peter 3:10).

 

It doesn’t take much intellect to see that to rest one’s very soul on such insubstantial vapor is an act of folly, but we must never underestimate the power of covetousness to turn our common sense into quivering jelly. We are living in an age which values men by the wealth they collect. It is madness, of course, but this spirit can breathe itself into us before we know it and suddenly we find ourselves mindlessly grubbing for "things" like all the rest. Materialism is destroying many disciples, some even while they are faithfully "going to church". The charade continues but their heart is no longer in it. Prosperity has become the trial of those of us who live in what is perhaps the richest society in human history, and it is severe. Thomas Caryle once observed that for every ten men who can stand adversity there is one that can stand prosperity.

"… but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven..."

This is not an exhortation to find a way to transfer the things we treasure on earth to a heavenly bank. If so, there is no information given about how to accomplish it. I once heard of a man whose love for his house and land, together with his premillennial speculations, moved him to seek a means of guaranteeing the return of his property when the Lord came to establish His kingdom on the earth. The treasures of heaven are altogether of a different kind than those we might store up here.

Jesus’ message is a simple one: "Learn to cherish the things of heaven, the things that have to do with your Father. Only these will last." His call is not simply to a better and more lasting treasure but to a total allegiance, an absolute commitment. To have one’s treasure in heaven simply means to submit oneself completely to that which is in heaven — God’s sovereign rule ("Thy will be done ). This is the theme that follows in the succeeding verses (Matthew 6:22-24). The key to understanding this whole section is found in Matthew 6:21: "where thy treasure is, there will thy heart be also." The Lord is far more concerned with what a man does with his heart than with what he does with his goods. Things are not our problem, God created them. An appreciation of things is not our problem. They have a God-given purpose. The love of things is our problem (1 Timothy 6:9-10) — the disposition to let some moth-eaten old garbage take the place of the incorruptible God in our hearts.

-via Gospel Powers Anderson, AL 2/11/07

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