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2007-05-25 - The Little Ones
Originally Published 2002-10-11
James 2:10 And the person who keeps all of the laws
except one is as guilty as the person who has broken all of God's laws. (New
Living Translation)
My husband, our dog and I recently enjoyed a cross-country driving vacation.
When we returned, a friend at church expressed astonishment that we had not
suffered any flat tires. That led me to ponder the fact that since we began
using radial tires, we have had only four flat tires in the past twenty years.
Through the last two decades, there have been times when we would hit something
and be positive it would flatten our tires. If you live in a big city (or
near a rural interstate), you probably know how it is when you are driving
on a freeway and there is parallel traffic in both lanes, so you simply can't
avoid running over a mattress, a piece of plywood, or who knows what kind
of gnarly metallic object. You cringe, but when you check the tire later,
there is no damage.
All four times we did have a flat tire, the flats were not caused by something
"obvious," something easily seen. Rather, they were caused by tiny nails
and one inch-wide piece of glass. Every time, we never even knew what hit
us.
Isn't sin like that, too? Most of you reading this haven't committed the
particularly "heinous" sins such as murder, child molestation, rape or torture.
But it seems to me that it's most often what some (and American culture in
general) view as the "little ones," (or even as virtues, at times) that really
do us in spiritually. And they snowball. It's greed (condoned and encouraged
by lottery ticket sales, movies etc.) that sometimes entices people
to get involved in illegal activities (such as drug trafficking) in order
to satiate the lust for material goods. It's pride that prevents people from
accepting the help God provides and thus stagnates their growth as Christians,
and pride that disrupts relationships that God yearns to reconcile.
Join me in praying a sometimes-frightening prayer, that God will show us
the "little ones" in our lives, that are keeping us from (to quote a commercial
for the U.S. Army) "being all we can be," in Christ.
Jan
cfdevjan@aol.com
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