The Privilege of Duty

As a professor I sometimes come across some interesting situations. One of the more common ones is when a student wants accolades for simply doing what they were supposed to do, rather than doing what they were supposed to do exceptionally well. As I try to communicate to them, doing what you are supposed to do is the baseline – doing it well is when you receive commendation.

It’s an attitude we can carry into the rest of our lives too. The sports player wants “props” simply for showing up every day rather than hustling to get the job done. The government official wants reelection simply because they didn’t make things worse – not that they did a whole lot to make things better. Tips jars abound in restaurants and coffee shops as if additional recompense is expected. We want praise for doing what we ought – even though we ought to do it regardless of the praise.

It can be tempting to take this same attitude to our walk with God. Yet Scripture makes it clear that we shouldn’t. As Luke 17:1 tells us:

So you also, when you have done all that you were commanded, say, ‘We are unworthy servants; we have only done what was our duty.

This isn’t what we want to hear! What we want to hear is that God will commend us for what we’ve done – that somehow our good works means that we receive special treatment. When we don’t get it – when obeying God doesn’t equal an easy life – it’s tempting to grow weary with what we are supposed to do as Christians. We may attempt to justify “minor” disobedience – as if obedience to Christ was on a weighted scale. However, this verse clearly shows that when we obey God, we are not doing anything worthy of acclamation, instead we are doing what we rightfully should do as servants of Christ. How generous He is, then, that He does reward us for being faithful to His commands!

It’s a point that’s punctuated by the next story in Luke. Immediately following is the story of the healed lepers – ten of them benefited from Christ’s generous grace, yet only one expressed gratitude. We rightly consider this an injustice – they all should have been filled with gratitude for the One that restored their lives. Yet we do the same when we expect, rather than are grateful for, rewards for obedience to God.

It isn’t easy to wrap our heads around, let alone our hearts. But just as we would consider it an honor if we were selected to serve a modern-day king – how much more so the King of Kings! May we see serving Christ as the privilege that it is and recognize that as such we should obediently follow Him!

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An Act of Rebellion

When I was younger, I learned that the word “sin” meant “missing the mark.” To explain this, I was given the illustration of a  target – where the bulls-eye was obedience;  sin therefore was anything outside of the bulls-eye.

While I do not doubt that the translation was correct, I think the illustration failed to convey the seriousness of sin to a holy God. If I am aiming for a target and hit outside of the bulls-eye, I can still make it onto the target. Perhaps it’s just because I’m not a gifted dart thrower, but if I make it anywhere on the board, I’m feeling pretty good about myself. Sure, I didn’t hit the bulls-eye but I almost did. I may be tempted to think the same with sin. However, there is no “almost” when it comes to obedience to God. We are either doing what He says or we aren’t.

Sin therefore, isn’t something that we casually brush aside, saying “Well at least I tried” as one might be tempted to do with a missed dartboard. Sin is a coup against God. As Stephen Neill statesevery evil word or act is a form of rebellion against Him” (The Christian Characterp. 117).  We aren’t just missing the target when we sin; we are offending a holy and righteous God. While we may be tempted to excuse our sin, just as I might blame the missed target on a poor throw or a sudden distraction, a rebellion is a volitional act.  And while we may prefer to see it differently, so is our sin.

When looking at the rebellions of history, it is easy to see that thee reason for them is that people were unhappy with their circumstances. They rebelled because they want their situations to be different than what they were. Their rebellion was their attempt at ceasing back control and changing the course of their lives.

So it is with our sin. As Neill goes on to state, “Why were you angry? You will probably find that it was because you were not willing to accept the world as God has made it; or because you were not willing to leave it to God to deal with the people He has made.” Sin is about seizing control. We want things the way that we want them and if we have to lie, cheat, gossip or slander in order to get that, than we will. Sin is a discontentment with how God is working.

This means that in order to sin less, we need to find our contentment in God alone. If we want to look more like Christ, than our prayer needs to echo His – “Not my will, but Yours be done” (Luke 22:42).  In doing so, we squelch the rebellion. One act at a time.

 

 

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