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The Other Side

June 4, 2021 by admin Leave a Comment

Three simple words in the title of this week’s article conjure up a wide array of thoughts, depending on the context. To the man who is always seeking something better, never satisfied with where he might be in life, he assumes that the grass is always greener on “the other side.” The socialites who hobnob with the rich and famous look down their noses on those who might live “on the other side” of the tracks. Wars have been fought with those who are “on the other side” of whatever it is they were fighting about. A hunter might find himself fortunate to know that the grizzly bear or much smaller ‘polecat’ is “on the other side” of the valley or river.

Photo by Agent J on Unsplash

In Luke 10 we read of four men, one of whom was a victim to those who were “on the other side” of law and order. Another man was on “the other side” of the pure pedigree of the seed of Abraham, for he was a Samaritan. There are two more men in this story: a priest and a Levite. Of both men it is said that they “passed by on the other side” (Luke 10:31-32). There is something intriguing in those words. Three words that suggest there are two sides. From their standpoint, “the other side” was the side of inconvenience and a delay in their busy schedule. After all, they were headed home from a busy day in the Big City! They had completed whatever business it was that had brought them to Jerusalem. It was time to go home. What they failed to see was the fact that “the other side” was the side of opportunities to demonstrate a benevolent heart and care for one’s fellow man. On “the other side” was the call for self-denial, and of giving and receiving. Unfortunately, they could not see those things lying “on the other side” of the road. I am not suggesting they were aware of what really awaited them on “the other side.” They were too busy to see the opportunity that was theirs at the moment.

In the parable of the Good Samaritan Jesus teaches us that it not WHO you are but WHAT you are that is important. Our Lord taught us that eternal life does not consist of performance of just one act, but fervently practiced religion (James 1:27). Strict ceremonialism cannot take the place of genuine concern for others. An opportunity buried is an opportunity lost. After all, that which a man does not use will be taken from him. The man who does no more than to ‘hold his own’ loses what he seeks to hold. Alexander Graham Bell is credited with having said these words:

When one door closes, another opens, but we often look so long and regretfully upon the closed door that we do not see the one that has opened for us.

It does not take a man beaten, lying half-dead on the side of the road to test our concern for our neighbor. It could very well be that opportunities pass us by every day, and we fail to see them because we are on “the other side” looking the other way and neglecting to see what God can do with us if we will only let Him have His way in our life. In Meredith Wilson’s MUSIC MAN, Professor Hill tried to get Marion the librarian to go out with him. He asked her to meet him at the footbridge across the stream running through the park. She wanted to, but she refused. She said, “Please, some other time. Maybe tomorrow.” The professor persisted, yet she continued to put off their meeting. Finally, in exasperation, he said, “Pile up enough tomorrows and you’ll find that you’ve collected nothing but a lot of empty yesterdays.”

May it never be said of us that we failed to see and use our opportunities because we closed our eyes and stood on “the other side.”

-Tom Wacaster, (other articles can be found at https://tomwacasterpen.blogspot.com/) -submitted by Jerry Sturgill

 

 

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06.02.21 Wednesday Bible Study – Devo by Greg Hall – Studying

June 2, 2021 by admin Leave a Comment

06.02.21 Wednesday Bible Study – Devo by Greg Hall – Studying
Videos:
Bible Land Passages 13 – Caesarea
Jesus and Other Savior Gods

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05.30.21 PM Worship – Youth Led Service – Tanner Adkins and Jesse Legg

May 30, 2021 by admin Leave a Comment

05.30.21 PM Worship – Youth Led Service – Tanner Adkins and Jesse Legg
Tanner Adkins – Love
Noah Day – Scripture Reading: Luke 10:25-27
Jesse Legg – What Must I do to be Saved?
Acts 2:38

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05.30.21 AM Worship – Mark Day – God’s Pattern for the Family

May 30, 2021 by admin Leave a Comment

05.30.21 AM Worship – Mark Day – God’s Pattern for the Family

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God’s Guidelines for Clothing

May 28, 2021 by admin Leave a Comment

This season is marked by school letting out and summer fun beginning.  What often accompanies hot temperatures is immodest apparel.  As Christians, how should we dress in public?  First Timothy 2:9 calls for modest apparel. In context, the prohibition against braided hair, gold, pearls, and costly garments shows we’re not to flaunt wealth and beauty in some gaudy display. Local custom may play into what is proper attire. For example, Rebekah in the presence of Isaac put on a veil, as a customary sign of modesty and moral uprightness (Gen. 24:65). However, in a different time, in a different locale, on the road to Timnah, Tamar put on a veil attempting to look like a prostitute (Gen. 38:14, 15). Above the propriety of customs related to time and place, God’s word indicates how much of our bodies should be covered to be modest. All conscientious children of God should ask themselves what God says about modesty, instead of following what the world says.

Photo by Raphaël Biscaldi on Unsplash

Before any development of clothing customs, Adam and Eve lived in the garden of Eden.  The Bible says they were naked, but were not ashamed (Gen. 2:25); they lived in pure innocence.  After the transgression of eating of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, things were different. Genesis 3:7 says, “And the eyes of them both were opened, and they knew that they were naked; and they sewed fig leaves together, and made themselves aprons.”  Realizing their nakedness, they went about to cover themselves.  The word for “apron” in the original language indicates something worn around the waist, like a girdle or loincloth.  According to their judgment, this covered them, but not according to God. Notice Genesis 3:21, “Unto Adam also and to his wife did the LORD God make coats of skins, and clothed them.”  This implies that before the coats of skins Adam and Eve were still unclothed. God’s judgment of what was needed for proper attire was more than the aprons Adam and Eve had made.  God made them “coats”; a word which in the original language indicates a tunic that covers the torso by hanging down from the shoulders.  We learn from this account that merely some clothing is not enough.  We must have enough clothing to cover us properly.

The instructions God gave to Moses regarding priestly garments also give us insight into this matter. God commanded the priests not to use steps to climb to the altar, lest someone look up and see their nakedness (Ex. 20:26). He also made provisions for attire that would properly cover them, commanding, “And thou shalt make them linen breeches to cover their nakedness; from the loins even unto the thighs they shall reach” (Ex. 28:42). While certainly God wanted a sense of decorum by His priests as they officiated, the explicit reason to have pants that reached from the hips even to the thighs was in order to cover their nakedness.

Consider Isaiah 47:2 concerning Babylon, “Take the millstones, and grind meal: uncover thy locks, make bare the leg, uncover the thigh, pass over the rivers.”  Babylon is personified as a woman in this figurative passage.  God was going to shame the proud nation.  He uses the figure of exposing one’s nakedness as a symbol of shame (v. 3).  We have already considered the cultural connotation of removing the veil that would uncover locks of hair, but God also uses uncovering the thigh to communicate nakedness and shame. If a woman passing over the rivers lifted her dress, or removed her skirt, so that all of her leg was made bare, exposing her thigh, then her nakedness was revealed. This fits with what God commanded back in Exodus 28 for priests. God has the same standard for both men and women in how much of our bodies should be covered. Most of us would be ashamed to be seen publicly in our underwear. But let’s be honest. Is typical swimwear any different in how much of our bodies are uncovered?

It is a shame when Christians identify with the world in immodest dress.  The potential for others to lust should cause us to be careful about the way we dress.  While each man must strive to keep his mind pure (Job 31:1; Prov. 6:25; Mt. 5:27-30; Phil. 4:8), the liberty we have in how we dress must not be made into a stumbling block for others. Even if you think your attire is lawful, it may not be spiritually helpful to others, so keep with the principle of 1 Corinthians 8 (cf. 1 Cor. 10:23-24). Do we follow the Bible when it comes to how we dress in public? Don’t seek to attract people by merely outward appearance, but let it be an inward, spiritual beauty that pleases God and blesses others (1 Pet. 3:3, 4).

 

-Mark Day

Filed Under: Articles, Featured

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Flatwoods Church of Christ
PO Box 871
2100 Argillite Rd.
Flatwoods, KY
41139

606.836.4207

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