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When
I finished showing some 35mm. slides taken in Australia, with
comments about churches and brethren there, one fellow remarked, “You
know, they are people just like us.” He had made a great
discovery. Oh, he had known before the pictures that Australians
were Anglo, spoke English, etc. But “just like us!!” That
amazing discovery might even amaze some of my Aussie friends. I
wonder if some of them have discovered that we Americans are “just
like them, too.”
Archie
Bunker, the great all-American bigot, sees himself and his kind as
“regular people;” and is now and then amazed that any other “kind”
(inferior, of course) could have the same emotions, reactions, and
especially triumphs, as “regular people.” There may be more of
Archie Bunker in all of us than we like to admit. Even the “other
kind” may build their own walls of self-centered classification.
I
once took a children’s Bible class to a destitute home to assist
in distributing food and clothing. When we returned to the church
building I asked the class to express their feelings about the
matter. One boy said, with wonder in his voice, “Why, they have
the same kind of funny books I have.” (There may be several
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lessons in this episode.) That boy had pictured “the poor” as a
people apart— some “other kind” perhaps, with feelings,
emotions, needs different from his. I hope we taught him to see the
less fortunate as people just like himself; and to begin to feel a
close “with” them, rather than a remote, cool, “for” them.
Who
is my neighbor? Are we better prepared by the
Lord’s parable (Lu. 10:29-37) to know the answer? Ah, yes!! But
are we any more willing to accept the Lord’s lesson
than was the priest or Levite of the first century? Jesus made the
despised Samaritan the hero of his parable— one “not their kind”
to teach compassion and concern for any and all in need. I suspect
this, was part of the lesson— to expand their concept of
brotherhood in Adam. “Our kind” are all over God’s earth.
Backgrounds
are different. Social standards, deeply engrained, may make
for difficulty in communication— we, do not “think Oriental”
nor they “Occidental.” (We’re still working on Yankee-Rebel
differences.) But God’s children, knowing all men are made in God’s
image, should have no difficulty in seeing “our kind”
everywhere.
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