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And
then Jesus told him six things to do: go thy way, sell
whatsoever thou hast, and give to the poor... and come, take up
the cross, and follow me (Mk. 10:21). Six things? Or was it
really just, "You must change your allegiance—put me before
worldly possessions." The records say Jesus "beholding
him loved him" but that love did not change the requirements,
and he allowed the young man to go away sad and grieved—but
unsaved.
Sometimes
I hear brethren speak of some good neighbor, well loved and
respected for his clean moral life; and they say, "All he
would have to do is just be baptized." How very wrong and
shallow we can be at times.
"Just
be baptized"? Just see yourself as a lost sinner,
wholly dependent upon the mercies of God? Just die
to your past life? Just submit to Him as Lord, in an act of
dedication, a pledge to put Him first for the remainder of your
life, regardless of the cost? The problem here is, we are unaware
of our own failures, our own lack of dedication, our tarnished new
life (?), but want to use ourselves as the standard for
measuring others whom we would see
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"come to Christ." To Christ?
Or to be with us??
An
obedient faith is "one thing" all lack, who have not
come to Jesus Christ; but Jesus actually was being more particular
than we have indicated. When he spoke of "one thing" he
seemed to see the young ruler was allowing material possessions to
stand between him and God. In that sense, our lack of dedication
may be due to some particular weakness—some "one
thing" that keeps us from seeing ourselves as we are, and
changing our way of life. One's craze for popularity, another's
desire for power, envy of the neighbors (called "keeping up
with the Jones"), or pure ego. These "one things"
and more like them, can be the particulars that keep many of us
from serving Christ as we should.
My
mother used to say, "A little thing may keep you out of
heaven." She knew it wasn't "little" if it did that—but
she wanted me to realize something I gave scant attention perhaps
deserved prayer and work. Don't allow "one thing" to
damn your soul.
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