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Alone!
Alone! What a stark, bleak, terror-filled word. Solitary
confinement is one of man's most dreaded and destructive
punishments. Who has not felt the agony of being excluded and left
alone? Bold and strong Elijah wilted under its lash and cried out,
"It is enough; now, 0 Lord, take away my life; ... I have
been very jealous for the Lord God of Hosts ... and I, even I
only, am left" (1 King. 19:4,10) No wonder God examined his
creation and said, "It is not good that man should be
alone" (Gen. 2:18). Nor is it surprising that Jesus gave
special attention to his disciples when it was time to leave them.
He assured them that they would not be left alone — orphans
(Jno. 14:18). "I will pray the Father and he will give you
another comforter" — one called to the side — "that
he may abide with you forever" (Jno. 14:16).
God
provided for man so that he would not have to be alone. First, he
put man in the family. To Adam he gave "a help meet for
him." — or a helper suitable to his needs. Family was
endowed with the strongest and closest human ties — a refuge
against being alone. Likewise, God gave the nation to meet man's
social needs for "no man lives to himself." Finally the
local church was designed to put together men of like faith and
hope in God. God knew that in spiritual matters "it is not
good that man should be alone." Few — if any — can make
it alone. We are members "in particular" but solidly
joined to the other members. None stands alone.
By
design, the family, nation, and the local church should support
and protect a man as he strives to serve God. Often that is not
the case. The Lord prepared his
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disciples for being outcasts from family and society. And
churches run by men like Diotrephes "cast out" righteous
men. Even so, he is not alone. "At my first answer no man
stood with me... notwithstanding the Lord stood with me:" (2
Tim. 4:16). We always have an advocate — a friend by our side.
When
"all men forsake" us, we must not allow that to distort
our values and perspective. Elijah did. Things were not as black
as he painted them. "I only am left." There were seven
thousand who had not bowed to Baal. His perspective was warned.
"Take my life" shows his values are out of focus. Many
decide to go to hell with a crowd rather than stand alone.
Yet
there are places we must go alone. No comrade can stand at our
side. In the garden, Jesus prayed alone; the disciples were left
behind. They could not share his pain or his prayer. He was alone
in his sorrow. We also must meet sorrow alone. Our friends
encourage; they want to help. They weep with us, but it is ours
alone in the last analysis. We say, "There is nothing you can
do." Again, duty stands us alone. Brethren exhort but I alone
can do my job — "For every man shall bear his own
burden" (Gal. 6:5). And at last consider the final judgement
where I stand alone even in so great a crowd. Churches and crowds
are not judged here, but "every man ... receiving the things
done in his body ... good or bad" (2 Cor. 5:10).
Joe Fitch, San Antonio, Tex.
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