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The Difference

Philippians 2:1 “If you’ve gotten anything at all out of following Christ, if his love has made any difference in your life,…” – The Message 

I found the following article on a website titled: www.clcaugustamo.org that describes a famous children’s story: “The Prince and the Pauper is a classic tale. Written by Mark Twain in the 19th Century, it tells the story of two boys in 16th Century England. They were identical to each other in their looks, but one of the boys lived in the king’s palace and the other lived in a shack. As the tale goes, one day the boys decided to switch places. Keeping it a secret, the prince put on the pauper’s ragged clothing and the pauper put on the royal garments of the prince. And for a while each boy lived in the other boy’s shoes. The pauper lived as a prince and the prince lived as a pauper. The story is intriguing and worth reading and it resembles the true story of our life in Christ. “The Word became flesh,” writes St. John. St. Paul says, “Our Lord Jesus Christ… though He was rich, yet for your sake He became poor that you through His poverty might become rich.” Isaiah writes, “I will greatly rejoice in the Lord…for He has clothed me with the garments of salvation; He has clothed me with the robe of righteousness.” What does all this mean? It means that the Prince became a pauper, and we paupers are now clothed as a prince.

When you realize Jesus traded places with you, becoming a pauper in order for you to become rich; in order for you to become a prince or princess – it should cause you to pause. His crucifixion and suffering should cause you to pause. As we approach the holidays, of Thanksgiving, and Christmas, this time should cause you to ask, “Has His love made any difference in my life?” Am I living up to who He created me to be or am I still living as a pauper? Is my life an expression of gratitude? Do I live wholeheartedly seeking to say, “Thank you!?”

Do you ever remember a time in which your parents or a loved one presented you with a gift that you had really wanted and desired? A gift that you had treasured in your heart? What was your response? Did you go to your piggy bank, wallet or purse and try to pay them for the gift? Absolutely not. What you did do was express as much heart-felt gratitude as possible. If you were a child you may have even been prone to work especially hard at any chore or responsibility you had been given simply as a way of saying, “Thank you!” Isn’t that the way your life should be lived towards Christ?

Has Jesus’ love made any difference in your life? Can anyone tell the difference it has made? More importantly, can Jesus see that you live a life of gratitude for all He has done for you and all He continues to do? Or are you still living like a pauper?

Open the Door and Make Room for the Great Physician

Mark 2:17, 22: And when Jesus heard it, He said to them, Those who are strong and well have no need of a physician, but those who are weak and sick; I came not to call the righteous ones to repentance, but sinners (the erring ones and all those not free from sin). 22 And no one puts new wine into old wineskins; if he does, the wine will burst the skins, and the wine is lost and the bottles destroyed; but new wine is to be put in new (fresh) wineskins.

Guy Richard, Ligonier Website wrote: Jesus is not talking about “sinners” generally or universally. All people are sinners in this general or universal sense, as Paul tells us quite clearly. Jesus is talking about a specific group of sinners, namely, those who acknowledge their sin and long to be healed and to turn away from their sin. We know that, because in the context of Mark 2, Jesus is responding to the Pharisees, who “grumbled” that He and His disciples were eating and drinking with “tax collectors and sinners” (v. 30) instead of associating with more respectable kinds of people (like themselves). Their question (and their grumbling) indicates that they did not consider themselves to be sinners. They were “righteous.” Even though they were sinners every bit as much as were the “tax collectors and sinners” and needed the healing of the Great Physician every bit as much as those other sinners did, the Pharisees did not believe it. They were uninterested in healing and repentance precisely because they saw no need for them. And Jesus’ point is that He did not come to call this kind of “righteous” person. He came to call those “sinners” who know that they are sick and need to be healed by the doctor.

The Self-Righteous have a Do-It-Yourself Righteousness, a Substitute Righteousness – that displaces being Rightly Related to God. Self-Righteousness keeps you from hungering, thirsting and desiring more of God – because it’s so FULL of its SELF. Substitute Righteousness never allows you to see this because that would require humility, teachability, and meekness. The Wine of the Holy Spirit only inhabits the new wineskins of those who know they are sick and need a physician. Insert the Holy Spirit into a self-religious, self-righteous person and He will explode their faulty mental scaffolding. But sinners in need of Grace discover that not only does He fill, He expands into the farthest recesses of their life and living. They heed the call of the Rejected Jesus Who stands outside the door of His own church knocking – and they open the DOOR to Jesus, not religious repetition, and routine. They make room for His gold of faith refined in fires of testing – opening the door to fire, filled faith. They make room for being rightly related to Him, and others, so their nakedness can be covered with His Robes of Righteousness. They open the door to His Righteousness. They make room to see through applying His medicine to their blindness. They open the door for spiritual sight. Those in these categories have no confusion about Jesus’ verdict on their lives: poor, naked, blind and wretched. Some people get confused when you state such things. They want to live in the denial of self-righteousness. They forget that Jesus addressed His letter to Christians who prayed the sinners prayer, gathered for church, prayed, took communion, read the word, gave their offerings, sang their songs, and possibly even witnessed. But their love for Jesus was only lukewarm, and Jesus called them wretched. Wretched means they are in a pitiable, spiritual condition. Unfortunately for the Laodiceans, it appears they had been attending the same “church” as the Pharisees – failing to realize Jesus keeps company with the very ones that recognize their need.

So, if Jesus came knocking on the door of our church, what diagnosis would He pronounce? If He came knocking on the door to your life what diagnosis would He pronounce?