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The Duty Of Being In Debt Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 2, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: We saw in a previous message that we have an obligation to be an encourager of all in the body of Christ, and now we see that we have an obligation to be an enlightener of all who are outside of the body of Christ. We are debtors to all people, and we owe everybody something.
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In 1901 Andrew Carnegie sold his Pennsylvania steel mill to J. P. Morgan for 420 million
dollars, and thereby became the richest man in the world. That fortune was made by the sacrifice of
thousands of common laborers. He under paid them ruthlessly, and he forced them to work 12 hours
a day 7 days a week. His labor practices stirred up a lot of hostility, and in Homestead, PA., where
our son Mark was born one of the bloodiest strikes in labor history took place at his mill. Fourteen
people were killed, and 163 were seriously injured.
The good that came out of this is that Carnegie felt obligated to benefit the masses with his
fortune, and so he began to give it away. He endowed 3000 libraries, and I have personally blessed
with generous gift, for I have used some of those libraries. Eighty per cent of his money went to
educational purposes so that millions have benefitted for the thousands who had to suffer. So many
of the blessings of life come to us because of men who felt obligated to do their best to make up for
the damage their past has caused. Paul was just such a man, and because of his strong sense of
obligation he preached the Gospel and started churches all over the known world. Paul felt like he
was in debt to the whole world, and he poured out his life to the fullest of his ability to pay what he
felt he owed.
Everyone is in debt to someone, but Paul was in debt to everyone. In verse 14 he says, "I am
obligated both to Greeks and non-Greeks, both to the wise and the foolish." What he says just about
sums up the entire human race. There might be room to squeeze somebody in between wise and
foolish, but there is no room at all between Greeks and non-Greeks. If you are not a Greek, you are
a non-Greek, and so everyone is covered.
Our national debt is outrageous, but even we do not owe everybody on the planet. Paul was
more in debt than anyone has ever claimed to be, but he was not ashamed of it. He glories in his
debt to all men, for what he owes them is, not dollars, shekels, or any other type of money, but the
Gospel. That is why he longed to get to Rome and to far off Spain, and to everywhere else in the
world. Paul owed the whole world the Gospel, and so he had business everywhere.
Something tells me this is a message we have missed as American Christians. How often have
we ever felt in debt to our non-Christian friends, associates, and neighbors? We do not feel like we
owe them anything. But Paul says that he felt an obligation to all men to share the Gospel. He was
debtor to all because he owed them the Gospel. Why did Paul feel such an obligation? It was
because he knew that all men were capable of being made rich in Christ. The Gospel is not-look at
how good I am-if you were as good you too could be a child of God. Or, look at how good someone
else is. That is not good news. Good news is that you can be saved and be a child of God no matter
who you are, or what you have been. No matter how sinful, foolish, or proud you have been, you
can be saved and be a child of God. It doesn't make any difference if you are a PhD or a high school
dropout. The reason Paul was obligated to all men is because all have an equal right to receive the
Gospel and be saved.
The implications of this are staggering. It means that everyone of us is in debt to every
non-Christian we know. We owe them the opportunity to be saved. This is an enormous obligation,
but I fear we have been so influenced by our culture that we do not take obligations all that
seriously. Clerks are obligated to wait on customers, but they often make the customer wait while
they do personal business. Manufacturers are obligated to produce a product that is safe, but tons of
stuff floods the market that can hurt, or even kill you. The government is obligated to protect its
citizens, but often neglects this and lets dangerous drugs and products into the market place.
Professionals of all kinds let us down for they set their obligations to us on the back burner, and give
selfish goals priority.
We all do our share of griping and complaining, for we are all victims to some degree, but listen
to how Paul starts chapter 2 of Romans: "You, therefore, have no excuse, you who pass judgment on