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Sold Into Slavery - Part 5 Series
Contributed by Michael Calo on Nov 29, 2012 (message contributor)
Summary: Sold into Slavery – we are not our own – Our wills must be submitted to Him – if each of us does that - the Body operates effectively
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The Body Beautiful
Part 5
Sold into Slavery
Today we conclude
This series called
The Body Beautiful
If you have missed any of this series
You need to get the CD and study this series
The conclusion of this series
Amazed me
I didn’t expect the Holy Spirit
To take us to this topic
In today’s world,
Just the word I’m about to say
can cause people to put up defenses
The word for today’s conclusion
To the Body Beautiful is
Slave
Slave” is the word
that almost every English translation of Scripture
has avoided using,
in favor of the term “servant.”
However, the image of a slave
is absolutely critical
for understanding what it means to follow Jesus
as a part of the Body Beautiful
This study has elevated my understanding
of what it means to say Jesus is Lord
and what it means
When I say I am His
Those of us who truly believe
and are genuinely converted
and have at least a understand of the gospel,
can understand
being a slave
and yet becoming a friend
a son
a citizen
and a joint heir
with him –
this is a strange concept
especially to Americans
But it is a new way to understand slavery,
not in terms of the
Abusive African slave trade
but in terms of
being owned by a master
who loves me and wants to provide
everything in his limitless resources
out of that love
to make my life eternally joyful.
This type of slavery
Is easily embraceable
If we could only believe it to be true
2 Corinthians 4:5
“For we do not preach ourselves but Christ Jesus as Lord, and ourselves as your bond-servants [slaves] for Jesus’ sake.
Being a slave conjures up very negative images …
and for good reason.
Humans have enslaved each other
for thousands of years
treating people worse than animals
No person desires to be
That type of slave
And no person deserves to be treated that way
However,
the Bible speaks about Christians,
as being “slaves” of Christ.
If there is anything in the Bible
that makes this progressive world cringe
its slavery.
In the Old Testament
Slavery is humanely regulated
Through the legal system
and in the New Testament
slave masters are exhorted
to show kindness to their slaves
But listen, nowhere in the Bible
is there anything
which can be interpreted as
a disapproval of slavery.
People of our generation,
Christians included,
tend to have a very hard time with the idea
of God not considering slavery to be immoral.
Part of the problem
is that we have false ideas
about what slavery was like.
Society today has
minds which are brainwashed
by means of Television
In the Old and New Testament times,
The life of a slave was not easy,
but we get an exaggerated idea
of the hardships of slavery
from watching movies
or even by reading historical material
that is written to distort the truths of the time
In most cases
the life of a slave
was not much different
from the life of any lower-class worker.
Those who have been in the military
have experienced something like it
by being legally bound to an employer
and to a job
that one cannot simply “quit” at will,
not free to leave without permission,
subject to discipline if you disobey
And yet we know
that the daily life of a good soldier
is not cruel or especially hard.
This is kind of what it was like to be a slave.
Another problem is,
when we discuss slavery
we have a tendency to relate it
to the horrible manner in which
The black race in America,
Was treated –
And we then confuse slavery with racism
A third reason
why Christians today
have a hard time understanding
the Bible’s treatment of slavery
is that we tend to confuse morality
with political values.
Today everything is politicized
including the Gospel.
In this era of political correctness
“Racism,” “sexism,” “homophobia,”
are the really serious sins
while the principles of ordinary
old-fashioned morality
are downplayed and even denied.
This political correctness
is not merely a fad,
it is a planned result of
the politicization of morality,
a new morality
based upon political ideas of right and wrong.
In recent years the principle of equality
has been raised to the status
of a Religious Doctrine in liberal churches.
This is illustrated
by the following statement
made by an Episcopal bishop
following his church’s decision
to appoint a homosexual bishop
The “Right Reverend” John Bryson Chane
Said this:
When I look at where gay, lesbian, and transgender persons are, they have been excluded from the full sacramental life of the Episcopal Church in the United States — and, in fact, excluded from the full sacramental life pretty much within the Anglican Communion. What I have to say to that is if, in fact, we believe theologically that God created human beings in the good image of God as creator, and if we, in fact, believe that everybody is equal in God’s eyes, then how in God’s name can we say that we don’t have enough theology to work this issue through? And how can we say that a person’s sexuality does not allow them to enter into the full life of this communion? (2)