Reading: Philemon 1-21
In this short letter Paul is practicing what Jesus taught. Paul is standing up for one of the least. Paul is reaching out to Philemon, a good friend and fellow Christian, and asking him to receive Onesimus back not as a slave but as a fellow brother in Christ. To help Philemon’s decision Paul offers to pay for whatever is has cost Philemon while Onesimus has been ‘away’. Paul is truly living out his faith in no only speaking up for a slave but also by being willing to give sacrificially for him as well.
While we do not live in a time when there are actual slaves, we do have plenty of people who are marginalized and who are trapped by their situation or conditions. We do live in a culture that excludes and leaves some on the outside looking in. We do live in an economy where many are used and exploited. So, no, we do not have slaves, but there are many without voice or power. As Christians, we are called to “loose the chains of injustice and untie the cords of the yoke, to set the oppressed free and to break every yoke”. Isaiah 58 goes on to call us to feed the hungry, to clothe the naked, to shelter the wanderer.
Paul was able to speak for Onesimus because he knew him. In our daily lives our paths do not regularly cross the paths of the marginalized, the hungry, the naked. To speak and act for them we must go to where they are and seek to know them. It is our call to love and care for the least and the lost. Isaiah 58 reads, “then your light will break forth like the dawn, … your righteousness will go before you, and the glory of the Lord will be your rear guard”. This day may we seek places and ways for our light to break forth, bringing God’s glory and live to all people.
September 4, 2016 at 1:49 pm
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September 4, 2016 at 5:21 pm
Paul knew very little of what Jesus taught, and he wasn’t practicing it in this case anyway. Under the Law, this man should have remained free.
Paul literally didn’t know the first thing about following Jesus.
Poem – What is love?
Two men came to Jesus
With different motivations.
They asked Him the same question
Relevant to all the nations:
Which is the Most Important?
The answer was the same.
Jesus did not manipulate
He was not there to play a game.
“Love the Lord your God” said Jesus
as He quoted from The Law –
to fulfill and not abolish
was His purpose, full of awe.
Jesus did not make all Scripture
Into one new great commandment.
He summarized The Law and Prophets
“First and Greatest” and “The Second.”
The Love of God is higher
Than the love of any man.
Receive from God, give back to God-
Then to others, that’s His plan.
The Love of God involves much more
Than simply “love your fellow man.”
Worship, trust, and pray to God,
and obey Him – that’s His plan
To worship and pray to neighbors,
Whoever they may be,
Or trust and obey our enemies
Would be idolatry.
The love of God is first and greatest,
And the love of man is second.
“All we need is love” are words
of dead Beetles on the pavement.
“The entire law is summed up in a single command”
are not the words of Jesus our Salvation.
It’s false teaching of Paul the Pharisee
an “accuser of our brethren.”
“Love” without God is Satan’s word through Paul
in his chapter to the Corinthians.
“I will show you the most excellent way”
is the road to eternal perdition.
Where is God in Paul’s chapter on love?
Nowhere in view of the eye.
Paul sings about himself like a Mexican Mariachi
“I, I, I, I.”
Jesus is The Most Excellent Way
Not the words of a Pharisee.
The words of Jesus are very clear.
Jesus said, “You must follow ME.”