Though I never use the animal terms ‘dogs’ or ‘pigs’ with regard to humans to whom the gospel is addressed, I know from tradition that ‘dogs’ refers to male homosexuals and ‘pigs’ to people who have no understanding of, or use for, the gospel—pigs can’t wear pearl jewelry, nor would they want to. I encounter these kinds of people everywhere, and how to deal with them as with ‘those for whom Christ died’ is something that I struggle with every day.
Our society seems to have become post-Christian, people from complete atheists to church-going types can all fall into this category, which seems to me to be the ‘pigs’ scripture is talking about. What? Church-goers can be post-Christian? They can be the pigs before whom one must not throw pearls, lest they turn on us and trample us underfoot? Well, sorry, but yes.
To receive Christ and the good news is precisely as the Lord says in the letters to the churches in Revelation: ‘I stand at the door and knock...’ Everyone, from atheists, to agnostics, to the christianised masses who may be quite religious but are blind to Jesus Christ as He really is, can be so inclined that they either will not open the door, or can not, for they no longer hear Him knocking, if they ever did.
This poses the question, for me at least, of evangelism in the lands of ‘christianosis,’
is it worth it?
Well, of course it is, because even one soul that is led to salvation through mine or anyone's witness—I am not here speaking about just talking, but about one's whole Christian life as a visible witness—is worth it. But it still is very discouraging to be placed in an environment where everyone around you has already chosen, and chosen wrong. It's like working in a pigsty, so to speak.
On good days, I still love the pigs and try to let that love alone be the witness, even though they see me coming and run. On bad days, when I am weak and am crying out for mercy for even my own life, being surrounded by pigs is almost more than I can bear. Almost more? Yes, because if I give in to the old man, I too become a pig, and that herd is headed for a lake, and it's not the sea of Galilee.
Christ have mercy!
Fortunately for us, babies are still being born who turn into youths and then young adults. That cream of the crop of humanity is still there, white for harvest, and it is primarily for them that we hang on to a life that otherwise would be almost unbearable, living as we do among people who hate, lie and slander at every opportunity. But it is for the Lord to call us to follow Him into that harvest field, and I hope He calls us there every day.
Therein is life, and without end.
Friday, January 13, 2012
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2 comments:
This may be off the topic: but I immediately thought of Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz. Remember, in the beginning of the movie, how Dorothy was trying to walk on an old wooden fence, and she lost her balance, and then she fell over into the pigpen? Sometimes, I think we Christians have to get dirtied up a little in order to appreciate what we have. I have been in a few pigstys: went to school there, made my living there, threw my pearls there, but also sometimes failed to be a true Christian there. I regret that: yet, I do not want to go back there. That was my old self. I have to go forward, even as a solitary self, where the pigs can neither reject me nor tempt me.
Sister, I love your comments, not just the one you left here, but all of them. Yet I just had to laugh (LOL) when I read these last words,'where the pigs can neither reject me nor tempt me.'
I had a vision of Dorothy doing the balancing act on that old pigpen fence and falling in. How much our lives are like that! The original Wizard of Oz books are no more than a series for children, but the greatness of the film, in terms of identifying universal human predicaments, desires and needs, and even the mercy of God hidden behind the curtain in His awesome and fiery temple, makes the film not only a classic, but a spiritual classic which most Americans have memorised.
Thanks for bringing the film to mind. I know that it was a product of the 'New Age' thinkers of that day, yet Christ can be found even among the artistic expressions of pre- and post-Christians, because He is the only Enlightener of all mankind.
Yes, even I, 'I have to go forward, even as a solitary self, where the pigs can neither reject me nor tempt me.'
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