Accept One Another: Devotions From Time of Graceنمونه
It's Hard to Be a Minority
May I confess that I dislike the term "minority"? It's from the Latin word "minor," which means "lesser" or "smaller." Just because you live or work or study in a place where you are outnumbered doesn't make you of lesser value.
Some brave people, like students studying abroad or entrepreneurial business agents, are completely surrounded by people not like them. That must be how Abraham felt. "I am an alien and a stranger among you" (Genesis 23:4), he said to the Hittites from whom be bought a burial plot.
It is a tremendous personal growth opportunity. When you are immersed in another culture or language, you have to adapt and learn to survive. People in the minority become bicultural--fluent and knowledgeable in an environment beyond their own. What a gift! It is also intensely lonely. It can be a perfect time to look for people connections to make up for the absence of family and old friends.
Christians who are open to God's opportunities for accepting one another can pay special attention to the "minorities" in their midst. That's how God connected Philip with an Ethiopian. Believers who are "aliens and strangers" can also use their differentness to get attention for their message. That's how Jonah connected with the Assyrians and what started Daniel on his rise to influence in Babylon.
کلام
دربارۀ اين برنامۀ مطالعه
It’s God’s wish and commission that we should be reconciled with one another. Though Satan tries to use differences as wedges to drive us apart, the Spirit leads us to love, respect, and appreciate other people. It is the goal of this devotional plan to help you think through and live out Romans 15:7: "Accept one another, then, just as Christ accepted you, in order to bring praise to God.?"
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