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CLOTHE YOURSELF!
Colossians 3: 9-17
“. . . .since you
have taken off your old self with its practices 10 and have put on the new self, which is being
renewed in knowledge in the image of its Creator. 11 Here there is no Gentile or
Jew, circumcised or uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave or free, but
Christ is all, and is in all.
12 Therefore,
as God’s chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with
compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience. 13 Bear with each other and forgive one another if
any of you has a grievance against someone. Forgive as the Lord forgave you.
14 And over all these
virtues put on love, which binds them all together in perfect unity.
15 Let
the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, since as members of one body you were
called to peace. And be thankful. 16 Let the
message of Christ dwell among you richly as you teach and admonish one another
with all wisdom through psalms, hymns, and songs from the Spirit, singing to
God with gratitude in your hearts. 17 And whatever you do, whether in word or deed, do
it all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through
him.”
Clothing. It’s a
necessary commodity and has been since Adam and Eve first donned fig leaves and
animal fur. It is a subject to which people
all over the world pay much attention, even in impoverished areas it seems the
attire is well-attended. So when we are
told to ‘clothe’ ourselves in scripture, the metaphor is something most of us
can comprehend. Yet even I skirt right
past these scriptural admonitions much of the time. I would never skirt the issue of clothing
myself as I prepare to go to work each day.
I, like you, pay much attention to getting dressed and to looking the
best I can. I care, after all, what
others think even if no one comments on how I’m dressed. Why is it, then, that I can so lightly pass
by verses like Colossians 3:12 – “clothe
yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience.”?
Amazing, this spiritual clothing that affects all of
society in ways my physical dress never will.
The son of a co-worker I have never met flashed through our offices late
yesterday with mom trailing behind instructing him not to open doors, not to be
so inquisitive, to stop and shake hands, to introduce himself. He was not a child but an older teen and
hanging around his neck was a sign that branded him – “Autistic”. Why did he have to wear a sign like that, I
wondered? Why single him out like that –
and yet I understood that his erratic wanderings in the safety of our own
offices were probably looked on by the outside world with just a little
disdain. Did I? If I am clothed with compassion it will come
through loud and clear to that mom who has raised her son in a world critical
of behavioral differences. If I am
clothed with kindness, that young man will recognize how I am dressed, as will
he comprehend my gentleness and patience and the love of Jesus will pour the
oil of joy and love all over the atmosphere!
If I am to live the life of Jesus on this earth, if I am to
affect those around me with His character and qualities – compassion, kindness,
humility, gentleness, patience – I have to actively participate in my own
spiritual grooming. The writer of this
instruction does not tell me to stand still so that God can dress me and get me
all prepped for my day. I am told to
clothe myself, and I want to do so simply because I am one of God’s chosen,
holy and dearly loved people who gets to be the demonstration of His love each
moment of each of my days on this earth.
What better clothing could I possibly attend to as I begin my day today?
Lord, I want to be a
humble, caring, compassionate, kind and gentle person as I step into this world
today that is oh so much more interested in physical dressings than dressings
that can affect a life for all eternity.
Moth and rust certainly does corrupt all other manner of clothing – but they
can never destroy the works You do in and through me when I am spiritually
dressed to meet the day. So right now I
clothe myself in compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience. Right now I put on the covering of love,
that the world might know Your great
love. Amen and amen.
“How often I have longed to gather your children together, as a hen gathers
her chicks under her wings, and you were not willing.” Matthew 23:37
I arrived home after a 2 ½ week vacation, proceeding to rake
up the plethora of avocado leaves that had fallen on my yard. It’s a never-ending job. I’ve been home a couple of weeks now, and
every day I have a new bag full of leaves.
I am hopeful it means a bumper harvest of the best avocados anywhere on
earth. I’m convinced they are, as are
people I give them too when there are so many I cannot possibly eat them
all. But back to that first raking event
post-vacation.
Under some plants I saw this white fluffy thing hunkered
down and it seemed to not move at all.
So I bent down to get a closer look, reached out my hand to touch it and
all of a sudden she flew up and away, protesting loudly. A live chicken was sleeping in my yard! Wow, I live in suburbia and while occasionally
I have heard their wake up call and even had one neighbor’s pet hen come peck
around my yard, this was something brand new.
A white hen was NESTING in my yard, I soon discovered. Laying on the ground where she had dutifully,
loving been sitting were 9 eggs. OH
NO! I’ve scared her away and she was
sitting on eggs that probably have babies inside. My heart sank as I emailed my family asking
them what to do. Really, there was nothing
I could do but pray she would find her way back to my yard and settle down on
her babies again. Thankfully, she
did. I arrived home that evening and
quietly looked between the plants. There
she was, laying motionless once again on those eggs.
I did an internet search to see how long that process should
take. 21 days, it said, and if it began
to stink in the yard I could be sure the hen was sitting on at least one rotten
egg. That never happened. I didn’t try to touch her again, but I
checked every morning to make sure she was there on those eggs. She was.
But then yesterday, just a week later as I was leaving for
work she was not under the plants any longer.
She was on the cold, hard gravel and I was worried she was sick. Why would she be laying on the gravel, all hunkered
down? I bent down to talk to her, and as
I spoke gently to her I again reached out my hand, ready to pet her. WRONG THING TO DO! It startled her again and up she flew, this
time revealing six baby chicks that scattered in every direction as mama squawked
and squawked. First, she ran around the yard
trying to round them all up and then she came charging at me! She was mad, obviously, and probably scared
that I would harm her brood. I ran up
three stairs to my porch and assured her I was not going to harm her or her
little ones. She returned to the search
for the babies as I quickly left for work – again praying that she would be ok
and that no harm would come to her chicks.
I prayed she would find them all and gather them, once more, under her
protective wings.
I don’t know then end of her story. When I came home from work that evening she
was no longer nesting in my yard.
Obviously she and the babies had gone to a safer place than this one
where the inquisitive giant kept disturbing her. There in the gravel, where she last lay
covering her babies I noticed she had pecked and scratched until she got a nice
well in that rocky terrain. In the nest
were still three unhatched eggs and my guess was she didn’t want to keep laying
on eggs that had no babies inside when she now had six fast-growing little ones
to tend. Very carefully she had
recreated a place for her brood, a snug, dry, safe place under her protection
and the warmth of her wings until they were big enough to live on their own.
I’m sad she and her chicks are gone, and yet I couldn’t have
taken care of them. I’m gone all the time
and besides, I’m sure she belonged to someone who is quite happy to have her
and her little ones back home.
I’ve thought often of the verse in the Bible where Jesus
stood outside Jerusalem facing the culmination of His life on this earth – His
stalwart journey to the Cross. . . .“I
have longed to gather your children
together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings.” Those baby chicks I saw were not new
hatchlings. Obviously they had been out
of those eggshells for some days by the time I saw them. They knew their mamma; they knew they were
safe under her wings and they also knew how to scamper when startled by the
unexpected. The image of Jesus gathering us, as a hen
gathers her chicks under her wings is a vision I now better understand. I’m not a country girl, and though I had a
sense of what this metaphor meant, while it brought peace to my heart that my
Lord cares for me just as tenderly as any great mom cares for her kids, I had
never seen a hen gather her chicks before.
I didn’t stick around to watch my white mama hen for fear she would peck
me to death to keep me from harming her little ones, but I saw those babies
under her wing, and I saw something else.
In that instant I not only comprehended the tenderness, but also the
fierce protection she afforded her children.
In that instant I was touched to the core of my being with what it means
for my God to gather me tenderly, ready to charge anyone who threatens my
safety and security. It’s not just a
nesting place; it’s a hiding place, a sanctuary, a fortress – those wings of
the hen . . . those arms of my Savior.
“But you were not
willing. . .”
That’s how Jesus’ sentence ends as He begins the journey
that secured my place under His wings forever.
I wonder if those babies heard the cry of their mamma and scurried
towards her, or if they thought they were strong enough now to venture out on
their own, to live life as they wanted.
My hope is the later because I am a city girl and those babies would
never endure a crossing on my busy roadways.
Those babies would not survive the predators if mama wasn’t with them,
guiding them, teaching them, providing sanctuary for them when needed. Of course they will not live forever under
her wings – I know that. And I suppose
that is where the analogy ends for me and for the children Jesus longs to
gather. Another Bible verse comes to
mind which embodies the bigger picture: “Jesus said: ‘Let the children come to me,
and do not hinder them, for to such belong the kingdom of Heaven.” Matthew 19:14
The greatest safety, security, sustenance is provided, not
by my accomplishments and abilities in this world, but by His gracious, tender,
strong, powerful, mighty, protective arms.
All my life I am to come to Jesus as His child. He longs
to gather me. What a precious assurance. A part of my mother heart understands
this. When I see my own children
struggling I want to bring them home and smother them with my love and
protection. My longings for them can
only provide temporary respite at best; my Savior’s longing, on the other hand,
is always, ongoing, and eternal. Oh may
I never refuse such grace!