Jesus also, that he might sanctify the people with his own blood, suffered outside the gate.  Therefore, let us go forth to him outside the camp, bearing his reproach.  For we have no continuing city here, but we seek one to come.

 
 
 

Going to Jesus

Daily Thoughts

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Thought for Today
May. 14

TWO UNITIES

". . . till we all come in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God . . ."

The children of God are divided among the different sects of Christianity. Some support Church of God doctrine; some support Assembly of God doctrine; others, the Apostolic sect's doctrine; others, Catholic doctrine; others, Baptist doctrine, and so forth. The list of differing, conflicting doctrines that God's children endorse is extremely long. How far-off seems the "unity in the faith" to which Paul hoped the saints would come. It seems like dream almost lost to memory. The divisions of faith among God's people are many, and the differences between those many doctrines are enormous.

It appears hopeless that the body of Christ will ever be united and "see eye to eye" concerning the truth of Christ, but that unity will be realized. At some point in the future, God will unite His people in the faith. God can do it. It may take much suffering, great persecution, and earth-shattering catastrophes, but it will be accomplished. In the meantime, until God does cleanse the body of its ignorance and self-will, we are all commanded to partake of another kind of holy unity: "the unity of the Spirit".

You can feel it whenever you meet someone who truly believes in Christ. The Spirit of God bears witness with your spirit that you have met someone who belongs in the family. The love you feel for such a person, the kinship of hope, is a spiritual unity that transcends all doctrinal differences. We need not "speak the same thing" in order to experience that unity; it is a unity of faith in the same God, a harmony that is there, no matter what one has been taught.

Paul exhorted the saints in Ephesus to "endeavor to keep the unity of the Spirit" until "we all come in the unity of the faith" (Eph. 4:3, 13). If we only allow ourselves to feel and show love toward those who are taught the same doctrine that we have been taught, we are very far from the heart of God. He loves all His children, and is not willing that any of them be lonely or lost. His feelings of kinship with all His children must become ours.

We may not be able to teach the brothers and sisters we meet the wonderful truth that Jesus has taught us, but we can love them with the same love with which Jesus has loved us. We may not agree with their words, but we can be happy for everything that God has done for them. Their doctrine may be wrong, and we may not want to hear it, but their experiences with Jesus are always perfect, and we should encourage them to talk about them. The best, if not only way to love most of God's people is simply to let them talk about what God has done in their lives.

With many of His own children, God only has "the unity of the Spirit". They do not know His voice; they do not understand His word. They do know, however, how it feels for the holy Ghost to fall upon them, and that is the only kind of fellowship that their heavenly Father has with them. That may be the only kind of fellowship we can have with them, too, but if that is all they can bear, then let us give it to them with all our hearts. That is what God does, and so, that is what we must do. Jesus said that he only did what he saw the Father do (Jn. 5:19), and that is our example.

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