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None of them empty handed
A large ant colony has built its home under a crevice in the road
pavement at my feet. It's not an ant "hill" exactly, but all around the
large hole is a tiny mound made from the chaff of ten thousand grasses,
shaped into a sort of low crater.
Out of one side of the crater passes a two-lane highway of ants. The
outgoing column heads towards a destination unknown, while the incoming
procession returns to the colony.
As I look more closely, I can see that each incoming ant is carrying
something. Not one returns empty-handed. Their treasures seem small,
miniscule to my eyes. One ant tries to maneuver a 3/4" straw along the
trail. It keeps falling out of his grasp again and again, but he picks
it up each time, and continues his ungainly journey home. Most of the
other burdens are smaller. A wisp of something, a seed fallen from the
now-brown grasses along the roadway. The size of each is tiny, almost
worthless, one might imagine. But the collection of each tiny burden
accumulates into a rich harvest for the colony.
Each ant is working for the whole -- working industriously,
tirelessly, to increase the general welfare, to work for the common
good. Each brings what he finds to their common home, into store-caverns
carved out many levels beneath the surface. An ant colony is a true
"corporation," if you will. A "corpus," a body that is dependent upon
the contributions of each and every one of its members.
I think of the church, Christ's body here on earth. Things are not as
they seem, you realize. It's not great preachers or fine buildings that
make us rich. Nor heavy offering plates on Sunday mornings. We are
richest when each one comes with his or her own unique gift, the
personal contribution of a each member out of love for the others.
"We have different gifts, according to the grace
given us.
If a man's gift is ... serving, let him serve;
if it is teaching, let him teach;
if it is encouraging, let him encourage;
if it is contributing to the needs of others, let him
give generously;
if it is leadership, let him govern
diligently;
if it is showing mercy, let him do it
cheerfully." (Romans 12:5-8)
"From him the whole body ... grows and builds
itself up in love, as each part does its work." (Ephesians 4:16)
As each part does its work the body grows in strength and health,
stronger and stronger. But sometimes our laziness and self-indulgence
get in the way.
"I'm too busy."
"I've got too many things going on at work."
"I just don't know when we're going to be in town on the weekends."
"I've been teaching Sunday school in this church for 50 years. Let
someone else do it."
A healthy church -- the Church of the Living Savior Jesus Christ --
needs both you and me, and our friends, and our brothers and sisters.
Every single one. We all bring bundles of different sizes and shapes.
Treasures of music and mercy, of love and loveliness, of grace and
glory, of leadership and service. Teachers, counselors, encouragers,
pray-ers, singers, preachers and custodians, repairers of the house of
God. Door-knockers and gospel-tellers -- we need them all.
If you were prohibited from bringing money for your Sunday offering,
what gift could you bring to the house of God to enrich the body of the
Lord Jesus?
"Go to the ant, you sluggard;
consider its ways and be wise!" (Proverbs 6:6)
I chuckle over those ancient words of exhortation, and the wonderful
mental picture conjured up by the word "sluggard."
And then my mind's eye returns to the ant colony,
with its two-lane highway.
Ants going out recharged and fully fed,
and ants returning,
carrying a little something to enrich the body.
And not one of them is empty-handed.
Not one. |