Daily Devotional for January 17, 2014

2 Corinthians 10:3-6
The world is unprincipled. It’s dog-eat-dog out there! The world doesn’t fight fair. But we don’t live or fight our battles that way—never have and never will. The tools of our trade aren’t for marketing or manipulation, but they are for demolishing that entire massively corrupt culture. We use our powerful God-tools for smashing warped philosophies, tearing down barriers erected against the truth of God, fitting every loose thought and emotion and impulse into the structure of life shaped by Christ. Our tools are ready at hand for clearing the ground of every obstruction and building lives of obedience into maturity.
 
Scripture quotations from The Message. © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002 by Eugene Peterson.  Used by permission of NavPress, Colorado Springs, CO.  All rights reserved.
 
I still cannot get over the news story this week about the young father of a three-year-old who was allegedly killed by a retired police officer in a movie theater. During the movie previews, this man refused to stop texting a message to his young daughter via the child’s babysitter. The former policeman sitting behind him apparently instigated an argument over this that escalated to his pulling out a gun and shooting this man, who later died.  The man’s wife was also shot and received a non-life-threatening wound to her hand.  The theater’s website lists prohibited items and actions…among them, any use of a cell phone inside the theater’s auditorium (including texting) - and possession of any weapons.
 
We rarely go to see a movie in the theater, because we inevitably are distracted by someone who is talking, eating too loudly, or otherwise creating a distraction.  However, we would never let things escalate to this level.  After all, it is just a movie.  And while a theater experience isn’t cheap these days…I cannot imagine any disruption that could present a cause for “war” – much less murder!  Yet these days, this seems to be where we have come to in the world as we know it.  To quote this scripture passage, “It’s dog-eat-dog out there!  The world doesn’t fight fair.”
 
The next sentence of this passage is incredibly profound and important:  “But we don’t live or fight our battles that way – never have and never will.”  As Christians, we are equipped with what this scripture passage refers to as “God-tools.”  Just what are some of our God-tools?  These include love, grace, mercy, forgiveness, compassion, empathy, acceptance, encouragement, and responsive obedience.  Does this mean that we sit back and let “the world” walk all over us?  Not at all!  But we are commanded to demonstrate a better way of solving problems and dealing with conflict.
 
We recently watched a documentary on our local PBS station about Woodruff Elementary School… a neighborhood institution of learning that was once part of the Little Rock School district. Woodruff was located in a truly dangerous part of the city…the principal and guidance counselor claimed that the “Crips” gang actually “met” on school grounds.  Violence and murder were familiar to the fabric of life in this neighborhood…even among the young children who were brought up in this culture.  The principal, Pat Higginbotham, and counselor Shirley Davis, developed a “plan” to challenge the children to go a set number of days without a single fight occurring at school.  At the end of this time period, there would be a reward.
 
It took a lot of setbacks and restarts, but the children finally made it twenty days without a fight…and they were rewarded with a huge “play day”.  From there, the school staff started again…and the time frame extended – eventually reaching 300 days without a single fight at school.  Along the way, victories were rewarded with field trips, play days, and more.  These administrators, and a subsequent principal, Janice Wilson, credited the children and teachers with making this concept work.  They claimed that as new children came into the school, the others would teach them that “we don’t behave like that here.”  Daily mantras were recited to remind the children to solve problems with words and cool-headed thinking…not heated actions and reactions.
 
Other educators repeatedly came to study the school and its success… and to “get a copy of the program.”  They were all told, “There is no ‘program’…we are simply instilling a sense of personal worth and values into these children and showing them that fighting is not the answer.”  Key in their approach was to emphasize to the children that the school was a “family”…and that families take care of each other, do not solve problems with fighting, and genuinely regard each other with respect.
 
Do you realize that we are a family in Christ Jesus?  As such, don’t you think we owe it to each other to get along without violence, unkindness, and disrespect?  How handy are your “God-tools”…and do you use them often?  Do you treat others with love, grace, mercy, forgiveness, compassion, empathy, acceptance, and encouragement?  Do you practice “responsive obedience” by putting God’s commands and the teachings of Jesus into practice in your daily living?  Are you quick to “fly off the handle” and make snap judgments about others…or worse yet, react in a way that belies your Christian faith and witness?  Do you let the little things in life get to you in such a way that you are ready to “pull the trigger and shoot somebody”… if only figuratively?
 
Does it make sense to you that we can use these “God-tools” (with the backing strength of God Almighty) to bring the thoughts and actions of others around without the senseless “spilling of blood”?  How long can YOU go without a fight…literally and figuratively?  Are you truly operating within the structure of a life shaped by Christ?  Isn’t it time you were?
 
©2014 Debbie Robus

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