I have a Filipino friend who told me of an event she
attended and how uncomfortable she felt there. She had to clarify for me that
she felt conspicuous because of her obvious ethnicity amid a crowd of “white”
people. It shocked me to realize how oblivious I was to how it feels to be
different. Racially and culturally, I have very seldom found myself to be a
minority in the crowd; as a Christian, however, I should be familiar with what
it feels like to stand out from the herd.
In these verses in Leviticus, and in many other passages,
God reminds his people that they are not to blend in with the people around
them. God’s people then and now are to contrast vividly with the rest of the
world’s population. Here, he tells them not to do as the Egyptians did in the
land they had come from nor as the Canaanites did in the land he had brought
them to. We should note that not everything these people did was evil - there
was more to them than just their religion - but their societies were permeated
with customs and behaviors that no child of God should tolerate. And yet,
exposure leads to tolerance and compromise.
In the King James Version, Deuteronomy 14: 2 and 26: 18,
Titus 2: 14, and I Peter 2: 9, speak of God’s people as “peculiar.” Newer
translations describe us as “belonging to God.” I don’t know if the newer
versions are more accurate or if we just don’t like being thought of us
peculiar, but I’m thinking we would make a stronger statement in today’s
culture if we were a little more comfortable with being looked at as peculiar.
Maybe we are true to our faith in the worship service but do we stand out from
the world when we’re out in it? Is there anything that distinguishes us from
the natives in the land of Canaan?
|
No comments:
Post a Comment