πŸ‘‘ Walk, Don’t Run! 🚢🏽

β€œβ€¦as the Lord hath called every one,Β so let him walk… Art thou called being a servant?Β Care not for it…” (I CorinthiansΒ 7:17,21).

Some Christians find it troubling that the Bible counsels slaves to beΒ contentΒ in their difficult circumstances, andΒ walk inΒ obedience to their masters rather thanΒ run away from them in rebellion (Eph. 6:5; Col.Β 3:22). But there were legitimate reasons why men were slaves in those days, and God has never been in favor of freeing β€œa lawful captive” from his owner (Isa. 49:24).

The Apostle PaulΒ did tell slaves, β€œif thou mayest be made free,Β use it rather” (I Cor.Β 7:21). For example, if a man was a slave because he was working off his financial debts, if someone offered to pay his debts, this was benevolence that no servant should ignore. But if there was no legitimate means by which a servant could be made free, it was God’s will that he walk in the calling wherewith he had been called (I Cor.Β 7:17).

Of course, unbelievers think that this isΒ terrible advice, and they aren’t shy about criticizing the Bible for not encouraging slaves to run away from their masters. But that’s because they’re thinking of the kind of slavery that existed in the early days of our country, when innocent people wereΒ kidnapped from Africa and brought here as slaves to serve in an illegitimate form of bondage. This type of slavery isΒ condemned in Scripture, and those who dared perpetrate it in Israel were given the death penalty (Ex.Β 21:16). Yet even when men were kidnapped and wrongfully enslaved, Paul’s advice to be content in servitude was good counsel, for often it was just not possible for slaves to escape bondage, and God does not wish His children to live lives of abject frustration and misery.

But if you are thinking that it is equally impossible to β€œcare not” for being a slave, consider the counsel that Paul went on to give servants in the very next verse,

β€œFor he that is called in the Lord, being a servant,Β is the Lord’s freeman…” (I Cor.Β 7:22).

The key to finding contentment as a slave was to remember thatΒ believingΒ slaves were free men in the eyes of the Lord. In other words, the secret to being content in the harsh circumstances of bondage was for servants to lookΒ pastΒ their circumstances and focus on how God saw them in Christ. That is, when slaves couldn’t change their circumstances, the key to contentment was to change how theyΒ thought about their circumstances.

Now, is there anything you can learn from that aboutΒ your difficult circumstances? Sometimes our situation in life can’t be changed any more than a slave could change his. Of course, if thereΒ isΒ a legitimate means by which you might be made free from your difficulties, by all means do what Paul told slaves to do with such an opportunity and β€œuse it.” But if you can’t change your circumstances, why not follow Paul’s advice and change the way you think about them? source

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