Apr 11, 2021

Avoiding rust by using one's talents - being in fellowship


photo of rusty front-end loader bucket next to traffic warning cone
Street repairs stopped Friday; Saturday's rain made Sunday's rust.
 

T-shirts and bumper stickers sometimes repeat the folk wisdom, "use it or lose it," meaning that a muscle, a skill, or an expertise needs to be exercised to remain useful and perform at top-level. The same logic seems to apply to the bucket of this front-end loader. When the city workers stopped Friday night and left the equipment parked on site during the weekend, heavy rains fell on Saturday night and by Sunday noon the shiny base of the bucket, polished by hundreds of loads of sand, dirt, and gravel now shows a vivid coat of orange rust. By extension to seekers after God's Way, there is a similar imperative to be active in one's use of talents, mental and physical powers, and the place in the world one occupies: not to sit still (although there is a time to meditate, and a time to vegetate, too) but to engage in the people and environment at hand. The photo is a good reminder to minimize rust by keeping active in fellowship, in study, in service, and worship, and so on.

The Zoom meeting of the First Congregational Church of St. Johns, Michigan for the first Sunday after the April 4 celebration took the book of 1 John, chapter 1 as the starting point to talk about how to be "Easter People," the Christ-followers who center their lives around the example of resurrection; born all over again, born from above. The concluding thoughts in the sermon put fellowship with God as something to aim for day to day and something to enjoy by fellowship with other Christ-followers. This is not an exercise in mutual self-righteousness; instead, it is a habit of interacting with others who share in common a humble, open-hearted, and other-responsive posture and mind-set. By living this way with fellow Christians, but also engaging in others not yet seeing and hearing God's love, the result is Kingdom Experience right now on Earth as it is in heaven. The kingdom of God is within you, but also when fellowshipping with others equally humble, open-hearted, and other-oriented, this same kingdom is put into flesh-and-blood form, even if imperfectly. No matter how short one falls from the ideal, by striving (one must use it) the goals come closer (not lose it). The corollary to "use it or lose it" also comes from folk wisdom, "It is better to wear out [from frequent use] than to rust out [not put to use]."

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