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I’m been quite touched
this week reading the magazine of Plan International through which
our family sponsors a child.
At the same time I got
really angry following a conversation with someone who was critical
of a fund-raising effort for a charity that works with children
overseas.
Children in need are
all around us!
We see heart-rending
footage of poor children in Third World countries and are shocked
and we have needy people in our own communities, our own schools,
sometimes our own workplaces.
Every night, some of
our "neighbours" (by Jesus' definition) are going to bed without
eating. Children have stomachs distended by hunger.
Hard-working families struggle to
"make ends meet."
In the model early church, this was
not so.
In Acts 4:32-36 we read, ‘And the congregation of those who
believed were of one heart and soul; and not one of them claimed
that anything belonging to him was his own, but all things were
common property to them. And with great power the apostles were
giving testimony to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and abundant
grace was upon them all.
For there was not a needy person among
them, for all who were owners of land or houses would sell them and
bring the proceeds of the sales and
lay them at the apostles' feet, and
they would be distributed to each as any had need.
Those are convicting words, aren't they? There were no needy people.
Those who had more than enough shared
with those who didn't have enough. The body of Christ functioned as
it was intended fellow believers taking care of each other.
There is nothing wrong with owning possessions; in fact, God
sometimes provided people in the Bible - and continues to do so -
with material blessings such as homes, vehicles etc.
But He also expects us
to share what we have.
In 2002, in the USA, the world’s most powerful nation thirteen
MILLION children lived in homes that could not provide enough food
for them.
So what can we do? Even if we are poor ourselves, we can pray. We
can volunteer for organizations that help the poor. Giving time and
effort doesn't cost a penny.
If we have a little money but not much, we can follow the example of
the woman who donated "the widow's mite." And for those of us who
are materially blessed, we can look for charities and contribute to
them.
If we have the gift of Encouragement, we can give a listening ear to
someone who is struggling financially.
We can encourage
our church leaders to get our churches more involved with helping
the needy.
There is something each one of us can do. I challenge you (and
myself) to ask God this week what He wants US to do toward making it
once again the reality of the church that there is "not a needy
person among them."
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