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Kissed or Cussed - The
Power of Rejection
I moved outdoors from the bustle of a noisy restaurant
to take a call on my cell phone. As I was about to return,
I passed a gospel tract to a woman who sat alone at
a table. She looked at the tract, then to my surprise
jumped up and kissed me on the cheek. I was delighted--not
with the kiss, but with the woman's reaction to the
tract.
A few weeks earlier I'd received a different response.
Kirk and I were standing in a hotel elevator in Florida
when a gentleman (to whom I had given a gospel tract)
cussed at me, chewed me out, and spat what was left
in little pieces onto the ground. We were waiting to
go up, but he sure put me down. I was devastated. I
felt humiliated. I also felt as though I never wanted
to give out another tract. Ever!
Rejection is a powerful blow to human pride. It cuts
deep, like a burning arrow in the heart. It makes the
most courageous of us want to withdraw in defeat. It
is when that sharp arrow pierces the flesh that we need
to think of the sinful woman of whom the Bible speaks
in Luke 7:36-50.
She came into the house of a Pharisee, stood behind
Jesus and began to wash His feet with her tears. Perhaps
she quietly approached the Master as He lay at a table
in typical Middle-Eastern fashion--on His side with
His feet behind Him. As she listened to His gracious
words, tears of contrition began to fall in great droplets
onto His feet. We are told that (for some reason) the
Pharisee didn't follow the custom of the day and wash
the feet of the Savior as He entered His home. It is
therefore likely that her tears mingled with (and darkened)
the dust from the street that was on His feet. Perhaps
it was then that she dropped to her knees and with tears
in her eyes began to dry His feet with her hair. A woman's
hair is her glory, but she so humbled herself that she
forgot her natural vanity, and dried His dusty and wet
feet with the locks of her hair.
Those who have heard His gracious words and have seen
their own sinful condition, fall at the feet of Jesus
and wash them in tears of contrition. They can be clothed
with humility because they have been stripped of their
pride and of this life's vanities. It is there that
they understand that all that really matters is the
approval of God. It is there that His will becomes their
will…they too will want to have beautiful feet,
shod with the preparation of the Gospel of Peace.
Then, when the world casts stones of rejection, we
will look to the heavens and see Jesus standing at the
right hand of God. When they nail our hands and feet
to a cross of restraint, we still seek only the approval
of God. When they offer the vinegar of bitter scorn
so that fear causes our tongue to cleave to our jaws,
we will still speak, because we seek only the smile
of God.
The next time you gaze at moonlight, realize that it
is actually the result of an explosion of a star so
big that this earth fits into its volume a million times.
The explosion sent light 93 million miles in a straight
line traveling at 186,000 miles per second and hit dirt
on the face of the moon. The light then reflected towards
this earth and traveled another 250,000 miles at the
same speed, so that you could have soft light in the
darkness of the night.
We are surrounded by many such miracles, but we don't
give them a second thought. If we did, we would begin
to comprehend that God is the Maker of this incredible
creation we so take for granted. It is when we see the
unspeakable greatness of His power, that we will see
how important it is to seek His approval rather than
that of lowly dust that he shaped into man by His miracle-working
hand.
The moonlight will also remind us of the fact that
even though we are called "children of light,"
we don't have our own light. We merely reflect the Light
that is unapproachable. One day it will reveal itself
in flaming fire. The pain of our rejection by this world
fades, compared to the unspeakable terror of the world's
rejection by God.
The first time Jesus preached in his home town His
hearers were so wrath-filled, they tried to kill Him
by throwing Him off a cliff (see Luke 4:29). But He
didn't end His ministry simply because He was despised
and rejected by men. Instead, He "committed Himself
to Him that judges righteously." He looked to the
smile of a holy God, rather than the frown of a sinful
world.
So the next time you let your little light shine by
preaching the gospel, or giving out a tract and a bucking
bronco throws you for a loop, chews you up and spits
you onto the soil, remember the moonlight. Remember
how it just reflects the brilliance of the sun. Then
get up and find another horse, and get back into the
saddle…while there is still time.
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