For you are a people holy to the Lord your God. The Lord your God has chosen you out of all the peoples on the face of the earth to be his people, his treasured possession. Deuteronomy7:6 NIV
Sin had ensnared another victim. He was flawed but functional.
I listened as the newscaster gave a piecemeal report. The
leaders of a noted mega church were meeting behind closed doors. The pastor had
planted the church sixteen years before on a college campus. From a small
start, it had grown into a mega church with numerous satellite campuses.
Thousands flocked to its campuses weekly. The following morning, I listened to
the newscaster again. This time, the news was grimmer. The pastor had been
accused of alcohol abuse and asked to step down.
Had church leaders polled church members for advice on how to
handle the situation, they would have received a wide variety of opinions. Some
would have wanted him to stay, some to leave, and some to take intermediary
actions between the two extremes. What would happen to his ministry was also up
for grabs. Opinions of those in leadership positions would determine whether he
ministers again.
Though God proclaimed his Old Testament people as holy, they
were often anything but. They dabbled in the pagan worship rites of their
neighbors while trying to worship God simultaneously. Their repeated pattern
was faithfulness followed by rebellion. Flaws decorated their lifestyles, just
as they did the pastor of this mega church.
Flaws are inevitable. I was born with a flawed nature. Christ
gives me a new one at salvation, but he doesn’t immediately perfect me. I’ll
have to wait for heaven to experience that. In the meantime, I’m flawed like
the Israelites and the pastor—and all people. I journey toward experiential
holiness, but flaws keep me from reaching it in this life.
But the news isn’t all bad. We may be flawed, but we’re still
functional. Though this pastor abused alcohol and had to step down, God can
give him power over his addiction and use him again. God used the Israelites
despite their rebellion. King David committed adultery, murdered, schemed, and
lied, but God still found room in his service for him. And God has continued to
use me, even though I’ve made many missteps into areas I should have avoided.
You may be flawed, but you are still functional in God’s
service.
Father, thank you for using me even when I fail to be all you
want me to be.
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