Philemon 25
It is amazing to think that not long ago, a personal letter
from someone you knew was always opened, read, and sometimes read more than
once. In our modern world of text
messages, face book, and the Internet, we have lost much of the value of a
letter. We often get too many from
the same person, I’m guilty of that, and often they are stuff we are passing on
with no personal message to the one who is receiving the message. So we look at the sender or the title block and make a judgment whether
to hit the delete button or put that person in our Spam file so that we are not
bothered by their emails. That is
the world we live in, and it would be horrible if they were sharing a personal
prayer need with us, but we spam them.
We live in a time where more words are being sent out in one
of these forms, but so little is being said. When you get a letter in your mailbox at home and it is from
someone you know, I’m guessing you open it, and read it because it came in the
U.S. mail and we know it took some effort from the sender.
The 25th verse of Philemon’s letter is the last lines and it
is understood, that it had no verses, just sentences, so this would be the last
sentence. “The
grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit.” I have a bad habit of dismissing the greeting and
the final greetings, much like many of you do with emails that you assume you
understand the contents. But are
we missing something of great value in doing so, and I’m talking about the
greetings.
What is your spirit; is it not the real you, is it not
hidden from others sight, and it has residence in our earth-suit. The spirit is
that which gives us the ability to have an intimate relationship with God. James 2:26 states that a body apart
from the spirit is dead and Job 32:8 states this truth; “But it is the spirit in man, the breath of the Almighty, that makes
him understand.” We
also have this insight from Stephen in Acts 7:59, “While
they were stoning him, Stephen prayed, “Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.” When “spirit” is used, it often refers
to the immaterial part of humanity that “connects” with God, who Himself is
spirit. Jesus tells us, “But the hour is coming, and is now here, when the true
worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father is
seeking such people to worship him.
God is spirit and those who worship him must worship in spirit and
truth.” (John 4:23-24)
Is this not what Paul is saying, may the unmerited favor of
Jesus Christ be all over you. If
we only grasp that Paul is stating so much more than what is understood in that
greeting. When the Spirit of Jesus
Christ and His grace is with our spirit, He is compassionate, gentle and
humble, longsuffering, forgiving, burden bearing, faithful, tender, quiet,
gentle, just, and faithful. He is a saving spirit, and we are
blessed with all Spiritual blessings in Christ Jesus.
From the Back Porch,
Bob Rice
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