Today's Scripture Reading (June 30, 2025): 1 Chronicles 9
A
colleague of mine passed away recently. He was an excellent pastor but spent a
life fighting his various disabilities. And I am sure that there were people
who looked down on him because of his limitations and the way he looked. I am also
sure that there were people who looked at him and never gave him a chance. I
think that these people who rejected him and refused to give him an opportunity
robbed themselves of having a wonderful person in their lives; their prejudice
made them less. In demeaning my friend, they ended up only demeaning
themselves.
Having
said that, it wasn't that long ago that someone with a visible disability, even
if it was something as minor as having a lazy eye, was disqualified from being
part of the clergy. In some places and sections of the church, women are still
excluded from holding positions of leadership within the Christian Church. Part
of the reason for this exclusion is the misguided belief that they aren't
strong enough to do the job. Ministering God to the people was a job that
required strength. It needed men who could minister with strength and
authority. And we mistakenly began to believe that excluded some people.
I
have long taught that we need to recognize the strength of the women who came
before us. Regardless of our beliefs about strength and the need for able men,
much of the progress that has been experienced in areas once called "the
mission field" was possible because of the strength of women who entered
these areas early in history and won the hearts of the people. Yes, being a
pastor or a missionary requires a great deal of strength, but excluding people
with a disability or because of their gender is a significant mistake.
As
Chronicles begins to tell us about the early priests, the author refers to them
as "able men." While accurate, the phrase is also somewhat
unfortunate. Elsewhere, when we are not discussing priests, the exact phrase,
translated as "able men" here, is rendered as "mighty men of
valor." I'm not sure about you, but given the choice between being called "able"
or a "mighty person of valor," I think I would like to be known as a
mighty person of valor. It also describes several pastors and missionaries that
I know, and it is a list that includes women and my recently deceased
colleague. These people are not merely able; they are mighty people of valor
because anyone who was any less would have never been able to complete the
tasks that God had laid on their strong shoulders.
Tomorrow's Scripture Reading: 1 Chronicles 10