Today’s Scripture Reading (December
31, 2015): Romans 3
I love the
Sikh practice of wearing a turban. Others may rail against the practice,
especially when a person is undertaking a task in support of the public, but
for me it is a good reminder of exactly who it is that I am. A Sikh wears a
turban to bind up his hair which has never been cut. The idea is that God who
creates and provides, created us as he needed us to be. By cutting our hair and
our beards (which out of honesty I need to admit that I do in regular fashion –
usually on a daily basis for the latter) we are giving in to the concession
that there is something about us that needs to be changed. A Sikh disagrees.
This is exactly how God intended me to be, so instead of cutting the hair, I will
bind it up inside the turban – and this turban and the length of the hair bound
within it serves as a reminder to me, and to others, that God doesn’t make
junk. I simply am as God created me.
I don’t wear
a turban, shave daily, and cut my hair regularly if not frequently (the last
time I sat in my hairdresser’s chair she reminded me that it have been fourteen
weeks since I had last occupied that spot, I honestly hadn’t realized that it
had been that long – the cutting of my hair has never been a favorite task of
mine, or one that I desired to commit myself to unnecessarily.) But I agree
with my Sikh friends that God has created me just as he intended me to be – and
that God values who it is that I am.
Having said
that, while I am as God wanted, often my actions fall short. I sin. I go
against what God wants for me. But those blemishes in my life do nothing to
decrease my worth. Or maybe better said, even though my actions often don’t
measure up, I continue to be what God has created me to be. It is just hidden
under, sometimes, layers of dirt. And even as a Christian I need to understand
that. I am like a child who misbehaves. My value is not lessened even in those
moments that I stand in need of discipline from my parents.
And this is
the heart of the Christians message of Good News. The dirt that has collected
on all of us, has in no way devalued the product. God believed that so strongly
that he that he sent his Son to die on a cross so that the dirt could be
removed once and for all – the person that God intended me to be, the one that
was hiding underneath all of the dirt, could now finally be revealed. And every
time I see one of my Sikh friends dressed in their turbans, that is the message
of which I need to be reminded.
Tonight we
celebrate New Year’s Eve. A time for looking back … and for looking forward.
Traditionally it is a time for the making of resolutions on things that we
would like to change about ourselves. But just for a moment, may I remind you
that you are as God intended you to be. All that really needs to happen is that
we allow the God who created us to wash off the dirt that as collected on us
through the process of living. And for that task, God has already paid the
price. This year, let the washing simply begin.
Tomorrow’s Scripture Reading: Romans
4
Personal Note: Happy Birthday to a great Son-in-law. Have a great day Greg!
Personal Note: Happy Birthday to a great Son-in-law. Have a great day Greg!