SolaScriptura

Hi, welcome to my online journal! I hope your visit will be both beneficial and enjoyable. This is a website dedicated to sharing my love for Jesus Christ through the posting of devotionals and commentary on the Word of God. Leave a comment and let me know what you think, and any questions. I'll get back to you as soon as I can. Thanks and enjoy. Jerry

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Location: Cape Cod, Mass, United States

I'm married to my Imzadi (soulmate) and have a great 19 year old son

Saturday, January 08, 2005

The Honor of Being a Slave

The Honor of Being a Slave

Paul, a servant of Christ Jesus, called to be an apostle and set apart for the gospel of God.… [Rom. 1:1]



The apostle begins with a simple identification of his name. As a Roman citizen, his name was Saul. But he became Paul, the one who was radically transformed on the Damascus road. Years later the theologian extraordinaire of the early church identifies himself humbly and simply as Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ.
The Greek word doulos, which is the word servant in the kjv, is more accurately translated by the word slave. In the ancient world a servant was a hired employee who could come and go and even resign if he wanted. But a doulos was owned by a kyrios, a master or lord. He was the purchased property of the slave owner.
This imagery is frequently used in the New Testament to reflect the relationship between Christ and his people. We belong to Christ—our kyrios, our Lord and Master. He has the right of an owner to impose obligation on us. Because Paul so clearly understood that believers have been purchased by the blood of Jesus Christ, he called himself a doulos, or slave, of Jesus Christ.
By nature humanity stands in bondage to sin. We are bondservants to our own evil impulses and fallen nature. Yet we are told that where the Spirit of the Lord is—where the Spirit of the kyrios is—there is liberty. Jesus said, “If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free” (John 8:31–32).
Jesus addressed those words to people who were not free, but were in abject bondage. But the irony is this: A person’s only freedom is to become a slave to Jesus Christ. Freedom from Christ means slavery to self. But one enslaved to Christ knows the royal liberation that only Christ can bring. So Paul, in citing his own credentials, looks to his highest virtue—that he is a slave to Jesus Christ.

Coram Deo

As the Holy Spirit brings to mind your obligations before God, don’t look at them as hardship or duty. If you have one you particularly dislike, ask God to change that situation, not necessarily by removing you from it, but by giving you a true servant spirit.

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