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Sin is no longer your master, for you are no
longer subject to the law, which enslaves you to sin. Instead, you are free by
God's grace. So since God's grace has set us free from the law, does this mean
we can go on sinning? Of course not! Don't you realize that whatever you choose
to obey becomes your master? You can choose sin, which leads to death, or you
can choose to obey God and receive his approval. Thank God! Once you were slaves
of sin, but now you have obeyed with all your heart the new teaching God has
given you. Now you are free from sin, your old master, and you have become
slaves to your new master, righteousness.
(Romans 6:14-18 NLT).
Sometime ago, I read about a
little school for young Indian men and women, who came to Oakland, California,
from the various tribes in northern Arizona. One of these was a Navajo young man
of unusually keen intelligence. One Sunday evening, he went with the pastor to
the young people’s meeting. They were talking about the epistle to the
Galatians, and the special subject was law and grace. They were not very clear
about it, and finally one turned to the Indian and said, “I wonder whether our
Indian friend has anything to say about this.” He rose to his feet and said,
“Well, my friends, I have been listening very carefully, because I am here to
learn all I can in order to take it back to my people. I do not understand all
that you are talking about, and I do not think you do yourselves. But concerning
this law and grace business let me see if I can make it clear. I think it is
like this. When the pastor brought me from my home we took the longest railroad
journey I ever took. We got out at Barstow, and there I saw the most beautiful
railroad station and hotel I have ever seen. I walked all around and saw at one
end a sign, ‘Do not spit here.’ I looked at that sign and then looked down at
the ground and saw many had spitted there, and before I think what I am doing I
have spitted myself. Isn’t that strange when the sign say, ‘Do not spit here’?
He went on to say, “I come to
Oakland and go to the home of the lady who invited me to dinner today and I am
in the nicest home I have been in. Such beautiful furniture and carpets, I hate
to step on them. I sank into a comfortable chair, and the lady said, ‘Now, John,
you sit there while I go out and see whether the maid has dinner ready.’ I look
around at the beautiful pictures, at the grand piano, and I walk all around
those rooms. I am looking for a sign; and the sign I am looking for is, ‘Do not
spit here,’ but I look around those two beautiful drawing rooms, and cannot find
a sign like this. I think ‘what a pity when this is such a beautiful home to
have people spitting all over it. Too bad they don’t put up a sign!’ So I look
all over that carpet, but cannot find that anybody have spitted there. What a
queer thing! Where the sign says, ‘Do not spit,’ a lot of people spitted. Where
there was no sign at all, in that beautiful home, nobody spitted. Now I
understand! That sign is law, but inside the home it is grace. They love their
beautiful home, and they want to keep it clean. They do not need a sign to tell
them so. I think that explains the law and grace business.” As he sat down, a
murmur of approval went round the room and the leader exclaimed, “I think that
is the best illustration of law and grace I have ever heard.” Live in grace!
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