If the church were a car dealership, you’d have a lot full of lemons. It’s not necessarily the way we think of ourselves; we’d rather imagine we were a lot full of brand spanking new Jaguars, or, for some who have a penchant for the extravagant, Rolls Royces, but we’re not, and that’s all there is to it.
There is a difference between being perfect and being
perfectible. If you walk into a church expecting everyone to be perfect, all
you’ll be in for is a world of disappointment and not much else. That you’re
judging everyone around you in the first place is something you should probably
work on, but we have this tendency to expect others to be what we ourselves are
not.
Before you expect perfection from everyone around you, look
in the mirror and be honest when deciding whether or not you are perfect. God
never promised a perfect church, but He did promise He would continually
perfect it.
Before we continue, it must be said that there is a
difference between holy and perfect; no, they are not interchangeable. If we
need to break out the Webster’s dictionary again, we will, but to be holy is to
be consecrated and set apart to God; being perfect is being perfect. If you
have one flaw, any flaw, whether objective or subjective, then by definition,
you are not perfect! Are you carrying a few extra pounds? Is your hairline past
the halfway point of your head? Do you snort when you laugh? Do you pick your
nose? Do you have ear wax? Is IBS a thing for you? Snaggletooth, acne, crooked
nose, nose hair, unibrow, halitosis? Then you are not perfect.
You could very well be holy with any or all of these things,
perhaps even more - I hear athlete’s foot is a problem for some – but you
wouldn’t be perfect.
To be holy is to be consecrated to God. This means you have
been declared sacred, you belong to God, and no other will have sway over your
heart, your actions, your thoughts, or your desires. God will take you as you
are, but He will make you into what He wants you to be. You cannot be
consecrated to God and remain in the same condition as you were before your
consecration.
A few years back, I was at an estate sale in Chicago looking
at some art I thought might have some value given the right buyer. It turned
out to be a lithograph rather than an original, and what they were asking for
it told me they didn’t know they had what amounted to one copy of multiples on
their hands.
Since I was already there, I started looking around the home,
seeing if I could find something I could flip to make back my time and my gas
money. There was nothing to be had downstairs, but as I went through the
bedroom closet upstairs, I saw a pair of cowboy boots. They were dusty,
mud-splattered, and looked as though they hadn’t seen sunlight in a year or
five, but I could spot Hornback caiman crocodile from a mile away, and when I
looked inside the shaft, Lucchese handmade was promptly stenciled on the side.
I took the boots to the lady running the sale, asked her how
much she wanted for them, and after looking at them for the briefest of glances,
she said, “is forty too much?” I said it wasn’t, pulled out two crisp twenties
and handed them to her, then went to my car and drove home.
It didn’t matter to me what size the boots were; it didn’t
matter how rough they looked presently; I knew their value and knew what they
would be worth once I was done working on them.
It took me all of fifteen minutes to clean the boots up and
wipe them down with some leather conditioner. I sold them two weeks later for
$1000. The man I sold them to was over the moon because he thought he was
getting a bargain, given that these boots are usually custom-made and cost
$5000 a pair.
Before anyone goes off on a tangent and misses the point of
the story, it’s not my job to research items at someone else’s estate sale for
them. I gave the lady the $40 she asked for, and she was happy to get it for
what she assumed were a pair of used boots. I saw value in something a dozen
people passed up without giving a second glance, not because I’m smarter than
anyone but because I take the time to look past the grime, or the dirt, or the
dust, or the ugly frame, and see the potential value of it.
We were all lemons. We were all muddy and dusty and not worth
a look at on our best day, but God saw what we could become, nay, what we would
become once He was done with us. If we’re all shiny and clean today, it’s not
through any effort of our own; it’s because He took the time to clean us up
when everyone else would have walked on by not giving us a second look.
Be grateful to God for what He has done in your life. Be
thankful for the grace He has extended you in that He took the time to mold and
chisel, clean, and scrub until you became a vessel of honor in His hand.
Even though we had the Maker’s mark, we were not up to Maker
standards. He received us and is perfecting us daily because we are consecrated
for Him. You haven’t always been where you are, and neither have I. We would do
well to remember this whenever we get the impulse to judge others for their
rough edges or odd appearance. God may have been working on you a lot longer
than He has on them.
We all start out as lemons. The finished product is something else entirely.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
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