Scripture:
Quick Summary:
The Point:
Questions for Family Time:
a. (see above)
2. Who does Jesus call sheep?
a. the people who
help others.
a. We fed the hungry, (and visited)
the elderly
4. How does our church do these things?
a. Feed the
hungry and give drink to the thirsty -
help at the food pantry, Feed my Sheep
c. invite the
stranger- welcome people into our church; Heart House shelters the homeless,
YES home provides housing for teens
d. clothe the needy-
help at the food pantry, make blankets for babies
e. visit the sick and
imprisoned- visit those in the hospital; Bible Study at the jail
a. Come up with
some creative ways you can do each one of these: feed the hungry, give drink to
the thirsty, invite in strangers, clothe the needy, visit the sick and imprisoned.
Deeper:
This is one of
those stories Jesus tells that is pretty foundational for how we understand who
we are and what our responsibilities are as followers of Jesus. This passage
says that if we are to call ourselves Christians, our lives are to be filled
with acts of compassion. Jesus’ disciples are to treat every person they meet
as if that person was Jesus himself. We
are to help those in need, whatever that need is.
I think Jesus was intentional to make a
list of needs that we can easily look past. It is easy to avoid people
struggling with these needs. It is easy to say that it is someone else’s
responsibility. But Jesus says his followers go out seeking these people, stuck
in their home because of their health, or even tucked away in jail out of the
view of the community. He tells us to find ignored people, people struggling
with the daily necessities of life, and to help them. He tells us that we are
to be proactive with our compassion.
Jesus is such a
strange king because rather than bowing at his feet, or demanding our praise,
he instead says he is The Poor. The God of the Universe says he is the person
who can’t afford their next meal. He is the child who walks miles each morning
to find clean drinking water. He is the kid who grows too fast for his parents’
income to manage. He is the refugee running for their lives with only what they
can carry. He is the sick patient. He is the inmate. How we treat the poor is
how we treat Jesus. If we choose to demonize them and blame them for their
struggles, we do it to Jesus. If we choose to come alongside them, empower them
and treat them as wholly human, we do it to Jesus. When we love them like
neighbors, we love Jesus.
It’s easy to lose sight of these people in our busy lives,
to say we have too much on our plate already. I get it. But, it’s important for
us to teach our children compassion now. It’s important for us to notice Jesus
in our midst, dressed in rags instead of robes. So I want to encourage you to
start seeing the invisible people in the world. Let us teach our children that
we have a responsibility not just to help those closest to us, but to all
humankind.
Personal Reflection:
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