Reflection The world wasn’t worthy of them
They don’t belong to the world, they belong to Christ.
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ions, floggings, chains and imprisonment? Hebrews 11 has a long list of extreme persecu-
tions, and they all seem so foreign. When have we faced a lion? It may be hard to identify with how these saints died, but facing death is part of our life in the church. At my congregation on All Saints
Sunday, we read the names of mem- bers and relatives who are now with the Lord. It could be a Hebrews list—it’s just as long. But one big difference between the biblical list and ours is how well we know these people. We know when they faced their “lions” and sometimes ran. But we also know that they faced death “with the sure and certain hope of the resurrection.”
We know that when Glenn
died, we all thought his wife would never survive alone. She and Glenn had been insepa- rable. But she was in church the next Sunday and the next and the next. When Sam died on that
motorcycle 12 years ago, we know his parents lost part of themselves. But at Sam’s funeral we watched as his mother boldly proclaimed to a packed church that Sam belonged to Christ. And it was so painful to lose
Jesse in the prime of her life, but her 6-year-old daughter knew just what to do when her mother closed her eyes for the last time. Amanda dipped her finger in a glass of water
and put the sign of the cross on her mother’s forehead. She then put the sign of the cross on everyone standing around that bed. And when the pastor came into the room, she put the sign of the cross on his forehead too. After a long list of saints,
Hebrews 11:38 states that the world wasn’t worthy of them. The world isn’t worthy of them. It’s true because they don’t belong to the world. They belong to Christ. And we do too.
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www.thelutheran.org
ERIN STRYBIS
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