“In The World, but Not of the World”
By Linda and Richard Eyre
Note: Each week this column provides a short
essay on one particular aspect or facet of the Lord’s personality
and character. It is intended that the reader focus
on this facet while partaking of the sacrament this Sunday.
(Click here to
read full introductory column.) Review previous columns
by going to the What Manner of Man Archives by clicking
in the margin to the right.
We often hear the admonition “Be in the world but not of the
world.” We assume that it is a warning,
that it means we should stay apart — isolate ourselves
from evil, buffer ourselves and to stand far aside form
the problems and turmoil of the world.
Perhaps the statement should be viewed instead as two clear
admonitions:
1.
Be in, be part of, your world so that you can help and serve.
2.
Be not of the world in terms of its evil and its improper priorities.
Christ “came into the world.” It might be argued that He didn’t have
to come, that He could have kept apart in the heavenly realms
of righteousness and watched from a safe distance, but He
did not. He came upon the world — and He was not only on
it, He was in it. He lived in every part
of it: the wicked part, the hypocritical part, the pious
part.
Some were not comfortable about some of the places He went to. They “warned”
Him, they urged Him to leave. He told them that a physician
did not come to cure those who were well. He walked into
the scorned publican’s house and across despised Samaria. He showed by His life His love for all.
He told His apostles (then and now) to go into all
the world and teach every creature (see
Mark 16:15).
Christ was in the world: in the peasant’s world, the learned Pharisee’s
world, the Roman world, the worlds
of all men. Through His comprehension of the principle that
“right has more power than wrong,” He was able to move in
a circle, always lifting others up: never himself descending
or being pulled down. How He must worry today about those
who stay aloof from the “unworthy” when they might help
to pull them up!
No one has ever been more “in the world” than Christ, for He cared for every
person and every thing, even to the point of descending
beneath them all. But no one has ever been less “of the
world,” for Christ’s desires were never for the things “that
moth and rust doth corrupt.”
Christ was so caught up in lifting the world up that it could never pull
Him down. Could it not be so with us if we followed Him,
followed his way of being in the world but not of
the world?
Closing Note: Many have asked if it is possible to get all
of the weekly “facets” or aspects of the Savior from this
column in book form. We now have such a book, and we would
like to give it as a gift to you loyal readers who have
been with us for these many weeks. Just send a self addressed,
stamped book-sized envelope (the padded ones are best) to
us at 1098 Augusta Way, Salt Lake City, Utah, 84108
and we will send you a signed copy. (You will need to put
$1.84 in stamps or postage on your return envelope.) Please
respond only if you have been reading and following the
column, and please do not ask for more than one copy of
the book. We hope this gift will help you continue this
idea, and that it will “link” us with as we think about
the same facet together each Sunday. All our best, Richard
and Linda Eyre