I
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was seventeen years old with a little bit of
money in my pocket which I had received from family and friends for my
birthday. My intention was to hold onto
the money and save it. Ah, the dreams of
youth!!! The money lasted just over a
week and then I saw something I simply had to have and I had exactly enough
money to pay for it.
One
of my good friends from high school and I had gone to eat and on the way home
we stopped by one of the popular shopping malls in our area. There was nothing in particular we were
looking for which meant that anything we saw was game for purchase—a very
dangerous prospect indeed.
We
wondered into a large department store, and, as most seventeen-year-old boys
do, we found ourselves looking at stereo equipment. There were all kinds of systems on
display. Some of them could only be
purchased as a complete system while others could be purchased one piece at a
time allowing the owner to build and tailor the stereo to his own specific
needs and wants. For this reason, the
systems were known as component systems and they represented one of the first
rites of passage from teenager to adult.
In
the middle of the display area, the store had a special promotion. They were selling a receiver and speakers for
just under $100. As luck would have it,
this is the amount of money I had saved and had promised myself I would hold
on to but that stereo looked and sounded wonderful. Needless to say, I buckled and gave in. I went home, took my savings out and drove
back over to the mall and purchased the receiver and the speakers. I placed them in the trunk of my car and
headed home.
It
only took about 20 minutes to assemble the receiver and speakers once I selected
a place for them in my room. There were
boxes on the floor, plastic wrap thrown across the beds, and speaker and
antennae wires running across the room.
The place was a wreck but it sounded fantastic. I was happy with my purchase and as time
progressed my parents helped me add to the system until it was complete.
Each
time a new component was added I would open the box, remove it, and wire it to
the receiver. No matter how many pieces
I added, they all had to be wired to the receiver. Without the receiver, the rest of the stereo
was of no value. Every device sent its
signal to the receiver which in turn made it possible for everyone in the room---or depending on the volume, the entire house—to hear whatever music I chose
to play. The receiver was the heart and
the center of my system and without it, there would have been no sound, no
music, no anything.
In
Acts 17:28, Luke reminds us of the important place Jesus must hold in our
lives. He underlines the importance of
making him the centerpiece, the very heart of our existence. Luke pens this reminder with the following
words, “For in him we live and move and
have our being.' As some of your own poets have said, 'We are his offspring.”
This
passage comes from Paul’s speech at the Areopagus in Athens where he was asked
to explain his teaching. Paul pointed
out that the men and women of Athens
were very religious. They had erected
altars to several deities, even one to “An Unknown God.” It was this “unknown God” that Paul explained
to those listening that day. He
explained that God was the creator of all things and did not live in any temple
made by human hands. Instead, He was the
central point of all creation and of all existence and He was much closer than
they imagined.
F
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rom
that point, Paul continued explaining about the coming of Jesus and how he
died for all men and how all those who believe in him would have life
everlasting. But the central truth Paul
wanted to communicate was that Christ must be the center of our lives. We must remain plugged into him if we are to
reach those around us for God. As long
as we remain connected to Jesus, our lives have purpose and our message is
communicated. However, if we lose
contact with him, if we try to send our own message without him, we become as
useless as a speaker or a stereo component detached from the receiver. Our witness simply will not work. This leaves us but one question to consider
today. Are we connected to Christ and is his message getting out through us?
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