I
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love listening to a cappella music. It never ceases to amaze me how voices from
different people, regardless of their number, can blend so that only one voice
is heard. A few weeks ago, I was
listening to a local Christian radio station.
They were playing a good selection of contemporary music so I relaxed in
my seat and enjoyed the ride home from Arlington
to Fort Worth .
After
a few songs, the announcer introduced a beautiful song by this singing
group. Right away I knew the arrangement
would be voices only, and in a few seconds, I was able to confirm my
hypothesis. I was very familiar with the song but dared not sing along with
it. So lovely and harmonious were the
individual voices that any attempt on my part would have marred the music. Despite the fact there were three distinct
voices coming from the radio, the group had its own distinctive sound. One voice the more, or one voice the less,
and the performance would have been completely different and not at all
inspiring.
From
these three people came one gorgeous sound.
Their voices blended as one, speaking the same words, carrying the same
message, each voice joining with the others in perfect union and harmony. For the next several minutes I was deeply
moved and encouraged as this song ministered to my heart. The only thing I could concentrate on was how
perfectly and how lovingly these voices blended into one to share the truth of
God’s love and mercy and to praise Him.
As
the song ended, I couldn’t help but think of Jesus’ words at the Last Supper
recorded in John 13-17. As he spends
these last moments with his disciples, Jesus teaches them about washing the
each other’s feet, about loving each other, and he calls them friends instead
of servants. In John 17, Jesus prays a
prayer known as the High Priestly prayer of Christ. In this prayer he prays for
unity among believers so that we may be one in mind, heart, and spirit as we
serve God.
John 17:20-21 gives us these words
of Jesus: "My prayer is not for them alone. I pray also for those who will
believe in me through their message, that all of them may be one, Father, just
as you are in me and I am in you. May they also be in us so that the world may
believe that you have sent me.” It
is indeed humbling to see that in addition to the disciples, Jesus prayed for
me and for you that night. Notice that
his prayer includes everyone who will believe because of the
disciples.
His
prayer, however, doesn’t stop there.
Jesus prays for us with a specific purpose in mind, that we would all be
one. Moreover, Jesus wants us to be one
in the same way as he and God are one.
That means completely and totally united with no differences among us
This was our Lord’s request for us yet the church today seems to be anything
but united. We are more concerned with
what our neighbor is wearing, the type of car he is driving, or the size of his
house than we are with his spiritual well-being. We are quick to point out where someone is
wrong and slow to acknowledge where someone is right. We spend more time talking about our fellow
Christians than we do with them and when we pray, it seems we pray at our
brothers and sisters instead of with them or for them.
T
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his
is not what Jesus meant when he prayed that we be united in spirit and in
love. The song on the radio captured my
attention because three distinct voices blended into one. Although of different registers and ranges,
they united into one sound with one common purpose; that purpose was sharing
the good news of Jesus Christ to all those listening to their testimony. Oh that we would take a great lesson from
this today and apply it to our own Christian lives. Are we united with our brothers and
sisters? Do we take time to listen to
them? Do we really care about them and
the burdens they are carrying? Do we
love them as Jesus commanded us to do?
Jesus is asking us the same question that he asked those twelve men
sitting with him around the table that evening, “How about a little harmony?”
What will your answer be?
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