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year, 1973. The place, South
Elementary School . The teacher, Mrs. Sarah Beam. The mission,
create a notebook containing information on the fifty US states. Opportunity
to reject the mission, non-existent! And
so my adventure in the fourth grade began.
Every kid in my class was offered the same deal, do a notebook or else. To my knowledge, no one ever explored the “or
else” option. Mrs. Beam assigned the
project at the beginning of the school year and gave us deadlines for the
different sections. The rest was up to
us. Oh yeah, and our parents!
My
mom and dad were very instrumental in this project. Mom and dad made the cover for the notebook
using wood, hinges, and brackets. It really was quite pretty with its red,
white, and blue paint, the decals of the U.S. Constitution, and the added touch
of a small feather indicating the document had just been signed. The cover, however, was nothing without the
information to go inside and this is where mom and I spent hour upon hour
writing the reports on the various states.
For
each state, we would make a fact sheet.
This sheet contained basic information concerning population, location,
major products, the capital, the year it entered the union, its nickname, and
the state’s motto. Mom would read the
information from the encyclopedia and I would write what she dictated. We did this for each state. Some states had
long entries and some were less involved but it was a great learning
experience, even though I thought differently at the time. I wanted to watch Gilligan’s Island , not talk about the soybean products of Midwestern
states!
Finally,
we came to my home state, North Carolina. I wrote the now familiar information on the
pages. Raleigh was our capital, our population was a
few million people, we produced tobacco, furniture, etc. and our motto was “Esse Quam
Videri” Latin for to be, rather than to seem. At the time, I didn’t think much about our
state’s motto. I simply wanted to finish
the entry and watch Gilligan’s Island . I was so glad the motto was short and to the
point. I really wanted to be in front of
the television rather than seem interested in my project.
Jesus touches on the
message of being rather than seeming in the twenty-third chapter of Matthew’s
gospel. In this chapter, Jesus addresses
the Pharisees and warns his listeners against duplicating their religious
lifestyle and piety. In Matthew 23:2-3 our Lord says, “The teachers of
the law and the Pharisees sit in Moses’ seat. So you must obey them and do
everything they tell you. But do not do what they do, for they do not practice
what they preach.” Notice the
charge against the Pharisees. They do
not practice what they preach. In other words, they seem
to be one thing but in fact are something
else. This is what we call being a
hypocrite and that is just how Jesus addresses them in the remaining verses of
the chapter.
How does this apply to
us today? It applies directly! One of the consistent criticisms against
Christians is that we claim to be followers of Jesus but live like everyone
else. We are willing to tell others what
they should do or more likely what they should not do yet we do not practice what
we preach. Jesus accused the Pharisees
of working very hard to gain one single convert and then living a life
completely opposite to their profession of faith. He accused them of wanting to bask in the
limelight and to receive recognition for their religious service and devotion
and he accused them of worshiping the Temple
more than the one who lived therein.
Lest we be too hard on
the Pharisees, we need to take a good look at ourselves today. Everywhere we are erecting huge buildings
with tall steeples, air conditioned auditoriums, and state-of-the-art
systems. We can tell someone the square
footage and the price of the building as if they were indicators of the
church’s effectiveness.
On a more personal
note, we attend church each time the doors are open, we serve on all the
committees, and we raise money and collect items for different projects in
which the church is involved. We pat
ourselves on the back and enjoy the recognition of our peers for the service we
have rendered. But do these activities
make us effective Christians? That is
the question, isn’t it? That’s where the
rubber meets the road, doesn’t it? Jesus
has called us not to “seem” Christ-like but to “be” Christ-like and there is a
world of difference in these two small words.
In fact, they are completely opposite!
Today, it is my prayer
for us all that we are being Christian instead of seeming Christian. Jesus had one word for the Pharisees because
they did not practice what they preached. That word was hypocrite and he had no
tolerance for hypocrisy. Where are we today? Are we being or seeming? Esse Quam Videri!
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