Clone the Shepherd!
I just
finished reading a fine article by a brother about the
dangers of cloning and the sin involved if it is ever done
for the wrong reasons. But part of his article made me
think of one way in which we have a great need for clones
in the church. In the article he said, “Especially
pertinent is the question of human cloning. Newsweek asked
the question, ‘Today the sheep - tomorrow the
shepherd?’” Yes, clone the Shepherd!
Too many
in the church are cloned from other sheep or those in the
world. We want to LOOK
like everybody else, DRESS
like everybody else, SPEND like everybody else, BE
like everybody else. When others change, we change. We do
everything we can to fit in with the Smith’s and keep up
with the Jones’. We are simply cloning ourselves after
sheep.
There
are examples of those in the Bible who had a choice
between being cloned after the sheep or the Shepherd. In 1
Sam. 15 Saul had a choice to make: utterly destroy the
Amalekites as the Lord instructed (vs. 3), or spare the
best as the people desired (vs. 21). We know his choice (vss.
9, 24). He was cloned after the sheep. We also know the
result (26).
The
rulers in Jn. 12:42 faced much the same decision. They
heard the word of the Shepherd proclaimed and believed it.
But would they be cloned after Him? At the present they
were cloned after the Pharisees. They decided to stay as
they were, “for they loved the praise of men more than
the praise of God” (vs. 43).
It is
time to clone the Shepherd! The apostles were His clones.
In Acts 5 they are being persecuted for following Him, but
in vs. 29 they boldly say, “We ought to obey God rather
than men.” Oh, for more people with that attitude today!
Paul
makes it clear after whom he is cloned. In Gal. 1:10 he
says, “For do I now persuade men, or God? Or do I seek
to please men? For if I still pleased men, I would not be
a bondservant of Christ.” Notice that Paul admits at one
point in his life he was cloned after men (“if I STILL
pleased men”). But in Acts 9 the Shepherd comes into
Paul’s life, and he becomes a changed man. In 1 Cor.
11:1 we see the cloning of Paul to be like the Shepherd
when he says, “Imitate me, just as I also imitate
Christ.”
Can we
speak like Paul to others? Are we imitating the Savior to
that degree? Have we cloned the sheep or the Shepherd?
Clone the Shepherd!
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