Acknowledging Our Citizenship
[每日靈修] 2/22/2019, 未譯
My
wife and I were traveling in Eastern Europe with another couple several years
ago. When we crossed the border from Hungary to Romania, three burly,
rough-looking soldiers boarded the train to check our passports and examine our
luggage. Their leader indicated that he wanted to see our passports. As we
handed them to him, he pointed to our luggage. As I rose to reach for a large
suitcase, he suddenly stopped me. In broken English, he said, “Wait! You not
American!” Then he looked at the woman who was traveling with us and said, “You
not American.”
I
must confess I was gripped by a vise of fear. The man pointed to a paper bag
our friend had on the seat beside her. “What is that?” he asked, pointing to
the edges of a book that protruded out of the top of the bag. She pulled out
her Bible. I gulped, thinking to myself, “Now, we are in real trouble.”
The
soldier took the Bible and began to leaf through its pages. He opened to the
second chapter of Ephesians and pointed to verse 19. He ordered: “Read.” We
read aloud, “Now, therefore, you are no longer strangers and foreigners, but
fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of God.”
Instantly,
the soldier’s face radiated with a benevolent smile as he said: “You not
American. I not Romanian. We are citizens of heaven.” Then he turned to his
fellow troops and said, “These people okay.” He returned our passports and bade
us Godspeed.
Coram
Deo
Thank
God for your citizenship in heaven.
Passages
for Further Study
Psalm
133:1–2
Ephesians
4:4–5