tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6825243.post108299511688225223..comments2024-01-06T07:53:11.832-08:00Comments on disabled Christianity: Manifesting the works of GodJeff McNairhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10029386598033932429noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6825243.post-27431589847053935422013-12-05T16:49:19.727-08:002013-12-05T16:49:19.727-08:00This is a very interesting entry. I must confess ...This is a very interesting entry. I must confess that I have read this passage many times, and every time I would assume "the works of God" was exclusively referring to the miraculous healing performed by Jesus. But as this blog entry has pointed out, “the works of God” are so much more than that. When Jesus walked the earth He visited sinners, fed the hungry, acknowledged the lame and ostracized, listened to the poor, cried with those who cried, preached the gospel, and most importantly He loved one and all. If we truly regard Jesus as our role model, then we must do the things He did. The problem here, I believe, originates from Christians focusing too much on the miracles. We believe - because God is extraordinary, then His works must be extraordinary. And that is how we completely ignore all the other radical things Jesus did (previously mentioned) because we consider them simple and plain. How can paying attention to the lame be something worthy of praise? Well, the fact is this act represents what it means to do the works of God. I mean, how not to praise a person who, although living in a self-centered society, has the heart to stop and take some time to attend to the needs of the most forgotten members in our society? To be able to put the least of these before ourselves and to humbly serve them, that’s a miracle in itself.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com