By Alan Smith
English sign in German cafe: "Mothers, Please Wash Your Hans
Before Eating."
On a scientist's door: "Gone Fission"
Outside a hotel: "Help! We need inn-experienced
people."
On a music teacher's door: "Out Chopin."
On the door of a music library: "Bach in a minuet."
At a farmer's field: "The farmer allows walkers to cross the
field for free, but the bull charges."
In a podiatrist's window: "Time wounds all heels."
At the Electric Company: "We would be de-lighted if you send
in your bill. However, if you don't, you will be."
On Maternity Room door: "Push, Push, Push"
Sign on fence: "Salesmen welcome. Dog food is expensive."
Muffler shop: "No appointment necessary. We'll hear
you coming."
Veterinarian's waiting room: "Be back in 5 minutes.
Sit! Stay!"
Optometrist's office: "If you don't see what you're looking
for, you've come to the right place."
That last sign is just a humorous
way of saying that it is only those people who are sick who
are in need of the doctor. And isn't that what Jesus
himself said?
"Those who are well have no need of a
physician, but those who are sick. I did not come to call
the righteous, but sinners, to repentance." (Mark 2:17)
Jesus and the Pharisees often had
conflict over the "sinners". The Pharisees drew a
sharp dividing line between the righteous and the
sinners. No good Jew would ever associate with "that
kind of people."
But, while the feeling of the
religious leaders was contempt and disgust for sinners, that
certainly wasn’t the attitude of Jesus. Jesus often
ate and drank with them and invited one of them (Levi) to be
one of his apostles. The Pharisees accused Jesus of
being the "friend of tax-collectors and sinners." But
to Jesus, that was a compliment. And it is perhaps the
most endearing and touching description of our Lord.
Jesus didn't come to hobnob with
the religious elite. He came to save sinners. He
didn't come to make small talk with people too blind to see
how sin-sick they truly were. He came to be a doctor
to those who were sick and knew it. It wasn't those
who claimed to be "righteous" who commanded Christ's
attention. It was the "sinners" he came looking for.
Sometimes we need to be reminded
that the church is not a place for people who are perfect,
but rather a place for those who are sick (with sin) who are
seeking healing at the hands of the Great Physician.
Don't stay away from church because
you don't have it all together. Come and find healing
along with the rest of us who don't have it all together
either.
Have a great day!
- Alan Smith, author of the popular "Thought For Today," and
minister for the Fayetteville Church of Christ in
Fayetteville, NC, may be contacted at
alansmith.servant@gmail.com
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