“Ambassadors”
BIBLE READING: 11Corinthians 5-7
“We are therefore Christ’s ambassadors. . . .” — 2 Corinthians 5:20
When a sovereign nation has diplomatic
relations with another country, it appoints an ambassador to be its representative
in that foreign land. In today’s verses Paul describes us as
Christ’s ambassadors. And what does this mean? Well, we can see some
similarities in the roles of diplomats still today. Ambassadors go to live in
a foreign culture, just as followers of Christ live in the
world but are not of the world (John 17:14-19), being citizens of heaven.
Ambassadors are also the face of the country they
represent. If they are rude and crass, they make a negative impression. As
Christians, we represent the one who “died for all.” As a result, we live “for
him who died for them and was raised again.” Our demeanor, generosity,
sacrifice, and love are to show others what Jesus has done for us.
In Paul’s day, though, ambassadors from Rome were
different from most ambassadors today. They were representatives in a land that
would soon become a province of the Roman Empire. So they were responsible to
bring others into the Roman family.
Our situation as
ambassadors for Christ is similar in some ways. While we are not to be militant
empire makers, we must recognize, as Paul puts it, that it is “as though God is
making his appeal through us.” Through the work of our Savior, we are
ambassadors of reconciliation as we introduce others to Christ and help bring
them into the family of God. -Gerrit
Bomhof
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