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Often at the beginning of a new year, we determine to make some healthy changes in our lives – hoping
to achieve something new in the new year. One year I found and read a book on this very topic: Have a
New You by Friday by Kevin Leman -- with the subtitle How to Accept Yourself, Boost Your Confidence,
and Change Your Life in 5 Days. And just in case you perfected that endeavor, there was also Have a
New Husband by Friday, Have a New Kid by Friday, and Have a New Teenager by Friday. As I remember,
I read them all. They were witty, fun to read, and did offer some practical suggestions.
Although we can get an advanced degree in human psychology, legislatures can pass laws for us to obey,
we may modify language to change meanings, we cannot change hearts. We cannot legislate kindness.
We cannot legislate love.
Only Christ can change hearts. When Christ made us new, He changed our hearts. When Jesus came and
made us a new creation, He didn’t water down the Jewish people and clean up the Gentiles. He didn’t
throw all the characteristics in a pot, stir it up, and voila! – something new! The new creation was not a
combination of the two – the new creation was all new! To help us understand what this term “new”
means, let’s try to get a visual.
When we were children getting ready for a new school year, we went to the store (before online
shopping) and bought brand new pencils. They looked just like last year’s no. 2 pencils – but they were
new unsharpened ones. Let’s say some genius comes along and creates a completely new and different
kind of writing instrument or method of writing – it’s not new like the new pencil – it’s completely
different. That’s how different we should be from the old way of living!
In America, we have many who identify as hyphenated Americans – usually referring to where their
family originated. In the Christian community, where Christ has changed hearts and made us new, He
also made us one. We are Christians – with no hyphen. When we stand and worship our Lord of Lord
and King of Kings, we are one in Christ – no longer strangers and foreigners, but fellow citizens with the
saints and members of the household of God… (Ephesians 2:19).
And if we welcome the work of Christ in us making us new and making us one, we will be the answer to
this part of Jesus’ prayer: “…that the world may believe that You sent Me” (John 17:20-21).
By Judy Shrout
Judy is the wife of Tom, mother of Heather, mother-in-law of Jim, grandmom to T.J., Ainsley, and
Maggie, and grandmother-in-law to Piper.
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