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But [we are different, because] our citizenship is in heaven. (Philippians 3:20 Amp)
After describing those who are enemies of the cross, Paul reminds believers that we are different. And we shouldn’t be surprised when people treat us as if we are different – because we are and we should be! And Paul gives us the reason we’re different: it’s because our citizenship is in heaven.
Most of you reading this devotion are citizens of the United States of America. The status of citizenship in our country gives us specific rights, duties, and benefits. As we speak, people are taking great risks and making huge sacrifices as they clamor across our borders – eagerly desiring to be a citizen of our country and enjoy the benefits of living in a nation that embraces freedom.
Citizens often complain about some of the duties – paying taxes, repaying debts, obeying the laws of the land – and forget that because of those duties, they have the benefit of living in a free country.
In junior high, one of the required courses was “Citizenship.” I don’t remember much from that class but I do know we had to memorize the Preamble to the Constitution: “We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”
As believers, we have dual citizenship – we are citizens of an earthly country; but, more importantly, we are citizens of the kingdom of Heaven. Do you ever wonder why people are not clamoring to be a citizen in the kingdom of Heaven with the same level of risk and sacrifice of those earthly folks eagerly seeking citizenship in America?
Do others know that your citizenship is in Heaven? Do others know that your priorities are eternal?
Would you join me in affirming this faith statement, sort of a preamble to our citizenship in God’s kingdom:
We, the people, the citizens of Heaven, in order to enter God’s perfect kingdom, to dwell in a place where perfect love has cast out all fear, where sin and lawlessness do not exist, where wars, sicknesses, tears, and hatred no longer have a home, where the mystery of the Trinity is revealed, where the Light of the world is quite literally the light of Heaven, do hereby accept by faith the grace gift of God -- His Son, Jesus Christ -- and put our trust, our joy, and our hope in Him alone.
By Judy Shrout
Judy’s life has taken a winding path of service in the church that led to her writing of devotions – for such
a time as this.
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