When this phrase, "strangers and aliens", first gripped me it was in 1 Peter 2:11, where Peter reminds the believers scattered because of persecution that they are strangers and aliens in this world, so they should live like they are waiting on home and not try to get too comfy in a place they aren't made for anyway.
I've taken much solace from the fact that this broken place isn't the final destination. On the days when everything seems to be going wrong, I can remember that, as my friend Andrew says, "This world is fading, along with it's promises...and you who've held out hope will rise into His arms."
Last night, in our Life Together Group, we read Ephesians 2 together and this familiar phrase struck me in a new way. Paul is reminding the Gentile readers that they used to be excluded from the people and the promises of God, but now because of Jesus, they are "no longer strangers and aliens, but fellow citizens with God's people and members of God's household (v. 19)."
So, they used to be strangers and aliens to God and His people. Now, they are strangers and aliens to the world. One way or another, we are going to be strangers and aliens. The issue is to whom will we choose to belong? I know where I wanna land.
"Better is one day in your courtsIf feeling at home on earth means being cut off from you God, forget it! I would rather just stand at your door for one day than to feel cozy here on earth forever. "Blessed are those whose strength is in you, who have set their hearts on pilgrimage." (Psalm 84:5)
than a thousand elsewhere;
I would rather be a doorkeeper
in the house of my God
than dwell in the tents of the wicked." (Psalm 84:10)
I'll leave it with this quote from Gregg Allison I found as I looked up that 1 Peter verse on strangers and aliens (or, as some translations say, "sojourners and exiles"):
"...the church, living in the boundary epoch between the two advents of Jesus Christ, is composed of people who live their short (earthly) lives away from their home for the purpose of being on mission for and with God."What a beautiful truth! We are not home. Not in this world. God is our home, and though we aren't as fully with Him as we will be one day, even now He's given us His Spirit as a deposit guaranteeing our inheritance. Just like Jesus left home to come to earth and lived on mission for and with God, He now enables us to do the same for this short time (70, maybe 80 years, as Psalm 90 says) we have on earth. What a privilege! That we could be made like Jesus in that way staggers the mind.
So I'm praying with the psalmist:
"Teach us to number our days aright,
that we may gain a heart of wisdom." (Psalm 90:12)
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