(A)Christians...
Illustration
(A)
Christians have more to be concerned about than only their personal affairs. Paul lists: marriage, mourning, rejoicing, buying and selling. His specific view was that unmarried persons would be less encumbered considering the insecure contemporary situation. Several things have been added since Paul's time to cause anxiety and which need to be reckoned with as "the form of this world is (also) passing away." Atomic destruction, the ozone layer, the energy and resource crisis, crime, a hungry world, the implications of space travel all have the potential to make Paul's statement literally true. No Christian, in good conscience, can sit back and do nothing.
Georgia Harkness says personal religion when it is consistent with the gospel
must not stop with the individual or his immediate surroundings. It must fruit into action to challenge and overcome the evils of society with its poverty, ignorance, and disease, its wars and destructive conflicts, its prejudice, oppression, chicanery and quest for profit and power, its insensitivity to the needs of persons. [Georgia Harkness, Understanding the Kingdom of God (Nashville: Abingdon, 1974), p. 142.]
-- Dean
Christians have more to be concerned about than only their personal affairs. Paul lists: marriage, mourning, rejoicing, buying and selling. His specific view was that unmarried persons would be less encumbered considering the insecure contemporary situation. Several things have been added since Paul's time to cause anxiety and which need to be reckoned with as "the form of this world is (also) passing away." Atomic destruction, the ozone layer, the energy and resource crisis, crime, a hungry world, the implications of space travel all have the potential to make Paul's statement literally true. No Christian, in good conscience, can sit back and do nothing.
Georgia Harkness says personal religion when it is consistent with the gospel
must not stop with the individual or his immediate surroundings. It must fruit into action to challenge and overcome the evils of society with its poverty, ignorance, and disease, its wars and destructive conflicts, its prejudice, oppression, chicanery and quest for profit and power, its insensitivity to the needs of persons. [Georgia Harkness, Understanding the Kingdom of God (Nashville: Abingdon, 1974), p. 142.]
-- Dean
