Luke 6:12-16
At that time Jesus went up a hill to pray and spent
the whole night there praying to God. 13 When day came, he called his disciples
to him and chose twelve of them, whom he named apostles: 14 Simon (whom he
named Peter) and his brother Andrew; James and John, Philip and Bartholomew, 15
Matthew and Thomas, James son of Alphaeus, and Simon (who was called the
Patriot), 16 Judas son of James, and Judas Iscariot, who became the traitor.
Food for thought!
Jesus needs all of us. This passage reminds us that
Jesus can and does use all of us. As we look at the kind of men Jesus chose and
used in those days, it gives us hope in these days. If Jesus can use men like
those he used and in the manner that He did, then surely He can use you and me
in these days.
Jesus chose a very mixed group. In it the two
extremes met. Matthew was a tax-collector and, therefore, an outcast; he was a
renegade and a traitor to his fellow countrymen. Simon the Cananaean was a Zealot; and the Zealots were a band of fiery, violent nationalists who were
pledged even to murder and assassination to clear their country of the foreign
rulers; today we call such as these terrorists. Between Matthew and Simon there
were all kinds of backgrounds and opinions, there are all of us. Only Jesus can
bring us together and keep us together.
Judging them by worldly standards the men Jesus
chose had no special qualifications at all. They were not wealthy; they had no
special social position; they had no special education--they were not trained
theologians; they were not high-ranking churchmen and ecclesiastics; they were
twelve ordinary men. But they had two special qualifications.
The fact that Jesus was able to use these men with
all their weaknesses and failures lets me know that he can use us too. These
men lacked spiritual understanding. They lacked humility. They lacked faith.
They lacked commitment. They lacked power. These men were always getting into
trouble; missing the point or Christ’s teachings; saying the wrong thing;
walking away from their commitment to Jesus; among other failures and problems.
Despite their weaknesses, the Lord used these men to turn the world upside down
for His glory. If he can use them, surely he can use us too! That gives me and
you hope today!
With these men, Jesus set a precedent of looking,
not so much for extraordinary people, as for ordinary people who can do
ordinary things extraordinarily well. Jesus sees in everybody, not only what
that man or woman is, but also what he can make him or her. Jesus chose these
men, not only for what they were, but also for what they were capable of
becoming under his influence and in his power. Yes, under Jesus you and I can
become different and can make a difference in your world.
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