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Dealing with laryngitis the
last week or so has been a new experience for me. I have had sore
throats before, but I have never lost my voice. It was strange to try to
talk, and have little or nothing come out. It is hard enough to
communicate through those speakers at the restaurant drive through under
normal circumstances, but impossible with laryngitis. The more I tried
to speak up to let my voice be heard, the less volume I had! It was also
hard to communicate to the hard of hearing, and to those who were in
noisy places.
Laryngitis is bad news for a
preacher, for sure. It makes it so hard to communicate the message that
the world needs to hear. I wonder, though, if we as Christians sometimes
have spiritual laryngitis.
Brother David Lipscomb
believed that Christians had no place in the political world, not even
to vote. I have read that he only voted once in his life, and was very
disappointed in the man he voted for. While I agree that there are many
things about politics that are contrary to the principles of
Christianity, I believe that it is not only the right, but the
responsibility of Christians to vote and voice their opinions on issues.
When we have little or no voice in the political or governmental realm,
we allow the devil to set public policy.
An even more serious area
where we sometimes have spiritual laryngitis, though, is in sharing the
gospel message to those around us. The world is a noisy place, and it
very easily drowns out our voice if we are not persistent in speaking
out. We may even feel like we should just give up. That is the way
Jeremiah felt. “Then I said, I will not make mention of him, nor speak
any more in his name. But his word was in mine heart as a burning fire
shut up in my bones, and I was weary with forbearing, and I could not
stay” (Jeremiah 20:9). The burning fire of the word in the heart will
cure spiritual laryngitis.
There are also those
around us who are hard of hearing, spiritually speaking. Paul warned,
“For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but
after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having
itching ears; And they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and
shall be turned unto fables.” Even in that situation, we must continue
to speak out the truth of God. “But watch thou in all things, endure
afflictions, do the work of an evangelist, make full proof of thy
ministry’ (2 Timothy 4:3-5). The cure for the religious fables of our
day is the truth of the gospel of Christ.
Speak Up
by Bob Prichard
www.oxfordchurchofchrist.com |