A thought by Max Lucado (2011-05-02)
from his book, Cure for the Common Life (p. 51). Thomas Nelson. Kindle Edition. (Click on the title to
go to Amazon.com to buy the book.)
Max starts this chapter with, “Tucked away in the cedar chest of my memory is the image of a robust and rather rotund children’s Bible class teacher in a small West Texas church.”
He continues, “Here is why I tell you
about her. She enjoyed giving us each a can of crayons and a sketch of Jesus
torn from a coloring book. We each had our own can, mind you, reassigned from
cupboard duty to classroom. What had held peaches or spinach now held a dozen
or so Crayolas. ‘Take the crayons I gave you,’ she would instruct, ‘and color
Jesus.’ And so we would. We didn’t illustrate pictures of ourselves; we colored
the Son of God. We didn’t pirate crayons from other cans; we used what she gave
us. This was the fun of it. ‘Do the best you can with the can you get.’ No blue
for the sky? Make it purple. If Jesus’s hair is blond instead of brown, the
teacher won’t mind. She loaded the can. She taught us to paint Jesus with our
own colors.”
He goes on, “God made you to do
likewise. He loaded your can. He made you unique. But knowing what he gave you
is not enough. You need to understand why he gave it: so you could illustrate
Christ. Make a big deal out of him. Beautify his face; adorn his image… Don’t
waste years embellishing your own image. No disrespect, but who needs to see
your face? Who doesn’t need to see God’s?”
And there it is, that is why we are
here on this earth.
Max says, “Besides, God promises no
applause for self-promoters. But great reward awaits God-promoters: ‘Good work!
You did your job well’ (Matt. 25:23 MSG). My teacher gave us something similar.
Judging by her praise for our sketches, you’d think Rembrandt and van Gogh
attended her class. One by one she waved the just-colored Christs in the air. ‘Wonderful
work, Max. Just wonderful!’ I smiled the size of a cantaloupe slice. You will
too.”
You will too. As Max said earlier, “Use your uniqueness to
make a big deal out of God every day of your life.”
So will you do that today?
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