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							There is a scene in the Bible — Matthew 11 — where 
							John the Baptist sends one of his disciples to ask 
							Jesus a question: “Are you the one who is to come, 
							or are we to wait for another?” It is one thing to 
							do the dirty work for a friend and ask a girl 
							whether she thinks he is cool or whatever, but it is 
							another thing to ask the Messiah if he really is, 
							well, the Messiah.
 Are you really the one?
 
 Jesus turns to the poor fellow, whose knees I 
							imagine were knocking as loud as the bass drummer in 
							the grade school band, and says, “Go and tell John 
							what you hear and see: the blind receive their 
							sight, the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, the 
							deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the poor have 
							good news brought to them. And blessed is anyone who 
							takes no offense at me.”
 
 Wait. What?
 That’s it? Nothing else? No Roman Road, or long, 
							detailed analysis of the Hebrew Scriptures? No 
							theological declaration that articulates the 
							Trinity?
 
 Just “Go and tell…”
 
 Notice how Jesus doesn’t answer the question with a 
							‘yes’ or a ‘no.” Also, isn’t it interesting how 
							Jesus does not proclaim himself but proclaims the 
							reign and love of God in this interaction? 
							Ultimately Jesus came among the people to serve 
							them, bringing life. Instead of casting away those 
							persons who are at the margins of society -- persons 
							that many would want to send away and out of sight 
							-- it is precisely to those people that the Messiah 
							came to restore and save.
 
 Some of us at First Presbyterian Church are reading 
							a book titled Acts of Faith: The Story of an 
							American Muslim, the Struggle for the Soul of a 
							Generation by Eboo Patel. In it, Eboo recalls a 
							moment in his journey of faith when he ran across a 
							guy who was always starting up new clubs at his 
							college. When Eboo asked why he always was doing 
							something, his colleague replied, “Because the most 
							important thing you can learn is how to turn an idea 
							into reality…”
 
 
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							So I ask you, what have you seen? If all you have 
							seen is the ‘bad’, I invite you then to step back, 
							take a deep breath, and listen with your eyes for 
							the goodness of God. As you do, it is my hope you’ll 
							recognize how Jesus comes among us in His Word and 
							through the Spirit to stir us up, to get involved in 
							his ministry among those who are left out, on the 
							margins of society, and who are in need.
 Our involvement need not be as extravagant and 
							exciting as restoring sight to the blind and hearing 
							to the deaf. Rather, what God may stir up with us is 
							to remind people of their beloved-ness, to see 
							people as the beautiful creation they are, and to 
							tell others about the goodness and love of God.
 
 Chances are, this won’t answer any real questions. 
							But it might inspire hope, bringing to fruition the 
							very real idea that God loves the world…
 
							
							So friends, tell the world what you have seen. Tell 
							your colleagues about God’s love by exhibiting God’s 
							love. Change the world by loving! Change the 
							community by loving! Change yourself by loving!
 
							
							[Pastor Adam Quine of First Presbyterian Church 
							in Lincoln]
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