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							I’m not sure of the first time I 
							heard the phrase, Meet Your Maker; maybe some old 
							cowboy movie, “Prepare to meet your maker Billy 
							Ray!” or perhaps a friend riding in my car, “Slow 
							down, I’m not ready to meet my maker today!” or 
							maybe it was some preacher from the past, “One day, 
							we will all meet our maker.” Regardless, this 
							expression has been around a long time. For 
							Christians, it is a part of our basic beliefs that, 
							after death, we all return to God to be judged by 
							our creator, our maker. 
 But there is more to meeting our maker than just 
							that moment of our last breath. We can meet Him 
							right now, right where you live! We’re invited to 
							come close and meet our maker each and every day. 
							The more we get to know Him, the more we will begin 
							to imitate Him.
 
 We get the privilege of modeling our maker to the 
							people around us. We get to show others God’s love 
							and grace and joy and forgiveness. We mirror our 
							maker. After all, we’re made in His image.
 
 My three-year-old granddaughter has started walking 
							around spitting. Not at anyone, just on the ground. 
							According to her mother, my daughter, it was 
							something she saw me doing and started imitating me. 
							You could say she is the spitting image of me (when 
							you read this, know that I’m still giggling).
 
 We are constantly in danger of letting the world 
							define our image instead of God. It is only natural 
							to shape our self-image by the attitudes and 
							opinions of our parents, our peer groups and our 
							society. But what is natural is not always healthy. 
							It is only when we define ourselves by the truths of 
							God’s Word rather than the thinking and experiences 
							of the world that we can discover the identity our 
							maker dreamed for us. God wants us to look like Him.
 
 Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote a short story called “The 
							Great Stone Face.” The story is about a mountain 
							overlooking a village, and on this mountain within 
							the rock formations was a clearly defined stone face 
							of a kind old man. Legend has it that one day a man 
							with that face would come and visit the village and 
							he would be a wonderful blessing to all the 
							villagers.
 A boy named Ernest heard that legend, loved the 
							story, and longed for that man to come soon. The boy 
							would gaze continually upon that great stone face, 
							studying its contours and contemplating all the ways 
							that man could bring a blessing to that village.
 
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							As Ernest grew older, he often would 
							take long walks out to the great stone face and just 
							sit and gaze at it. It was a daily practice for 
							Ernest to spend time at the Great Stone Face. Ernest 
							became more and more well-known for his kindness and 
							love for the village he was a part of, and he became 
							known for his wisdom and care for the villagers. One 
							day, a man was walking with Ernest past the Great 
							Stone Face and as the man looked at the mountain and 
							looked at Ernest his mouth suddenly dropped open in 
							shock and he said with great joy, “Ernest, you look 
							just like the Great Stone Face.” Suddenly, the man 
							threw his arms around Ernest and shouted again, 
							“Behold! Ernest is the likeness of the Great Stone 
							Face!” Ernest had become like the one he beheld. 
 We each are asked to become more and more like our 
							maker. But in order to mirror Him well, we need to 
							know Him well. If we’re to become like Him, we must 
							first study His face. If we’re ever to be His 
							spitting image, we must come close and adopt His 
							ways.
 Our world is in a desperate state of needing to see 
							God. They need His love, His kindness, His grace, 
							and His joy more than ever. You and I are their best 
							chances of seeing Him today.
 
 
							[Ron Otto, Preaching Minister at 
							Lincoln Christian Church in Lincoln] |