===== Thursday's
Thought For The Day (Jan. 23, 2014)
=====
Lessons From LEGOS
The following
essay on "All I Ever Needed to Know I Learned From LEGOs" was written
by Steve Klusmeyer:
"Life
might be less complicated for all of us if we each received
our own LEGO kit at
birth. Yes, I realize there is a choking hazard for children under three. But
when you are old enough, you can learn a lot from LEGOs. I have learned that:
~ Size doesn't matter. When stepped on in the dark, a 2X2
LEGO brick causes the same amount of pain as a 2X8 brick.
~ All LEGO men are created equal (1.5625 inches tall).
What they become is limited only by imagination.
~ There is strength in numbers. When the bricks stick
together, great things can be accomplished.
~ Playtime is important. Sometimes it doesn't matter what
you are building, as long as you're having fun.
~ Disaster happens. But the pieces can be put back
together again.
~ Every brick has a purpose. Some are made for a specific
spot - most can adapt almost anywhere - but every one will fit somewhere.
~ Color doesn't matter. A blue brick will fit in the same
space as a red brick.
~ No one is indispensable. If one brick is unavailable,
another can take its place.
~ It doesn't always turn out as planned. Sometimes it
turns out better. If it doesn't, you can always try again.
I thought
about each of these statements as it relates to the church. Some of the statements apply more than
others. For example, unity is a biblical
concept. When Christians stick together,
great things can be accomplished (and color truly doesn't matter!).
And it is an
important biblical truth that every Christian has a purpose. As Paul describes it in I Corinthians 12
using the analogy of a human body, some of us are eyes, some are hands, still
others are feet, but we all have a purpose and a role.
But while it
is technically true that "no one is indispensable", the teaching of
scripture is that each one of us is needed and the body suffers greatly if we
don't do our part (I Cor. 12:20-22)
The greatest
comparison between Legos and Christianity, though, is that we are indeed a
building shaped by God's own hand. And
every Christian is a part of that building -- not a plastic building block, but
a "living stone":
"As you
come to him, the living Stone -- rejected by men but chosen by God and precious
to him -- you also, like living stones, are being built into a spiritual house
to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God
through Jesus Christ." (I Peter 2:4-5)
Have a great day!
Alan Smith
Helen Street Church of Christ
Fayetteville, North Carolina
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