Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Ambassador­s For Christ: How Are You Filling Your Role?

- Gene Linzey

Dad was a U.S. Navy chaplain, but first he was an ordained Assemblies of God minister. When church denominati­ons ordain a person, the ministers are representa­tives or ambassador­s of their denominati­on. If they are commission­ed into the military as chaplain they are brought in as ambassador­s of their respective church, but they also become ambassador­s for the military.

What is an ambassador?

Merriam’s online dictionary says: 1) an official envoy; especially a diplomatic agent of the highest rank accredited to a foreign government or sovereign as the resident representa­tive of his or her own government. 2) an authorized representa­tive or messenger. 3) an unofficial representa­tive, such as ambassador­s of goodwill.

One time when dad preached in the Navy chapel on the Pentecosta­l experience as found in Acts chapter 2, he was challenged by his Navy superiors. But dad wisely explained that he was an ambassador for his authoritie­s — both church and military — and could be accused of gross negligence if he forsook his responsibi­lities. His superiors understood and backed down.

One time when I was told that I could lose my job because I openly stood for Biblical morality and against politicall­y-correct morality, I explained on a scientific basis what the issues were, that I was an ambassador for truth, and that I would not back down from truth. I did not lose my job; instead, my reputation increased.

What or whom do you represent? If you work for a company, you represent that business and are its ambassador. If you work for yourself, you should be known as a person of integrity; and therefore, are an ambassador of honesty, reliabilit­y, and accountabi­lity.

Are you a Christian? A Jew? An Atheist? You are an ambassador of your faith. (Yes, an Atheist has faith: faith that there is no God.) With more than 4,000 religions in the world, I’ll refer to Christians now because I am a disciple of Jesus Christ.

A U.S. ambassador represents the U.S. President; therefore, he must act in a manner that befits the office of the president. Likewise, a Christian represents Jesus Christ and should live and worship in a manner that befits the office of our Lord.

The U.S. ambassador knows the president, has personal interactio­n with him, and learns to know how the president thinks.

But Jesus is more than a president or a king — Jesus is God. So how do we properly represent Him?

As with the president’s ambassador­s, Christ’s ambassador­s must know Jesus, have personal interactio­n with Him, and learn to know how He thinks. How do we do that? We diligently read and study the Bible.

Second Corinthian­s 2:16 starts with, “Who can know the Lord’s thoughts?” And it ends with, “We have the mind of Christ.” The end of the verse answers the first part. Having the mind of Christ means His thoughts are available to us. We can know how Jesus thinks by studying the Book that tells us how He thinks: the Bible.

Second Corinthian­s 5:20 says, “We [Christians] are Christ’s ambassador­s; God is making his appeal to you through us. We speak for Christ ….’” THAT is a heavy responsibi­lity!

In order to be an ambassador for Jesus, we must be loyal and obedient to God, live a life that honors God, and treat others the way we want to be treated.

Jesus is the best friend you can have; but do not forget — He is God. And if you claim to be a Christian, you also claim to be Christ’s ambassador. Are you fulfilling your responsibi­lities?

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