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In this Daily Devotion, the main idea is about Jesus teaching his disciples not to be exclusive and judgmental towards others. One of the disciples, John, complained about someone outside their group performing miracles in Jesus' name. Jesus corrected them, saying that anyone who does good in his name is on his side. He emphasized that the focus should be on the person's relationship with Christ and the fruit of their ministry, rather than their association with a specific group. Jesus reminded them that his kingdom is larger than just one church or denomination. While there are boundaries to be drawn, it's important to not exclude those who truly belong to Christ. The personal worship option suggested is to pray for a mindset that sees and accepts others as God does. Welcome to Christchurch's Daily Devotion for May 21st, 2024. Today we will be reading from Mark Chapter 9, Verses 38-41. Teacher, said John, we saw someone driving out demons in your name, and we told him to stop, because he was not one of us. Do not stop him, Jesus said, for one who does a miracle in my name can in the next moment say anything bad about me. For whosoever is not against us is for us. Truly I tell you, anyone who gives you a cup of water in my name because you belong to the Messiah will certainly not lose their reward. Arguments over who was the greatest in which the disciples engaged on their way to Jerusalem, Mark 9, 33-34, demonstrate that the disciples were focused on exclusivity in an unhealthy way during Jesus' earthly ministry. Each of them wanted to be in the select category called greatest, which by definition excludes everyone except its one member. Each disciple wanted, in essence, to put a wall around himself with a sign that said, herein stands the greatest, no one else allowed. The exclusionary attitude on the individual level operated also on a larger group level. As indicated in today's passage, Mark 9, 38, records that Apostle John's complaint that some people outside the band of disciples who constantly followed Jesus were performing exorcisms in Jesus' name. Immediately, John's protest showed that something was wrong with his understanding. The complaint was that the man was not following us, not that he was not following you, Jesus. John had a misplaced sense of priorities. His concern was that the man doing the exorcisms was not part of their little group. And he seemed to have cared little about the man's actual relationship to Jesus. In responding to John, Jesus said it was wrong for the disciples to try to stop the man, for his works showed that he was on the side of Jesus, even if he was not one of the twelve. Essentially, Jesus called John and the others to evaluate the man's relationship to Christ, not on the basis of the group to which he belonged, but on the basis of the fruit of his ministry. The man was bearing good fruit, so he should not have been treated as being outside the kingdom. This account demonstrates the error we make when we draw our boundaries in such a limited way that we exclude from God's kingdom anyone who is not part of the particular group to which we belong. Christ's kingdom is larger than one church or one denomination. Of course, this does not mean absolutely everyone who professes to follow Jesus is in fact one of his sheep. There are boundaries to be drawn. For example, Scripture tells us that those who do such things as deny the deity of Christ, John 8, 24, add our works to our justification, Galatians 1, 6-9, 5, 4, or advocate living in ways contrary to God's commandments, 2 Peter 2, are not true Christians. But we must be careful to draw boundaries only on essential matters, not be willing to work with those who truly belong to Christ, even if they are not part of our particular group or congregation. Your personal worship option today? Dear Heavenly Father, today I pray I take my eyes off of myself and see and accept others the way that you do.