Honor All People
“Honor all people, love the brotherhood, fear God, honor the
king” (1 Pet. 2:17).
When Peter tells us we should honor
all people, he is speaking of showing esteem to others, to bestow special marks
of favor on someone, to
prize, to assign worth or value. It is used of the attitude children should
have toward their parents (Eph. 6:2), of kings or those in authority (1 Pet.
2:17), of God and Christ (John 5:22-23), and of everyone (Rom. 12:10).
This
principle is true because we all are created in the image of God. We may feel
some people are not worthy of honor due to their conduct. Interestingly, when
Peter wrote 1 Peter and exhorted his readers to “honor the king (emperor),” he
was speaking of Nero. While we certainly should not emulate ungodly and sinful
behavior, we can still acknowledge the love of God for all, that He does not
desire any to be lost, and that all deserve to hear the gospel that can change one’s
heart, behavior, and eternal destination.
This
concept of honor is rooted in not only in our being created in the image of
God, but in that God honors those who reflect that image. This basic principle
is emphasized when God confronted Eli with putting his sons over Him. “Therefore,
the LORD God of Israel declares, ‘I
did indeed say that your house and the house of your father should walk before
Me forever’; but now the LORD
declares, ‘Far be it from Me—for those who honor Me I will honor, and those who
despise Me will be lightly esteemed’” (1 Sam. 2:30). The term lightly
esteemed carries the thought of considering something as trivial. Obviously,
God is not trivial, nor should those He made in His image be considered as such
either. “’Do I have any pleasure at all that the
wicked should die?’ says the Lord GOD,
‘and not that he should turn from his ways and live?’”
(Ezek. 18:23).
Some time back I was helping someone
who was in obvious need. As I did my best to help him through the difficulties
he was facing, he looked at me and said, “Everyone tries to take advantage of
me. Do you think bad about me because of who I am?” I assured him he was just
as important to God as anyone else is, since he was made in His image. With
this, he unexpectedly embraced me and thanked me. There are those in desperate
situations, who just need to hear some kind words and be reassured they have
worth and value.
The words of our Lord help us to do
what Peter encourages us to do. “Treat others the same way you want them
to treat you” (Luke 6:31). We know we all have sin and struggle to
overcome it. There are times when it gains the upper hand, and we have to deal
with its consequences. Isn’t it wonderful God still loves us as His children, that
knowing this, He still sent Christ to die for our sins, that He honors us when
we submit to Him and seek Him as an integral part of our lives? If we are
imitators of God, as beloved children (Eph. 5:1), we will take honoring each
other seriously. If we lose the desire to honor God, it’s no wonder we lose our
desire to honor each other, and ultimately lose our respect for ourselves as
God’s creation. Thus we find, in a society and world where self is exalted
above everyone else, the issues that plague us.
May we honor all people, because we
honor God. We will be amazed at the difference it makes in people’s lives, and
ultimately, in ourselves.
μαράνα
θᾶ
Robert
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