I
love the fall season, the weather, the colors associated with it, the
decorations, the pumpkin coffee. I put
out my fall decorations last week. Two
scarecrows sit in chairs on the front porch, fall leaf garlands stretch across
the front of the porch and around the door.
A squashed-looking pumpkin sits on a wire crate next to the front
door.
When
you get inside the house, you can smell the pumpkin candle. Bowls overflow with
pinecones and cinnamon sticks. There are
even tiny leaves and acorns and squirrels made from applesauce and cinnamon,
hanging from the hackberry tree and above the kitchen sink. My two favorites are the dried okra pods I spray-painted
copper and the pumpkins I made last year from old sweaters and real pumpkin
stems.
So
I’m finally getting around to why I tell you all this. As a retired teacher, I have not left my
habit of looking things up, even when I think the dictionary may not tell me
anything I don’t already know. This time
I looked up "decorate.” The
dictionary said “to furnish or adorn with something ornamental or
becoming.” This led to “adorn”: “to decorate or add beauty to make more
pleasing, attractive impressive.” Eventually
I got to “ornament—a person or thing that adds to the credit or glory of a
society.” I kept going, but I will have
mercy on you and not insist that you go as far as I did.
That
led me to a phrase of scripture. Titus
2:10 says that we are to “adorn the doctrine of God our Savior in every
respect.” Look at the context. Verses 7-10 say, “In all things show yourself
to be an example of good deeds, with purity in doctrine, dignified, sound in
speech which is beyond reproach. In order that the opponent may be put to shame,
having nothing bad to say about us. . .showing all good faith that they may
adorn the doctrine of God our Savior in every respect.” So how do we adorn the
doctrine of God? Our actions and character are our adornment. Just as you know
what season it is by looking at my decorations, others should know our
profession as Christians. We are living
in a period of history where actions or even alleged actions can cover the
sound of our words. Ralph Waldo Emerson is quoted as saying, “Your actions
speak so loudly, I cannot hear what you are saying.” We must be above reproach in order to be an
adornment.
Charles
G. Finney, an evangelist of the early eighteenth century said in discussing
this passage: “A holy life will command
the attention of the world, and they will inquire what this doctrine may
be. They are forced to exclaim—How
beautiful their lives are! And how sweet their temper! Who is this Savior whom they profess to
follow, and to whose influence they attribute their peculiar spirit and
life? If this doctrine begets such a spirit
and such a life, we ought to know it and ought to have it!”
May we adorn the doctrine of God! May we be His ornaments bringing glory to
Him.
~~Faith Himes Lamb