Travelers
Nearly 17 years ago those words showed me the difference between the person I had been and the one God had called me to become. I realized that the moment I had trusted Christ was the moment I had clambered down from the balcony and onto the road.“[picture] persons sitting on the high front balcony of a Spanish house watching travelers go by on the road below. The 'balconeers' can overhear the travelers' talk and chat with them; they may comment critically on the way that the travelers walk; or they may discuss questions about the road, how it can exist at all or lead anywhere, what might be seen from different points along it, and so forth; but they are onlookers, and their problems are theoretical only. The travelers by contrast face problems which, though they have their theoretical angle, are essentially practical - problems of the 'which-way-to-go' and 'how-to-make-it' type, problems which call not merely for comprehension but for decision and action too.
"Balconeers and travelers may think over the same area, yet their problems differ. Thus (for instance) in relation to evil, the balconeer's problem is to find a theoretical explanation of how evil can consist with God's sovereignty and goodness, but the traveler's problem is how to master evil and bring good out of it. Or again, in relation to sin, the balconeer asks whether racial sinfulness and personal perversity are really credible, while the traveler, knowing sin from within, asks what hope there is of deliverance. . ." [emphasis added].
For travelers, however, the Bible is something else entirely. It is their hope for their future. It is the voice of God calling them to “a better country, that is, a heavenly one” (Heb. 11:16). It is what feeds them and quenches their thirst along the way. It is what they talk about amongst themselves and what they encourage each other with. It is what keeps them on the path and what urges them “as sojourners and exiles to abstain from the passions of the flesh, which wage war against your soul" (1 Pet. 2:11).
*Packer’s description is a paraphrase of an illustration from John MacKay’s Preface to Christian Theology.
This article was originally published here.
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