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  • Rick Warren
    February 2008
    Preaching: How do you think through this whole issue of application as you are dealing with the text...
  • Rick Warren
    February 2008
    Preaching: How do you plan your strategy in terms of what you are going to do in preaching? Warren:...
  • Rick Warren
    February 2008
    The bigger the church gets the more important the pulpit becomes because it is the rudder of the ship....
  • Andy Lam
    February 2008
    I read recently about a man who had passed away and what they wanted the funeral parlor to do with the...
  • Matthew Blake Judkins
    February 2008
    Matthew 15:21-28     Have you ever known someone with whom you didn’t get along...
  • Richard E. Nystrom
    February 2008
    "Then the eyes of both were opened and they knew that they were naked" (Genesis 3:7a) Let us look inside...
  • Daniel T. Hans
    February 2008
    (Note: This message was originally preached as part of an annual county-wide memorial service for families...
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Christian Life: The Eighteenth Camel I Corinthians 1:26...
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Christian Life: The Eighteenth Camel I Corinthians 1:26 - 28; 12:18 - 27
By Leo Hartshorn
But, so is life. And you may just be one of them. Have you ever felt like what you had to offer to life was a drop in the bucket? Have you ever thought of yourself not just as a wart on someone's nose, but the hair on that wart? Could it be that you see yourself as someone who just fills an empty chair on Sunday morning? Or maybe at times you've felt like the two cows reading a milk sign that said, "Pasteurized, homogenized, standardized, Vitamin D added." And one cow turns to the other and says, "Kinda makes you feel inadequate, doesn't it." Do you see yourself as inadequate, unessential, with little or nothing to add to the lives of others? Then, you may well be an 18th camel. Life is full of them.
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- A short boy with the coke bottle glasses sits quietly in the back of the class. He's afraid to raise his hand to speak, because he feels he has nothing to contribute.

- An elderly woman rocks in her squeaking chair. She tells her children in the big house in the city that it's too much trouble to pick her up for the family picnic with the grandchildren. It's such a long drive. She can't play Frisbee with the kids. Her arthritis has knotted her knuckles. "And besides," she says, "an old woman would just get in the way."

- "I can't preach, or teach, or lead a committee," sighs the church member with his eyes scanning the floor. "For Heaven's sake, I'm a carpenter. I work with these," he says with rough, scarred hands opened. "What carpenter ever amounted to anything?"

The Apostle Paul has a word of encouragement for those who, at times, feel unessential, unnecessary, unworthy, unwanted. He reminds them that in the community of Christ they are the eighteenth camel. For in Christ's community those who appear to be the weaker, the least, the less honored, the less respectable, are indispensable. Those who feel that their contribution is minuscule or of little significance are to be honored.

The church has great need of the diversity of people who make up the body of Christ. No one is unessential or unnecessary. Each person here adds a rich contribution to the church, even if that contribution is not easily recognized. You may not see what your life contributes to life around you and to this community we call the church. You may not even be able to figure out how your simple presence adds to the lives of others, anymore than you can figure out how the 18th camel in the story added anything to the solution of the three sons dilemma. Anymore than George Bailey, in the movie It's a Wonderful Life, could see how his life made a difference to those around him. Remember, your presence counts!

The lonely zero's presence counted. It took some time for her to realize it, though. You see, she didn't think she amounted to anything. Miss Zero was a real nothing. The other numbers teased her and called her "Zilch." She was round and pudgy. And you could see right through her. There was nothing to hide. Whenever she walked by the letters of the alphabet all they said was, "Oh!" Sometimes, when she got up the nerve, she would go stand next to the nine or the four. But, she added nothing to them. An 09 was still a 9 and a 04 still just 4. It was as if she wasn't even there at all. She often rolled off and cried in a corner.

Then one day she saw a 1 standing all by itself on a sheet of paper. He looked so alone and sad. She knew how that felt. So, she walked right up and stood next to the 1, hoping to provide some comfort. But this time she noticed a difference. The 1 seemed to straighten up and stand tall on its base. Then she figured out why. She was standing on the 1's right side. The one had become a 10! Her presence did add up to something. No, her presence multiplied others ten times! She wasn't a nobody and a nothing! Though she couldn't see it before, she now realized that her presence counted.

And so does yours. Your life, your gifts, your contributions, your presence add to the lives of others, even though you may not see how. You count! Just like the 18th camel. Just like Jesus. A friend of sinners and outcasts. Despised. Rejected. Humiliated. Weak. Godforsaken. Crucified.

Dead. Buried. And yet ... He is the 18th camel, whose resurrection presence adds riches to our lives and multiplies our hope. That is why: God chose what is low and despised in the world, things that are not, to reduce to nothing things that are (I Cor. 1:28).

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