Tag: heavenly citizenship

  • Devotional of the week – Heavenly citizens (2 in John 15-16 series)

    As it is, you do not belong to the world, but I have chosen you out of the world. John 15:19

    Photo: Ian Mackenzie, Flickr
    Photo: Ian Mackenzie, Flickr

    I have two passports – one from America, the land of my birth, and one from Britain, my adopted country. I will always have divided loyalties, whether in which sports team to support or which lingo to speak. But my most important citizenship is my heavenly one, to which Jesus refers here. For he has chosen us out of the world, and we do not belong to it.

    What does it mean to be a citizen of heaven? To be “in the world but not of it”? Christians throughout the ages have interpreted this question differently. Some remove themselves completely from the world. Others so accommodate it that they lose their Christian distinctiveness. Many struggle somewhere between the two poles, seeking to keep in tension engaging the world on the one hand while being a transforming force in it on the other.

    As we keep our sights fixed on God’s promises of his heavenly city, we will see our struggles and travails with his eternal perspective. He can pull us back when we are too engaged with worldly things, such as watching a dodgy television program. He can shed wisdom on the challenges we face, reminding us that he will never leave nor forsake us. He will strengthen and undergird us, helping us to be his witnesses in a world hungry for grace.

    Heavenly Father, as aliens and strangers on earth we long for a heavenly country. Help us to live by faith.

  • Dual citizenship

    2013-07-03 10.21.49

    When I first moved to the UK, I felt so self-consciously American. Hyper aware of my accent, which immediately labeled me as foreign. Fifteen years later, I usually forget my “other” status, but sometimes – often when I’m out of London – someone will look at me with curiosity and ask me where I’m from.

    “North London,” I’ll say somewhat cheekily, fully knowing that’s not what they mean. “But from the States originally.”

    And again I’ll be jolted into an awareness of otherness. That sense of being a foreigner in a strange land. The longing for home, which God embedded into each of us, whether we live in an adopted country or not.

    A few months ago I wrote a poem expressing some of these feelings of heavenly citizenship, and to Whom we ultimately belong.

     

    We belong
    Attached
    To you
    To others
    We belong.
     
    The yoke
    It’s a light burden
    Making us free
    Releasing us to bolt
    Out from our pens
    The gates flung open
    Running to the Father.
     
    We belong
    Peace resides with us
    A home is ours
    With arms and legs
    Hearts and hands
    We belong.
     
    Freedom and joy
    Usher in light and peace
    Rooted in the earth
    Grounded we are.
     
    Foreigners and aliens
    Away from our home
    Longing for a country
    For a city and the throne.
     
    We belong to each other
    Needed for love
    Learning to see Jesus
    His presence among us
    We belong.
     
    © 2013 Amy Boucher Pye  
     

    What makes you yearn for home?