The
teacher asked each student in the class to write an essay about
their pet, and two little girls who were twins turned in identical
essays about their puppy. When asked why the essays were exactly
alike, they replied that they were both about the same puppy.
Unless
there is collusion, no two people, not even identical twins, will
say exactly the same thing about anything. God has made us each
a distinct individual, and although different, yet each in his own
way can serve. As God said of Paul, so it applies to us as well,
that each of us is to be ”His witness unto all men.” No two witnesses
seeing the same accident will give the exact same account anymore
than two little girls working independently will write the same
essay about the same puppy. In spite of their differences, true
witnesses will agree and confirm the facts, but a skillful lawyer
can trip up a false witness. 1n the case of those who testified
at Christ’s trial, ”many bear false witness against him, but their
witness agreed not together.”
Now
we are all witnesses, our life is a trial, and we are testifying
every day. We can be willing witnesses, or like the Jews of old
who were God’s witnesses even in their disobedience, we can help
prove the truth of God’s prediction that ”there shall be false teachers
among you, who privily shall bring in damnable heresies.” ”Of your
own selves,” warns Paul, ”shall men arise, speaking perverse things,
to draw away disciples after them.”
What kind of witnesses are we? When a certain number of facts are
known, the testimony of the witness can be tested to determine whether
or not he is telling the truth. John exhorts us to try the spirits
whether they are of God, because many false prophets are gone into
the world. John proceeds to give us the test to apply to determine
whether a witness is true or false, and says that ”hereby know we
the spirit of truth and the spirit of error.”
It is important that we each keep alert to the facts so that we
may easily discern the true witness from the false. It is also important
that we each make sure that not only is our testimony true, but
that we are always prepared to give an answer for the hope that
is within us.
An
ignorant witness is no witness at all. If we were present at an
accident or scene of a crime and slept through the whole thing,
we could not be of any help. Neither can we be a true and faithful
witness for Christ if we are not aware of the facts concerning his
life, his sacrifice, his return, or his commandments.
”Oh, you’re a Christadelphian; now just what do they believe?” someone
asks. Are we ready to testify? Or are we ashamed, either of our
own ignorance or of Christ himself? ”Whosoever therefore shall be
ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation;
of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed, when he cometh in the
glory of his Father with the holy angels.”
No two people will say exactly the same thing, but we should all
be ready, willing, and able to be true and faithful witnesses and
”give to every man that asketh us a reason of the hope that is in
us with meekness and fear.”
With
God there is no ”Fifth Amendment.” Not even ignorance can be used
as an excuse. We are witnessing every day, either by what we do
or do not do” either by our acts of faith, or the lack of them,
either by giving an answer or being ashamed of him. The big question
that will be answered by the judge of all the earth very soon is,
”Just what kind of witnesses are we?”
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