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marbella3 70F
2483 posts
9/14/2021 5:00 am

Last Read:
9/15/2021 2:58 am

Outside the Camp

Today's Devotional

Read: Hebrews 13:–16

Bible in a Year: Proverbs 19–21; 2 Corinthians 7


Jesus also suffered outside the city gate make the people holy through his own blood. Hebrews 13:

Friday was market day in the rural town in Ghana where I grew up. After all these years, I still recall one particular vendor. Her fingers and toes eroded by Hansen’s disease (leprosy), she would crouch on her mat and scoop her produce with a hollowed-out gourd. Some avoided her. My made a point from her regularly. I saw her on market days. Then she would disappear outside the town.

In the time of the ancient Israelites, diseases like leprosy meant living “outside the camp.” It was a forlorn existence. Israelite law said of such people, “They must live alone” (Leviticus 13:46). Outside the camp was also where the carcasses of the sacrificial bulls were burned (4 Outside the camp was not where you wanted be..

This harsh reality breathes life into the statement about Jesus in Hebrews 13: “Let us, then, go to him outside the camp, bearing the disgrace he bore” (v. 13). Jesus was crucified outside the gates of Jerusalem, a significant point when we study the Hebrew sacrificial system.

We want to be popular, to be honored, to live comfortable lives. But God calls us to go “outside the camp”—where the disgrace is. That’s where we’ll find the vendor with Hansen’s disease. That’s where we’ll find people the world has rejected. That’s where we’ll find Jesus.

How do you initially react to outsiders and misfits? In what practical way might you go to Jesus “outside the camp”?

Thank You, Jesus, that You don’t show any favoritism. Thank You for going outside the camp for me.


MrsJoe 76F
17417 posts
9/14/2021 3:43 pm

We are supposed to love the unlovable people, the same that Jesus did.

Be a prism, spreading God's light and love, not a mirror reflecting the world's hatred.