What
seemed criminal may have been entirely because he should be yours eternally.
Not a slave any more – a person, valued brother, and one who is now so special
to me. He’ll be so much more valuable now as he lives in the Lord. (Philemon
15-16)
Think
of your subordinates, whether volunteer or paid. Think of the vendors and reps,
and the customers. What is their value to you? Do you value their productivity,
performance, usefulness, the profitability they bring? If so, understand this –
that basis of valuation is the one used to value a slave.
Paul
appealed to Philemon, the owner of runaway slave, Onesimus in this personal
letter. He called on Philemon to recognize the value Onesimus had as a man who
was created and loved by God. There is no doubt Paul has spent time helping
Onesimus understand Philemon’s value as a brother. How else could he return,
trusting the Lord for his safety, and risking his freedom, and his life to help
Philemon grow with him. Paul has explained to each of them that they, along
with other men and women, are made in God’s image. That is the one source of
their true value.
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