Living Like You're Leasing
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Here's the thing about living in a place you know you're leaving: you stop investing in it the same way. You could redo the bathroom in a rental. It may need it. But you're not going to. It's not your home. Why pour time and money into something you're walking away from?
There's a freedom in knowing you're leaving this world. You stop obsessing over what won't last. You start prioritizing what travels with you. What matters shifts. That's exactly where the author of Hebrews lands in chapter 13. He tells them to get comfortable living "outside the camp." For Hebrew people familiar with this phrase, who understood exile, who knew what it meant to be displaced, that language carried weight. It meant being on the margins. Not quite belonging. Living as strangers in a land that wasn't theirs. And the author says that's exactly where we're called to go. Outside the camp. With Jesus.
This Sunday, we're wrapping up our journey through Hebrews, by examining what it means to live outside the camp and why the author chose this particular phrase to encourage us to live as sojourners in this world.