Tag Archives: standing out

Strange Christians | Bible Gleanings | May 23-24, 2026

Zebras arenโ€™t exactly known for blending in, and Tennesseans couldnโ€™t help but notice the runaway zebra trotting in their backyard in June of last year. When the Murfreesboro Police Department received calls about a zebra galloping along the interstate, officers thought someone was horsing around. But after several neighborhood sightings, a week-long chase ensued and, โ€œEd the Zebra was captured safely after being located in a pasture near a subdivision,โ€ according to the Associated Press. The Volunteer State instantly recognized that while there is plenty of wildlife in Tennessee (and no shortage of folklore creatures), this black-and-white cousin of the horse was a foreigner in strange territory. Because he belonged to a land across the Atlantic, he stood out too much to blend in.

Similarly, believers in Christ belong to land lying beyond this life and above the skies, โ€œa land that is fairer than day,โ€ called heaven. Because of this, Christians should stand out in the world too much to blend inโ€”much more than a zebra in the backwoods of Tennessee. The Scripture teaches that there should be a black-and-white difference between those of this world and those who belong to the โ€œkingdom not of this worldโ€ (John 18:36). Disciples of Christ should not camouflage themselves within the culture like chameleons or live under cover like secret agents, which is why Peter exhorted Christians, โ€œBeloved, I urge you as sojourners and exiles to abstain from the passions of the flesh, which wage war against your soulโ€ (1 Peter 2:11). Sojourners are strangers passing throughโ€”exiles living away from their homelandโ€”and both are true of Jesus-followers who are โ€œcitizens of heavenโ€ (Phil. 3:21).

The believerโ€™s speech should sound like a foreign language to everyone elseโ€”upbuilding rather than destructive and seasoned with grace rather than spoiled with obscenity (Eph. 4:29; Col. 3:8). A Christianโ€™s conduct should make other people think, โ€œThey must not be from around here.โ€ Saints saved by grace ought to forgive in a world that desires revenge, pursue godliness in a society that applauds immorality, and live humbly in a culture inflated by pride (Eph. 4:32; Gen. 6:9; Col. 3:12). Paul the apostle said it best: โ€œDo not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mindโ€ (Rom. 12:2a). The children of God are called to be โ€œwithout blemish in the midst of a crooked and twisted generation, among whom you shine as lights in the worldโ€ (Phil. 2:15).ย A zebra without stripes would be a bizarre sightโ€”stranger still is a professing believer indistinguishable from the world. And the return on living distinctly as a Christian pilgrim is worth it, as John Wesley wrote in his little-known hymn, How Happy is the Pilgrimโ€™s Lot:

โ€œNothing on earth I call my own;

A strangยญer, to the world unยญknown,

I all their goods desยญpise; I tramยญple on their whole deยญlight,

and seek a counยญtry out of sight,

a counยญtry in the skies.โ€


Brandon is the pastor of Bandana Baptist Church in Bandana, Kentucky, where he lives with his wife, Dakota, their much-prayed for son, Oliver, and their three dogs. Brandon and Dakota previously served as foster parents through Sunrise Children’s Services of Kentucky. Brandon is also a published author and his Bible Gleanings columns are featured in over sixteen publications throughout Kentucky, Illinois, Tennessee, and Indiana. He is also a devotional contributor for Kentucky Today, a news publication of the Kentucky Baptist Convention, and an editor at Reforming the Heart.