Shake it off
Today's reading: Luke 8:40-56, 9:1-6
"And wherever they do not receive you, when you leave that town shake off the dust from your feet as a testimony against them.” - Luke 9:5 ESV
This was the initial transition of Jesus' 12 going from just being disciples (followers) toward the idea of being apostles (those who are sent). It is significant to note that Jesus equips them with the intangible (authority and power) but doesn't give them what is tangible (lunch money).
What if a place is resistant to them? Jesus commands them to shake the dust from their feet and move on.
Leon Morris, in his commentary on Luke, wrote the following:
There was a rabbinic idea that the dust of Gentile lands carried defilement, and strict Jews are said to have removed it from their shoes whenever they returned to Palestine from abroad. The disciples’ shaking of the dust from their feet was a testimony against them.
The people to whom Jesus is sending his disciples were all Jewish. So why does he say this "shake the dust" statement to them? Well, if the Jews rejected them, then they were no different than any other pagan nation. They were proving they were not the people of God.
We have problems with shaking the dust off of our feet. If someone rejects us or doesn't like us because of our faith in Jesus, it is hard not to take it personally. We have to remember that if we are easily offended when rejected, we won't be focused enough to talk to the next person who is ready and open to the Good News about Jesus.
Shake the dust. Lift up your eyes (John 4:35).