Starting Off Right

“One thing I ask of the LORD,
this is what I seek:
that I may dwell in the house of the LORD
all the days of my life,
to gaze upon the beauty of the LORD
and to seek him in his temple.” – Psalm 27:4

Happy New Year!

As I think about starting another trip around the sun, I’m reminded of how much freedom a beginning can bring. Every 365.25 days we start another new year. With our thanks to Julius Caesar, this turning of the calendar gives us a new opportunity to become the people that we think we can be. Of course, January 1 is really just another day like any other, but the perception of its primacy creates expectations for improvement.

Experts will tell you that starting the new year with a bunch of pie-in-the sky resolutions is dangerous because you’re not likely to be able to fulfill them. Instead, they caution, that you should create reasonable goals interspersed with milestones. In this way, you can obtain what you seek.

I don’t know whether David wrote the passage above at the start of another new year, but in it, he does open the door to his heart to share with us his resolution. He has one goal in mind – to be where God is.

As I read the passage, I’m struck by two things. First, David takes such care to emphasize that this is his heart’s desire, that he redundantly identifies it as both the “one thing” he asks, and the object which he seeks. He passionately articulates that for him, this is of preeminence.

Secondly – David says that he wants to be where God is because he desires to both 1) gaze upon His beauty and 2) to be in His temple. The Psalmist both wants to feel God’s pleasure and experience His presence. Ill content to just experience God from afar – he desires an intimacy that requires physicality. He wants to both know His Father’s love and to be in relationship with Him.

At the start of another new year, I think that’s a wonderful resolution to make.

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The Arrival

It’s Christmas – a time when families and friends gather together to celebrate. Hopefully, the occasions are marked with remembrances of Christ’s birth. However, even the most secular amongst us often view this time as an opportunity to join with those that they love dear. They might not recognize the reason for the celebrations, but celebrate they do just the same.

I think its appropriate that as when remember Christ’s first arrival on this Earth that we remember that our anticipation should be for His return. I was struck recently by one of the most common passages in Scripture, John 3:16. This verse tells of the coming of the Heavenly Son, sent as a babe to visit His Creation The subsequent verse tell us the purpose of this visit. “For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through Him”. (v. 17). Christ’s arrival was a visit prompted by love seeking reconciliation.

I think its a motive we can all relate to. How many of us have arrived at our holiday celebrations longing to see again those that we love? How many have arrived seeking restoration? We know what its like to be separated; the holidays remind us of what it is to be together.

The noteworthy thing is that this was the purpose of Christ’s first visit. The purpose of His second is much different. The Son’s initial arrival was a demonstration of His love, upon His return Christ will be here to judge. His first visit was not about condemnation, but in the second all will be acknowledged before Him. “For we will all stand before God’s judgment seat. 11It is written:
” ‘As surely as I live,’ says the Lord,
‘every knee will bow before me;
every tongue will confess to God.” – Romans 14:10b-11

As we celebrate His first arrival, let us not neglect to anticipate His second. And to make sure that our response to each is the same.

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