One Thing

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My family has a tradition of putting together wish lists for gift-giving occasions. Whether it’s for birthdays or for Christmas, the idea is that if you have an idea of what people want, you are more likely to get them something they will actually use. The problem is that this has become more difficult the older we get. Perhaps part of the reason is because others have been so generous at providing us things along the way that there are very few things that we desire. Conversely, I think part of it is a recognition that comes with maturity that having stuff isn’t as important as we once thought it was. The things we should truly desire can’t be picked up at the local shopping mall.

David understood this. He had his “wish list” for God boiled down to one thing. As he wrote in Psalm 27:4:

One thing have I asked of the Lord, that will I seek after:

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 inquire in his temple.

Chief and foremost in David’s mind was his pursuit of God. While there may have been other requests that he made along the way, as we can read in his other psalms, none of them compared in importance to this one thing. His desire was for God alone – to dwell with Him in eternity. And regardless of the outcomes of his other petitions, this would be his focus and quest.

The beautiful thing about David’s “one thing” is that the thing he asked for was also the thing that he could have confidence he would be granted. As he writes in the following verses:

For he will hide me in his shelter in the day of trouble;

he will conceal me under the cover of his tent; he will lift me high upon a rock.

And now my head shall be lifted up above my enemies all around me,

and I will offer in his tent sacrifices with shouts of joy;

I will sing and make melody to the Lord.

For my father and my mother have forsaken me, but the Lord will take me in. (Psalm 27:5-6, 10)

You’ll notice that David used the future tense to describe what God would do. David could do this because what he was asking for was in keeping with the promises that God had already made. Perhaps one of the reasons he is described as a man after God’s own heart (Acts 13:22) is because his desires aligned with what God willed to do.  David didn’t want the things of this world; he wanted what God had already offered him. He pursued God, and knew that whatever happened temporally, God would deliver him eternally.  With his heart’s desire focused on that, he did not need to worry about asking for anything else.

And God’s children can continue to have this same confidence, knowing that regardless of what happens in the meantime, God has promised us an eternity with Him. When being with Him becomes our heart’s desire, than anything else pales in comparison, and we like David, can say we ask for just this “one thing.”

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Redeeming Restlessness

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One of the gifts that God has given me is an uncanny ability to fall asleep practically anywhere. It’s not exactly a talent per se, but it is something that has come in handy. I’ve fallen asleep at rock concerts, in airports, and sitting straight up in a chair. It’s a very useful proclivity when it comes time to travel or in any situation where the point of exhaustion might not be met by the convenience of comfort. It’s something I’ve been grateful for time and time again.

Lately, however, even in the comfort of my own home my normal patterns of rest have been frequently interrupted. There are good reasons for this, but they still result in a lack of sleep. As I’ve tossed and turned though, God has placed on my heart a desire to redeem these moments of restlessness. If I am going to be awake, I might as well be doing things that draw me closer to Him. So periods of my night are often filled with listening to sermons or worship music, hearing someone read Scripture to me, or praying for those whom I know that have lost loved ones recently. Rest may allude me, but that doesn’t mean worship needs to as well.

There are periods of life that are often like these fitful nights of sleep. We may feel unsettled and uncertain of the work that God is doing. Our points of exhaustion may never seem to find the comfort that we so desperately seek. Refreshment and renewal can seem elusive. We spend our time pondering what God is doing and wondering where He is leading next.

And just like my own restless nights, He can redeem this restlessness as well.

As written previously, when David faced one of these seasons, when he wondered how long he would lack peace from those who pursued them, he did two things – he looked to the past and saw God’s faithfulness, and looked to the future with a commitment to praise Him (See Ps. 13:5-6). As we follow this pattern, we will be reminder of how God has used the uncertainty that we have faced before to increase our reliance on Him. We will see that He has faithfully used the times where we lacked clarity to work in ways that we could not have anticipated. HIs provision was not dependent upon our understanding – instead, even as we struggled to make sense of what was happening, He was busy bringing us to the place He desired us to be.

This should inspire praise. Not only for the work that He has done in the past, but for the confidence that we can have in the future. Like the Psalmist, we can say that we will “look upon the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living” (Ps. 27:13). We might not know how God will work, but we can know that He is. Life may seem uncertain, but we can have confidence in the One who never is (Ja. 1:17).

Ecclesiastes reminds us that to “everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven” (Ecc. 3:1). God is not wasting this time of our uncertainty, and neither should we. We know that while rest may evade us now, God will lead us “besides still water” and He will “restore [our] soul[s]” (Ps. 23:2).  And we will find the peace that we seek, as we rest in Him.

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