Content with the Common

I don’t know many people who like to think of themselves as settling. We all want to believe that we can get the best life has to offer, and although we may intellectually acknowledged that there will probably be some trade-offs and compromises along the way, we don’t want to believe that life’s treasures can’t be ours. Who gets married not thinking that they are wedding their soul mate? Who purchases a car not believing that it will just what they expected? We are hard-wired to seek out and acquire the best and we convince ourselves that the things we do are in line with this proclivity.

Except when it comes to things of the spirit. For some reason, in this one area we tend to settle for less than everything. Maybe its because we know that to achieve the ultimate we have to get up all of ourselves: a scary proposition regardless of how sold-out you are. Maybe its because the topic is ethereal and we delude ourselves to think that we won’t experience the side effects if we don’t take it for all its worth. Maybe its because we don’t life in holy fear of the consequences. Whatever the reason, it seems there are more people content to go to church and relegate discussions of the spirit to listening to a sermon from the pulpit than there are who would be willing to give up any Earthly luxury for a the same period of time. We put God in box because we are comfortable with Him being there. We can check Him off the list and move on to the things we understand, the things that can be defined, and the things that we can control. In other words, oftentimes with God we are content with the common.

The problem, of course, is that God is anything but common. When we try to define God we no longer experience Him. He is mystery and mystery can never be contained. When we don’t approach His throne with awe, we lose the potential for Him to penetrate our lives and work His transformation. And that’s why we come to God to begin with.

When our lives are focused on God, awe and wonder lead us
to worship God, filling our inner being with a fullness we
would never have thought possible. Awe prepares the way in us
for the power of God to transform us and this transformation
of our inner attitudes can only take place when awe leads us
in turn to wonder, admiration, reverence, surrender, and
obedience toward God.
… James Houston

Continue Reading

Joyous Strength

I’ve been at this Christian thing for a while. A lot of times I relate to King Solomon: there’s nothing new under the sun. I can quote Bible verses fairly accurately off the top of my head and can sing more worship songs than anyone (save God) could care to hear (If you doubt that – ask the art department where I work. They’ve been treated to a rousing rendition of “Father Abraham.) It’s easy to get into a routine – a habitual expectation of how God will show up in my life. However, every once in a while, my arrogance is rocked and I realize that I have even begun to understand the depths of the mysteries of God. In short, I learn something new.

Nehemiah 8:10 states ” . . .Do not grieve, for the joy of the LORD is your strength.” I’m not sure when I first heard this, but it’s been familiar to me for a long while. I’ve even suggested it to be used on Christian product. And yet, as I sat in the car after a frustrating day and listened to Chris Tomlin sing “How Great is Our God’ it took on new meaning. I guess because I’ve always kind of twisted the verse in my mind to mean that when we rest in God, He provides us strength and joy. In reality, that’s not at all what the verse says. The only joy that is talked about is God’s. His joy, His pleasure that should be our focus. When we’re focused on bringing Him glory, we’re not worried about ourselves and our petty desires. We’re not even focused on the blessings that God’s given us. Our total focus is on God’s happiness. Through this we get our strength. Our joy isn’t the provision for our strength; His joy is. Because of it, we have reason to stop grieving. We have desire to move forward. And we have all the provision we need for today.

As humans we strive to avoid pain and seek pleasure. God’s Word tells us to seek His pleasure. Not because of what it will get us, but because His joy is the only thing that can fill the “God-shape hole” that each of us have (a concept that was, oddly enough, originally presented by Pascal – a scientist.) We develop more and more into the person that God’s created us to be, when we seek Him above all else. Only then, do we build strength.

Mercy Me’s new song states what our heart’s desire should be:

Bring me joy, bring me peace
Bring the chance to be free
Bring me anything that brings You glory
And I know there’ll be days
When this life brings me pain
But if that’s what it takes to praise You
Jesus, bring the rain

Continue Reading