Abandoned

Working with college students you hear a lot of interesting things. After all, it’s a time in life where people are legally adults and yet are still often isolated from the harsh truths of the “real world.” As these students near graduation, those truths quickly become their reality. It’s a time for them to figure out how it is that they want to contribute, in what arena they will use their talents and gifts, and to set out to make that happen.

It’s not uncommon for students to get to this point and eschew what they perceive as the “easy route.” For example, they don’t want to go work in their parents’ business, because they want to make it on their own. However, these same individuals who revel in their self-proclaimed independence may have no issue using their parents’ connections to land the job they really want. While their words may say that their abandoning the comfort that their parents’ hard work has afforded them, their actions demonstrate that they have no trouble reverting back to it when the benefits are too tempting to pass up.

Similarly, we often face the same reticence to abandon our former ways when it comes to our relationship with Christ. We may find its easy to proclaim that we willing to give up everything for Him, and yet, when comfort calls, we often revert back to those temptations we hold dear. I may say to God that I’m willing to go to the ends of the Earth, and yet I’m unwilling to give Him my desires and dreams. My words may indicate a departure from my past, but my actions demonstrate otherwise.

However, as a great song by Hillsong United reminds us, is not just our stuff that we have to give up for the sake of Christ; we have to abandon everything – our very soul – for Him. We say that we want “Jesus to come live in our hearts” but in reality being a Christian means giving up our heart to Him.  There is no half-way. We can’t cling to ourselves and have Him. We must let go of it all.

And in His graciousness, He’s promised to reward those who do so. When, for His sake, we abandon all this life affords us, all the benefits of temptations and the comfort of living for ourselves, in the next life, the life that lasts for eternity, we will have all things.

It’s not easy. After all, we are all too familiar with what we know and desire; we know well the convenience of sin. And yet, it’s only in giving up what we claim as “ours” that we get that which really matters. It’s only in abandoning self that we get Him.

 

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Satisfied

I suffer from the hangries.

If you’re unfamiliar with the term, the hangries are a condition that causes normally rational people to get fussy and cranky when they haven’t eaten for an extended period of time. It comes from the words “hungry” + “angry” = hangries.

I wish I was the type of person who could simply forget about eating, but I never have been.  When it’s been too long since my last meal, my body immediately feels the effects. And unfortunately, sometimes those effects caused me to be less-than-pleasant company.

On the flip side, I love the feeling of having eaten a good meal that I know will sustain me for a long period of time. Feeling satiated, I’m energized to take on whatever is next in the day. Satisfied, my body is equipped to do the things that I need to do.

I’ve found that the same is true for my spiritual meals. If I don’t eat, if I’m not regularly partaking of the meet of God’s Word, I get the spiritual version of the hangries. I’m less inclined towards obedience, I’m more inclined to sin, and my focus is on myself rather than God. What I eat, regularly and richly of the truth of God, I’m spiritually equipped to do those things that God has called me to do.

It’s important for our bodies to be satisfied, to have what they need to function as they ought. However, we must recognize that our spiritual well-being also requires nutrients and sustenance; our spiritual health requires regular and intentional feeding. Just like I know the effect on my body when I neglect to give it food, we should recognize the impact on our soul when we don’t provide what it needs. And we should purposefully and regularly consume God’s Word for our soul to be satisfied.

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