Designing Our Own Cross

In recent years, one of the fast-growing sectors of consumer products has been in the area of personalization. In what would have seem unfathomable even a decade ago, we can customize and individualize things like never before. Not only can we get our initials monogrammed onto bath towels, but we can get brand-name jeans made exclusively for us, and shoes that were designed to our specifications. If you can think of it, you can probably get someone to create it – exactly as you desire. 

This ability to individualize and personalize can be great for businesses but can cause unrealistic expectations for people. The era of hyper-specialization can cause us to think that everything should be designed based on our desires. We want what we want and our aghast when we don’t get it. We have little patience for experiences that are not customized based on our preferences, priorities and proclivities. Not only do we live a “microwave society of wanting things cheap and fast,” we live in a culture of curated content – chosen specifically for us.

These increased expectations can even impact how we consider trials in our lives. Difficulties come and we think “I don’t deserve this” or “this wasn’t supposed to happen,” as if somehow the challenges that we encounter should be based on what we have done or who we are.  We tend to think that difficulties operate on a kind of quid pro quo basis – we get what we deserve. However, the Christian knows that we actually get far less than we deserve in this life. Our sin against God earns us the penalty of immediate and permanent death (Ro. 6:23), separation from Him for all eternity. Our trials shouldn’t seem to be more difficult than we think they should be; they are far less of a burden than what our guilt has incurred.

Yet, even mental assent to these truths can not be enough to fortify us against our discontent with the valleys of life.  One of the simplest yet most helpful statements I have ever heard about suffering came from a friend whose mother had died unexpectedly.  When discussing the seemingly endless amount of unhelpful statements and inadequate comparisons that people would make when trying to comfort her as she grieved, she expressed her understanding of what seemed to be their lack of awareness by saying “Pain is personal.” What she meant by this is that as much as we might sympathize with another person, we can’t fully experience their pain they are going through.  Comparing the loss of a parent to the loss of a pet may seem reasonable until you lose your own beloved mother. Pain is personal because as much as you try, you can’t fully walk in another person’s shoes. But pain is personal for another reason too; because the pain you experience, the suffering you go through, has come into your life under the sovereignty of your Heavenly Father whose love for you is greater than you can even imagine (Psalm 103:11-14). He chooses the cross that you bear. And when you walk the road of your personal Golgotha with the attitude of His Son – you honor Him. “Not my will but Your will be done” are the words our beloved Savior offered as He prepared to carry the cross that our Father had decreed for Him. May we do the same with the hills, and even the mountains, He places in front of us.

In a day and age where we can choose much about how we experience the world, it is unlikely that we will also get to pick the trials and tribulations we encounter. However, let us take confidence in the fact that the One who is sovereign over what transverses our paths, has designed and equipped us to encounter those difficulties in such a way that we honor Him. We may not get to design our own crosses, but we can honor our Designer by the manner in which we carry them.

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All the Same

“We all put our pants on one leg at a time.”

Or so the old saying goes. We often hear this quip when one person is intimated at the success or talents of another. In our timidity, it reminds us that while someone else may be smarter than us, more skilled or more attractive, we all share some pretty basic commonalities. One of them is that we all have the need for clothes, and when it comes to how we become attired, we each follow roughly the same process. 

This reality of our shared characteristics can be an important reminder in our relationships. Often it is what provides the courage for someone to ask for help, or to make a bold approach. Remembering the similarities that we share can give us courage and confidence when we lack it. And while the saying is helpful, it does not reflect some of the most important shared attributes; namely that each person that we interact with is fearfully and wonderfully created by God and that each of us is a sinner in need of a Savior. More than our method for getting dressed, this is what truly binds us together. And it is these two shared attributes that are important for every follower of Christ to remember. It is these commonalities that should give us boldness and confidence to share the good news of Christ. 

For many of us, it is far too easy to go through life and put the people we encounter into two categories: there are the people that we interact with who make our lives fuller, and the people who seem like a hindrance. We have a tendency to consider others in light of how they affect us, rather than in considering them as image bearers of the most High God. Each individual has been intentionally and beautifully created by the King. Each of them has value and worth because they are fashioned by Him. While the artistry of our Creator may be obscured by the effects of sin, it does not negate the fact that every individual comes from Him. And as a result, each person is treasured by our God. 

While the fact that we are all God’s creation may increase our affection for other individuals, it is also important that we remember that this isn’t the only commonality that we share. Because each and every one of us have violated God’s law, we are all sinners. And because we are sinners we are separated from our Father, unless we repent and put our faith in Christ. Therefore, out of love for those God’s created, if they do not yet know Him, we should be compelled to share this message of faith and repentance. Our concern for others should motivate us to share the Good News of Jesus Christ.

If we are God’s child, we should constantly be reminding ourselves of these two shared commonalities.  Everybody that we talk to is not just a person who either helps or hinders us along life’s path. Instead, every person we talk to is either someone who knows and has embraced the saving grace of Jesus Christ, or someone who hasn’t. There is no one that we interact to whom this doesn’t pertain. Every person is a sinner in need of a Savior. And because each person was purposefully and beautifully created by God, each person is someone that is special to Him. Every individual is a soul that He created and that He longs to redeem.

This too should give us confidence, but far greater confidence than we may obtain by recalling that we all get dressed the same way. Remembering that every individual is created by God and needs His grace to spend eternity with Him, should give us boldness in telling them the message of salvation. The fact that we all share the same need should make us eager to proclaim the good news of how this need has been met in the person of Jesus Christ. We are all the same – not only in how we attire ourselves, but because we all need to be clothed by the grace and righteousness of our Savior.

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