Showing Up

It’s a common phrase in Christian circles when something happens that conforms to what we want. “God was really working in that situation”, we say and the evidence of this, is apparently us acquiring what we prayed for. We know that we’ve talked to God about our desires and when we obtain them we think that God’s power is demonstrated. It’s a simple case of cause and effect.

The problem with that theory is that there are a lot of times that we don’t get what we want, and yet, God is still on His throne. Just because we can’t trace the cause and effect doesn’t mean that God’s not accomplishing His purposes. God’s working even when we don’t acknowledge it. As Rob Bell says “God is always present. We’re the ones that show up.”

And therein lies our challenge. We need to show up to participate in what God is already doing. We need to see where He’s working and want to be a part of it. We shouldn’t be looking for God accomplishing what we want, but we should be seeking to be a part of His purpose. Showing up sounds easy, but it requires that we don’t have our own agenda, or our own expectations of what should be. We’re open to the possibilities of what He’s doing, and we’re listening to His still small voice so we know where we should be.

As children, we don’t understand the power of showing up, because its what we’re doing already. We don’t plan and strategize, we just accept where we are and look how to make the most of the experience. Children don’t have to be convinced that God created the world or that He’s working in their lives. They have to be convinced that He’s not.

When God commanded us to “become like little children” it was not only a reminder to trust Him without inhibition but to see His work wherever we happen to be. He’s always on His throne, He’s always commanding His Creation. We just have to be willing to experience it.

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Holding On Too Tight

By afflictions, God is spoiling us [i.e., taking away from us] of what otherwise might have spoiled us. When he makes the world too hot for us to hold, we let it go. – John Powell

Growing up I had a license plate frame that said “Not Spoiled, Blessed.” I was always a little self-conscience about it because it seemed very Orange County, but it was a gift from my parents, and so it stayed. (In fact when my mother reads this she’ll be a little sad that she was a part of anything that caused me the slightest discomfort. It’s o.k. Mom – I survived.) Desspite my awkwardness the license plate frame surely conveyed some truth. I was definitely blessed.

The problem with the frame was the perception that it engendered that somehow what made me bless were the possessions that I had. This was not the case, not because I didn’t have nice things, for I most certainly did, but they weren’t my truest source of blessings. That came from the fact that I was a sinner saved by grace, a saying that makes a poor license plate frame but contains everlasting glory. The problem is that most people won’t make the distinction between the two. They will be left with the thought that somehow what I have dictates who I am, and the condition of my being. This happens a lot. People hold on so tight to what they have that it begins to define them. When we are defined by what we own, we cease to be defined by God.

Chapter 5 of James has a lot to say about this subject. Primarily it encourages readers to remember that everything in this world is going to burn. When we aren’t willing to sacrifice material gain for heavenly glory our balance sheet is out of whack. Oftentimes God will work in our lives to correct this imbalance. He’ll use the things that we’ve placed ahead of Him to show us His proper place. God makes a poor second fiddle, and in His love for us, He’ll spoil that which supplants Him.

Being spoiled isn’t a bad thing, if what we are spoiled for is any work but what God has intended. If we are completely useless except in bringing Him glory, if we can offer nothing but all that we have, than we truly are blessed.

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