Always Relevant

Working with college students, it’s a struggle to stay relevant. After all, they use words that I’ve never heard of. They refer to bands whose names aren’t even familiar. They’re pop culture references are completely different than mine.

Yet even in this struggle to stay current, there is one way that we can all stay relevant. As Simone Weil said “To be always relevant, you have to say things which are eternal.” In other words, in order to be relevant, you have to say things which transcend this present time. You have to focus on the things that are always true, in order to never be out-of-touch. And what we know is always true is the One who is Truth. What we know is always prescient, is the Person who never changes. We know that when we focus on Him who was before the creation of the world, and Who will be long after it is gone, we are focused on that which remains current even when time is no more.

And so the question becomes, are we always relevant? Do we spend our time talking about the things that will matter in the next life, or are we focused on the things that only matter in this? Are we busy doing those things that will build up treasures in Heaven, or are we amassing a fortune that will only exist on Earth? Are we consumed with building relationships that will last for eternity by sharing the Gospel with those who don’t know, or is our aim to only pursue those relationships that will benefit us while we still reside here? If we are focused on what is considered to be relevant in this life, it’s almost a certainty that it won’t be relevant in the next. And if it’s not relevant there, than it’s not worthy of our attention here.

May we focus on staying relevant, not for now, but for eternity.

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For Who’s Sake?

“I want you to know, brothers,that what has happened to me has really served to advance the gospel, so that it has become known throughout the whole imperial guard and to all the rest that my imprisonment is for Christ” – Philippians 1:12-13*

There are a lot of things in life that prompt action:

  • Our feelings towards someone
  • Opportunities that we want to take advantage of
  • The directive of someone in authority
  • Bad circumstances we want to avoid.

And while we all understand that our actions are precipitated by these things, it’s important for the Christian to understand that “we” are not to be the central consideration for the actions that we take. In fact, even when it’s the actions of others that are affecting us, our comfort, our convenience and our concerns are not of primary importance. Because as Paul so wonderfully makes clear in Philippians 1:12-13, everything we have, and everything we do, should be for the sake of Christ.

After all, here was a man who is writing about being wrongly imprisoned, and what he is reflecting upon is how God has used his circumstances for eternity’s purposes. He considers even his chains to be “for Christ” because he recognizes that as a result the Gospel has spread. His life was focused on a single aim  – “how can what I do, what happens to me, be used for Christ?”

It’s the right focus for every Christian’s life – to see our circumstances not through the lens of “what does this mean for me?” but “what does this mean for Christ?” – because we want our lives to truly matter.

We want our lives to be used for Christ’s sake.
Now it’s your turn….

How will you let your life be used for Christ’s sake?

*Author’s Note – For a slightly different take on the same passage, check out my previous post here.

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