Beyond Today

“My son, if your heart is wise, then my heart will be glad; my inmost being will rejoice
when your lips speak what is right. Do not let your heart envy sinners,
but always be zealous for the fear of the LORD. There is surely a future hope for you,
and your hope will not be cut off.” – Proverbs 23:15-18

It’s easy to get wrapped up in what’s going on in our lives. Primarily this is because of the intimate way in which what happens in our lives effects our happiness, our attitude and our ability to make of life what we desire. We get caught up in the trials and travails of today, and spend countless moments searching for how we might change them. We focus on the here and now to the neglect of the ever after.

This tendency to be consumed with the dailyness of our lives is easily understood and quite commonplace. However, the preponderance of its existence doesn’t mean that it is beneficial phenomenon. As the above Proverb illustrates, when we focus on today, the Christian will often come up short. We will look at what we’ve obtained and compare it to our neighbors and be found wanting. We will see the immediate delights of sin, and ignore the deadly consequences When in our foolishness we focus on the attainments of today, we neglect to secure the wisdom that teaches the permanence of eternity.

To combat this, we need to ask God to expand our view. Instead of seeing what we’re missing, the Christian needs to look to all that they’ve received. We need to look beyond today to the hope of tomorrow. And unlike what can be acquired now, this is a hope that can be sustained. And when our Hope is clearly in view, we find peace, no matter what the day brings.

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Bring It On


Perhaps the phrase “Bring It On” is most-often associated with a movie about rival cheerleader squads. In it, the phrase serves as a taunt to proclaim one squad’s superiority over the other. “Bring it on” they say, with confidence that whatever the other team may bring, they will do better.

However, around the same time this movie was seeping into our nation’s consciousness, and before it proliferated way too many sequels, Steven Curtis Chapman had a song with the same name. “Bring it on” he proclaimed, with the intended recipient being the Persecutor of Christians. Sure, there may be tough times, the song exhorted, but if those times bring us closer to our Father, than “bring it on.”

Chapman’s song emphasized an important point, reminiscent of James’ point to the early Church that they should view their trials with joy because they produce perseverance in faith (James 1:2-3). And while this point is a good one, and it can help us to have a right view of the struggles we encounter, there is another reason that we should say “bring it on” when, as Christians, we face tough times. The more we suffer, the more we struggle for Christ’s sake on this Earth, the more we will be rewarded in the next (See Matthew 5:11-13). When our difficulties arise as a result of our faithfulness to Christ and His calling, we can with confidence combat our trials. We say “bring it on” not only for the Earthly benefits of tested and proven faith, but for the heavenly ones as well.

This is no small tasks. Welcoming trials seems in opposition to all that we as humans crave. We desire the avoidance of pain, and the preponderance of pleasure. And while we shouldn’t seek out troubling situations, just for the sake of encountering them (See Matthew 4:7), we also needn’t fear them. We can confidently say “bring it on” knowing that in the end our rival will be conquered and our reward great.

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