The Focus of Our Thoughts

Christ tells us that where our treasure is, you’ll find our heart as well (Luke 12:34). Additionally, you’ll usually find that where your heart is, that is where your thoughts are centered.  Just like our hearts are a gateway to what we value, so our thoughts are a gateway to what is occuping our hearts.

For the Christian, therefore, the question is whether the things that are consuming our thoughts are reflective of our Savior’s heart.  Since it should be our desire to increasingly become more like Him, our thoughts should be focused on the things that He valued, the things that were important to Him. Reading the Gospels it is easy to see that one of the things that was important to Him was the “kingdom of heaven.” Parable after parable had this as the object. Even Jesus’ instructive prayer pleaded with the Father for the coming of His future reign. If this is where our Savior’s heart lies, shouldn’t it be the focus of our thoughts as well?

As John Owen wrote in The Grace & Duty of Being Spiritually Minded,  “We all profess that we are bound for heaven, immortality, and glory; but is it any evidence we really design it, if all our thoughts are consumed about the trifles of this world, which we must leave behind us, and if we have only occasional thoughts of things above?”

In other words, if our thoughts are focused on the inconveniences and struggles of today, this is a pretty good indication that this is what we think is important. However, if what we think is important is the reign and glory of our Eternal King, then this should be where our thoughts are centered as well.

Things are going to happen in this world that matter; we can’t escape that fact. However, when things do happen we can see them through the prism of Eternity and, like our Savior, keep our thoughts focused on the glory that is to come.

 

What do you think? How do you keep your thoughts on the “things above’?

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Hastened to the Haven

Living in southern California, we don’t experience inclement weather very often. As a result, unlike most places in the world, when rain approaches, you’ll see Facebook status updates excited about the impending storm. (Of course, we are rather fickle in our excitement because it only takes a few consecutive days of rain for the complaints to supplant the former excitement.) For us, rain is viewed as a nice change of pace, rather than the inconvenience and hassle that most geographies consider it.

The reason that rain is often disparaged is because other places are too familiar with the destruction that storms can bring. Devastation often follows a downpour and the effects are real and lasting. However, in the storms in life, much like the Californian, the Christian should have a different perspective on the rain. As Charles H. Spurgeon reminds us,

Fear not the storm, it brings healing in its wings, and when Jesus is with you in the vessel, the tempest only hastens the ship to its desired haven.

We know that storms cause us to be tossed about, but as the great English preacher exhorts us, followers of Christ also known that in that turmoil, He is bringing us to the harbor. He controls the waves of the ocean, and the waves of our lives, and He often uses the swells to bring us to His desired destination. This doesn’t mean conquering the tempest will be easy, but it does mean that we can trust that He is using the crests and the crashes to accomplish His purposes. And because we are His, we know that wherever He brings us, in His love, we are safe.

May we increasingly see the storms of this life as an opportunity for God to hasten us to His haven, and may we trust in where the One who commands the waves, leads.

 

Share your thoughts…

How have you seen God use storms to bring you to the harbor?

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