Final Destination

We’re all familiar with the tale of the child on a family vacation who can’t seem to stop asking “Are we there yet?” If we’re honest, most of us have probably felt like that child at one time or another. Even before we start our journey, we’re often picturing the blissful days that we plan on enjoying. We talk with friends about our plans to sit on the beach, hit the slopes, or to spend time with loved ones. We anticipate the feelings of relaxation that will penetrate our bodies and rejuvenate our spirits. Once we’re on our way, we can hardly wait to get there.

For the Christian, we know that our entire life is a journey towards a destination that greatly overshadows even the most wonderful of vacations. And just like the child who is eagerly looking forward to getting to where they want to be, we should be eagerly anticipating the Place that awaits us. We must live life on this Earth with our eyes firmly focused on our final destination – not only because it will help us make choices in light of eternity, but because it will make put the temporary concerns of this Earth firmly in perspective. Just as a child doesn’t worry about the sniffles she woke up with or the previous day’s skinned knees when they are fixated at their impending trip to Disneyland, so we will rightly focus, not on the trials that we currently experience, but on the permanent goodness that awaits us.

As C.S. Lewis once wrote that “If you read history you will find that the Christians who did the most for the present world were precisely those who thought most of the next. It is since Christians have largely ceased to think of the other world that they have become so ineffective in this one.”

May our eyes be focused on our final destination so that we do the most good while we are on our journey to there.

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Bring The Rain

(I’ve been doing a little mini-series on trials. Sometimes these mini-series are unplanned and just happen because of what God has placed on my heart. Hopefully for those who are going through trials, you’ve found them encouraging. For those who aren’t, I hope they’ve been encouraging to you as well. :))

I’ve lived in Southern California for over 25 years now and I still marvel at the weather.  It’s a wonderful gift that we can wait for sunshine to go grocery shopping, because if it’s inclement today in all likelihood it won’t be tomorrow. Recently, however, we’ve had a spate of storms. These storms weren’t just “big for Southern California” – they unleashed a bucket load of rain that would impress a mid-westerner. And while I enjoy an occasional downpour as much as the next person, sometime around the 6th day straight of rain, I was over it. Just like the refrain in the child’s lullaby, I was wishing for the rain, rain to go away (and was really hoping it didn’t come back another day.)

Sometimes, however, the rain lasts much longer than we think we can endure. This is true of the drops that fall from the sky and the storms that we face in life. However, in their song “Bring the Rain,” MercyMe gives us a different perspective to consider when our lives are caught in a downpour. They sing:

Bring me joy, bring me peace
Bring the chance to be free
Bring me anything that brings You glory
And I know there’ll be days
When this life brings me pain
But if that’s what it takes to praise You
Jesus, bring the rain

Did you catch that? Instead of asking God to take away the rain, they ask Him to bring it – if it brings Him glory. I know people who pray to avoid painful situations, and those that pray to have pain removed, but to tell God in advance that you are o.k. with the heartache if that through it, His goodness is shown takes a faith and a confidence that is rarely seen.

As I’ve written previously, I don’t think we need to go looking for pain. However, I do think we need to offer everything to God, even our comfort and contentedness if through it, His goodness can be put on display.

May our hearts increasingly be not only willing to endure what life brings, but may we offer up whatever God needs to use even if it means some rain.

 

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