The Purpose of the Paths

The 23rd Psalm is a well-known passage in Scripture. It has provided comfort and conviction to many as we realize what it means to have the Lord as our Shepherd – as the one who guides, protects, disciplines and pursues after us. Yet, because it is a familiar passage, I am prone to overlook the riches of what it says. In its familiarity it becomes common to me, but the truth it contains (as the truth of any Scripture) is anything but ordinary.

For instance, recently, as I listened to the 23rd Psalm being read, I was struck by the phrase in verse 3, “He leads me in paths of righteousness.” Like any good shepherd, one of the primary purposes of The Good Shepherd is to lead those who follow after Him. He is purposeful in choosing the paths that will lead to our protection and that will enable us to get to the place He has prepared. He is intent on choosing the roads that are in keeping with His Word, guiding us in the way of living more like Him. If I follow Him, I will increasingly live a life that is “righteous” – a life that better reflects Him.

Yet the very next phrase tells us the purpose of this leading; it isn’t for our own glory and esteem. We are led down these path of righteousness for His name’s sake. In other words, He doesn’t call us to go in a certain way primarily because it will be for our good (althoughHe does promisethat He is working all things together for that). Instead, His primary purpose is to bring glory to His name. The paths that He calls us to walk is not primarily about us; it’s about Him. And when we are called to go a certain way, we need to remember that choosing to go in a different direction, isn’t a “neutral” choice. We are choosing to deny Him the glory that He so richly deserves.

As a college professor, I get the opportunity to talk with a lot of students who are getting ready to enter “the real world.” Doing so is scary because all of their lives, they have had known what the next step was. They would finish elementary school, then go to junior high and so on and so forth until they are brought to graduation day. As they look to an unknown future, I always try to encourage them to look for the path that God has prepared. In doing so and in walking that path, they can be assured that He will accomplish something good from it. However, they can also be assured that if they walk the paths of righteousness that He has prepared, they will be used to make His name great. And there’s no better future to anticipate than that. For a college student or for the rest of us.

 

 

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Holding On

In the waves and shifts of life, sometimes it can be hard to remain steadfast. We think we’re heading one way, things changed and we’re knocked off balance. What we thought we knew for certain, now comes into question. The direction we thought we were heading becomes unclear.

When this happens, we’re tempted to revert to the things we know. For the Christian, this can mean their old way of living before they repented and put their faith in Christ. The things that were once familiar can become enticing again. We can cling to the patterns of live and behavior that helped us get through tough times before.

We usually think of sin as something that we do, not something that we have possession of. Yet, Colossians 3:8 states that we can put these things (anger, wrath, slander and obscene talk) away. Through the grace of God, He enables us to let go of these things that previously defined our lives (See Col. 3:7) And by His power, we can cling to Him instead.

Walking down the path that’s familiar seems comforting; we know what to expect and we know how to navigate the circumstances. Yet, when it comes to the pattern of our lives, God calls us to no longer walk in the former ways, because they no longer define our lives. He does. And when times are trying, we must not cling to what we once knew, but instead we must hold on to Him.

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