Archive for April, 2009

Finding Purpose

Johnny Hart captures an apologetic nugget of wisdom. People are ever pursuing purpose and meaning in life…and they settle one finding purpose in the search for purpose, not in something that will actually give them purpose. That is like a person searching for water, and then becoming satisfied with the search and not needing the water any more. It’s like finding love in pursuit of love, that is the feeling or experience of anticipating love. It reminds me of a love song that extols the virtue of love, but never mentions the object the love.  Maybe someday scientists will discover a “love” pill, which you can take and experience the emotional or romantic aspect of love without having anyone else in your life to actually love!

For some people, the search for God is noble, but the finding of God is naive, lacking the subtleties of contemporary epistomology. Howver, we were created with a purpose, a God-given purpose. It comes from outside of ourselves, from God. Our purpose IS God, to live for Him and for His purposes. He wants to fulfill our need for purpose, not simply in the pursuit of Him, but in the finding of Him and living for Him.  Don’t let the pseudo-intellectural, pseudo-spiritual naysayers mislead you into settling for a pagan god that is nebulous, mysterious and ultimatley unknowable. (Sad to say, some Christian intellectuals are actually promoting this notion today).

God is a knowable God, who wants to be found out. If not, what is the point of the search? Please spare me the rubish of “It’s the search that matters.”  No, it is God that matters and that is why we are ever searching to know more about him. From knowing to knowing, it is Him that satisfies.

The Lord says, “You will seek Me and find me when you search for Me with all your heart.” (Jeremiah 29:13). The purpose of life is not in the searching, but in the finding God. Have you found Him. Do you know Him? Are you getting to know Him better?

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If I Could Love You Better

Following are the lyrics of a song I discovered in an old Bible of mine from years ago. It brought back memories of the most difficult time in my Christian life I have ever gone through. The words of this song were a great encouragement to me.

If I Could Love You Better
By “Wendy and Mary”

If I could love You better alone than together
then give me solitude.
If I could love You better by becoming a beggar,
Then remove my coat and shoes.
If I could see You clearly through the most humble,
Then bring me Lord to my knees.
If I could love You better in stormy weather,
Then let it rain on me.

Chorus: Let me find shelter in Your covering,
And trust in You when hope seems gone.
Let Your strength be my strong hold,
Then Your voice will be my song.

If I could love You better without a song I’d rather
You take me Lord and change my heart.
But if You see me on stage singing,
Then give me word and may it impart.
If I could love You better with out-stretched hands,
Help me lift them high.
If I could love You better in stormy weather,
Then break through my pride.

Chorus: Let me find shelter in Your covering,
And trust in You when hope seems gone.
Let Your strength be my strong hold,
Then Your voice will be my song.

In my weakness You bring me strength,
Through my trusting You build my faith.
Through my dying to my selfish ways,
I live in you.

Chorus: Let me find shelter in Your covering,
And trust in You when hope seems gone.
Let Your strength be my strong hold,
Then Your voice will be my song.

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Cure For Dysfunctional Family

I just read today (somewhere in the Gospel of Luke) that the kingdom of heaven is a like a small seed that grows into a large tree and becomes home to the birds. This made me appreciate the local church of God in these difficult times. In our small church we have a number of people unemployed due to the economy, several with difficult marriages and others with debilitating physical difficulties. On Sunday mornings we all come together, and as one body we worship the Lord Jesus as he asked us to do by breaking of bread. This odd tradition He left for us is meant, among other things, to give us a sense of family, the kind that gets together regularly for a “sit-down” meal (fewer and fewer families, I am told, have a daily sit down together kind of meal, much less once a week). The family of God, comes to dinner weekly, so to speak, with a single focus in mind – the glory of the Lord. What a way to begin the week that we all face with such differing struggles of life—getting refocused on what is important and essential.

Then various members of the body kick into gear serving others, whether it is teaching Sunday School, providing praise music, working on setup and takedown (we meet in rented facilities), serving refreshments, preaching the word, greeting visitors, serving in nursery, stacking song books, cleaning up someone else’s mess, etc. Most of us get time to take part in the praise time and the teaching time. The body is working together for the glory of the Father and the building up of each other.

Then, our church is a bit weird, people like to stay afterward and just “be” together, sometimes up to a hour after the service is ended. Sipping on a hot or cold drink, munching on donuts or bagels and talking or watching, sometimes talking about the recent sports games, sometimes the economy, sometimes about spiritual thinks, sometimes praying for or encouraging one another concerning some heavy matter in our lives. You know, the kind of stuff that true fellowship is made up of.

Sometimes an older person and a younger person are engaged. Often married people and singles mix, people of different social or economic classes find no barrier to being together—in this environment it simply just doesn’t matter when it comes to fellowship. Jeans, t-shirts, ties, slacks, dresses, you name it. Kids play “kill the man with the ball” in the gym while younger children get scooped up to safety by concerned parents. Laughing, crying, deep discussions, chit-chat—you name it.

These are the kind of things Jesus had in mind when he spoke of the church being a family, all are accepted and each building up the other. When so many struggle with dysfunctional or broken families, the church is a family that provides a wonderful respite from the cares of the world. It may not seem like much to outsiders (like a small seed) and we may blue jays seem to argue at times, but we birds of a feather like to flock together in the tree of God’s kingdom, and we stick up for each other.

For some people this replaces their dysfunctional family of birth and provides an example of what a real family should be like like. More than just providing an example, though, the local church is a real family, a functional one. Praise God for the church!

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