Showing posts with label Wonder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wonder. Show all posts

Sunday, December 11, 2022

Just pondering


How amazing are the deeds of the Lord! All who delight in him should ponder them. Everything he does reveals his glory and majesty. His righteousness never fails. (Psalm 111:2-3)

All who delight in him should ponder his deeds. What does it mean to ponder? To consider something deeply and thoroughly - we get the word meditation from this concept of pondering. Meditation isn't sitting cross-legged and chanting - it is taking time out to just dig a little deeper into the object of your attention. If God is the object right now - you are pondering!

"A season of suffering is a small assignment when compared to the reward. Rather than begrudge your problem, explore it. Ponder it. And most of all, use it. Use it to the glory of God." (Max Lucado) We may not want to admit it, but God can and does use every 'season' of our lives - good, mediocre, or really bad! Ponder these seasons - what is he doing, how are we responding, what might he be teaching us in that moment? We aren't going to grow in Christ if we ever expect to do it without some element of 'pondering' him.

Everything he does reveals his glory - that should resonate in your soul and deep within your spirit. Nothing escapes his use in your life - nothing. The tiniest of issues can reveal the biggest of victories. The greatest of victories can reveal the most hidden of virtues. We need to consider well what he is doing, for in so doing we open ourselves up to the revelation of something we may not have really known about God or ourselves. Pondering is not wasted time - in fact, it is the most beneficial use of time you may ever experience. Just sayin!

Thursday, April 23, 2020

The possibility of today

Did you ever stop to think just how practical the Bible really is? It lays out sound advice on how to make financial decisions such as the borrower becoming slave to the lender, so don't be frivolous in your spending (Proverbs 22:7). We find instruction on how to have a solid family life such as how much it takes to build a household and the depth of understanding required to set them all on a firm foundation (Proverbs 24:3). We also find warnings of things we should avoid because they will be our "undoing" - things like not interfering with a good person's lives as it may end up with us falling flat on our face (Proverbs 24:15-16). Yet, there are many questions we just don't seem to find the easy or "straight" answers for in those pages. Jesus spent about three years teaching his disciples as he made his way to the cross. In that period of time, he laid out all kinds of truth for them. Some of it stumped the crowds, but the disciples usually got what he was teaching. Other times, the disciples were just as bewildered as the crowds! Peter finds the courage to ask a question which had probably been "niggling" at him for a while. I think Jesus likes it when we are honest with him about the things we question or don't understand fully.

At that point Peter got up the nerve to ask, "Master, how many times do I forgive a brother or sister who hurts me? Seven?" Jesus replied, "Seven! Hardly. Try seventy times seven. (Matthew 18:21-22)

You know Peter was probably pretty proud of himself with suggesting that he go beyond forgiving his brother or sister just ONE time and extending this forgiveness to the seventh offense. I can just see him now (probably because I can see a little of myself in Peter) - kind of looking around at his peers, all delighted with his "spiritual insight" into how much God "values" forgiveness. Then, as quickly as he asks the question and suggests this answer, Jesus bursts his bubble! Imagine his surprise when Jesus announces, "Nope, how about 490 times, Peter?" Now, don't read more into this than what Jesus intended. He was not suggesting a literal number, so as for us to keep a little tally book indicating how many times we had forgiven an individual - then when they reach the "point of no return" they are cut off from our forgiveness forever. Jesus was showing Peter (and us) the infinite side of God's forgiveness. He was suggesting the principle of being long-suffering. Some of us might want to translate this as "suffering long". Jesus was suggesting the idea of enduring injury, trouble, or provocation long AND patiently. When we are faced with injury - we have a tendency to not want to experience that too often or for very long! When involved in trouble at the hand of another - we want to give a little of it back to them! When provoked - it takes everything inside of us to not respond with some type of anger! True? I don't think I am in this alone - I have a whole lot of companions who struggle with this whole idea of forgiving much and often.

In fact, we want to have some "finite" point when we just say, "You just hit my last nerve and no more 'Mr. Nice Guy'. From now on, you better watch your back!" How do we get to the point of being 'enduring' in our forgiveness? I am not sure I know all the answers here, but if we look at this scripture in context, you will see it comes just after Jesus has answered another question for the disciples. The question posed, "Who gets the highest position in your kingdom, Jesus?" His answer was an object lesson. He takes a small child from the crowd, holds him close and then begins to teach the disciples about the importance of seeing things in God's kingdom through the eyes of a child. He starts with the concept of "starting over". Not just any arbitrary point of starting over, but he tells them to return to square one and start over like small children (vs. 2-5). He points them back to the elementary things in life - the simple, or rudimentary stuff. What is a small child like? Aren't they curious, willing to explore new things, seeing things for the first time through eyes of wonder? I think Jesus may have just been referring to this way of viewing things as God views them - with a willingness to explore them the way we have never explored them before - through the eyes of wonder! He is probably saying it is important for us to get the basic stuff before we try to move onto the harder stuff! There is an "order" to learning - both physically and spiritually.

They are trusting. It is a simple trust - uncomplicated with all the stuff we tend to "build trust" upon as adults. They don't keep an "account" - to them, the "history" doesn't matter as much because each day brings a new chance to start over. Think back to being a small child - didn't you start fresh each day? You awoke, did your few chores, then charged out into the yard to find your friends. Before long, you'd be in a game of tag, or running cars through dirt roads you'd created with your hand in some imaginary "town". If you had a falling out over some particular toy, or who'd be the leader in some imaginary game of war, tomorrow would bring a new day. Jesus adds to his teaching about the child, telling the disciples (and us) to not expect hard times will never come - in fact, when they come, he warns us to not make them worse by holding onto the things we'd like to be angry and bitter about. Maybe this is how we are expected to model forgiveness. Perhaps Jesus was suggesting more about how we don't allow the stuff from yesterday to muddle up our today than he was us keeping an account of offenses. To Peter's question (and to ours) he simply points to the child. In learning to face the new day with the wide-eyed wonder of a child, maybe we will see less of the offense of yesterday and more of the possibility of today. Each new day is a day of wonder when it is squarely placed in God's hands! Just sayin!

Saturday, August 13, 2016

Inspired Desire

Your decrees inspire wonder; because of that, my soul desires to keep them.  When Your words are unveiled, light shines forth; they bring understanding to the simple.  My desire for Your commands left me waiting, open-mouthed and panting.  (Psalm 119:129-131 VOICE)

Left waiting, open-mouthed and panting.  That certainly conjures up an image in our minds, does it not?  Do God's decrees (his words) inspire wonder in our minds, hearts, and spirits? Or have they become routine (mundane) and a little "dry"?  It is quite common to find the things we are most familiar with becoming "mundane" or "ordinary" in our minds and hearts.  I think a good, totally sappy movie on a Saturday afternoon is a real treat because it helps me to unwind and just get some much needed distraction or rest from the normal routine of the week.  When this Saturday afternoon "flick" turns into a binge-watching fest on Netflix, I begin to find I no longer get the same enjoyment from it!  Why?  It has become mundane - it has become something which "dulls" my senses, but from which I am not really deriving any benefit.

When we approach God's Word with intent, it is rarely found to be mundane. When we haphazardly "flip through it", hoping to find something distract ourselves from whatever pressure we are under at the moment, we might just be surprised how "ordinary" these words can become.  What has the potential to ignite a great blast furnace of spiritual energy and enthusiasm is kind of "dulled" by our lack-luster approach to exploring it.  As our psalmist points out, when the heart is eager to connect, God's words become the very things which inspire and ignite us from within.  It is like anyone who works out regularly will tell you - just do it because you "have to" and it is a chore; do it because it releases something "in" you and it is a delight!

Wonder is that internal feeling you get whenever you discover something which surprises you, is beautiful beyond words, or simply brings a sense of awe or amazement.  I have to ask the obvious here - do God's words ever surprise you, bringing into your heart and mind a sense of awe or amazement?  I think we might just find when we connect with an intentional heart connection they do!  It is the heart which connects the ear to the one who is speaking! When our heart yearns, we are more likely to find a deeper sense of satisfaction in that which we receive in our exploration!

Look again at what our psalmist says...
He goes into God's Word seeking to uncover something - even the smallest iota of truth and light.  He has intent in what he is doing and that intent is not going to be disappointed - because God honors a heart that searches, longs, "pants" as it were after his truth!  It becomes a light in a dark place, creative energy when other solutions man could turn to have somehow proven to be unreliable, and direction to the one who is about to be set adrift on the waves of the unknown.  God's Word connects with the one who seeks with intent - it brings insight, builds passion, sets straight the crooked, and gives clarity to the one who needs answers.

We can approach God's Word in many ways, but none will be as rewarding as when we come with expectation - intent builds excitement and anticipation!  I don't find some mornings easy - the restless nights can sometimes exhaust me more than the productive days! Yet, when I look into God's Word, seeking with intentional purpose of making a connection with the one who energizes my soul, I am never disappointed.  May your times of exploration in his Word never leave you less than amazed!  Just sayin!