Tag Archives: Redemption

Would you like MORE?

Charles Dickens’ Oliver, still hungry after his meager portion of cruel, boldly approaches the workhouse master and asks, “Please sir, could I have more?” In a world where the majority of people face a similar situation every day, even those of us with full bellies still ask for more. More bang for the buck, more miles per gallon, more value added features, more happiness, more fulfillment, more time! Even when we simplify our lives and focus our energies and discover that “less is more,” it’s still “more” we’re after. More peace, more balance, more of everything good.

But what happens when you actually get more of what you’re seeking? Does it lead to more contentment and satisfaction? Or does getting more make us want even more yet? Many of our appetites for things like food, fitness, and life festivities leave us saying, “That was great! Let’s do it again!” Whether we are “addicted” to something good or something bad, our appetites easily become satiated and yet left wanting more.

Consider facing a terminal illness or any other situation that leaves you pleading for “a second chance.” If your life circumstance was redeemed and restored, how would you respond? We’ve heard “there are no atheists in foxholes,” and we know that many desperate “negotiations” are made in desperate times. “If only you do this, I’ll certainly do that.” But would we follow through? If faced with a month to live, you were granted many more months or even years, would it forever change the way you spend your remaining time? Or would you continue to fritter it away on meaningless activities? If the court gavel came down with the verdict of guilty, and yet someone stepped in and paid the price for your wrongdoing, would it change the way you lived your life each day after?

That’s the picture of God’s gift of grace. He gives us life with so many second chances. He gave his Son to not only pay the price for our rebellious ways but also to provide an inheritance into his kingdom. And more yet, he gave us his very Spirit to guide, comfort, strengthen, and teach us everything we need.

Whether you have good reason to believe your days are very short or whether you think you have many years left, why not live each and every day with a thankful and generous spirit as if you were miraculously redeemed? If you’re sure you’d rejoice if the darkness of your worries were wiped away tomorrow, why not let the light of that hope shine brightly in the midst of your pain today?

Today is called the present because it is a gift. Look for and celebrate the goodness that remains in your life today and share it with others. I think you’ll find more of everything you really wanted.

Are you experiencing heaven on earth?

 

God restores.  He doesn’t have to. He could divorce us, walk away, and start over. But he is, has always has been, and always will be in the business of:

Reconciliation
Redemption
Restoration
Recovery
Return
Renewal
Regeneration
Resurrection
And reclaiming

His plan to restore his creation is the centerpiece of his work on earth and and will be completed when the new heaven comes down to the new earth. (Revelation 20-21)  But God’s plan is not only for a new earth later, but renewal and restoration in your life right now.

Ponder this list, one by one. Is there an area of your life that needs reclaimed and redeemed by God for your own good? What about the good of others close to you? How would they benefit from your surrendering of all things to the control of God’s Spirit? Unconfessed sin, negative thoughts and emotions, and even apathy can set up strongholds in our minds. We try over and over to tame a critical tongue, a tendency to gossip, our penchant for personal gain, worry, fear, and our wasteful obsessions with things that don’t matter at the expense of those that really do. Oh, how we work to be “better Christians.” But it will never work out on our own. It is one of the paradoxes of the Christian life. We win only by surrendering. Only by consistently and persistently and relentlessly surrendering these strongholds to God’s control will we conquer them. And not only is he able to free us, it’s his desire to do so. It’s part of his master plan.  It’s part of the bigger picture of his redemptive plan to salvage his creation.

Have you ever wondered why God left us here on earth after he saved us? Why didn’t he just take us right away to heaven? Was it to work hard to serve him? The way I see it, we are left here to enjoy him:

“Man’s chief end is to glorify God, and to enjoy him forever.”  (Westminster Catechism – though I agree with John Piper, that it better reads “Man’s chief end is to glorify God BY enjoying him forever.) It’s the job description not only for our time on earth but for all eternity. We exist to glorify God, because he alone is worthy of our praise. How do we glorify God? By enjoying him and being fully satisfied in him.

You already know what it means to enjoy time with a trusted friend, a walk in the park, and shared joys with close family. What does “enjoying God” mean to you? Can you imagine intimate fellowship with the one who loves you most, sitting at the feet of the master, watching his light disperse the darkness from your life? Could you marvel at his splendor, his wisdom, strength, his mercy and grace, and the depth of his unending love he lavishes upon us? Do you know what it is to experience firsthand his restorative work in your life, even as we dance trials? To possess the one thing that positively impacts those around us and our passion for living well, even in the midst of trying circumstances?

We experience “heaven on earth” by dwelling in his presence now. It’s how Jesus taught us to pray, “Your kingdom come, on earth as it is in heaven.” It’s a precursor of the new heaven those who are redeemed will one day experience. It’s his restoration plan to proclaim good news to the poor, bind up the brokenhearted, and proclaim freedom for the captives, and release them from darkness. (Isaiah 61:1)

There will come a time when there will be a new heaven and a new earth, when God will redeem and restore all his creation. His Word says that all who believe in the name of His Son, Jesus, will enjoy it forever. Shouldn’t thinking of this grab our attention now?

Randy Alcorn quotes British theologian J.C. Ryle: “I pity the man who never thinks about heaven,” and adds “thinks correctly” about heaven. “It’s our inaccurate thinking that causes us to think so little about heaven,” he says while noting that heaven has fallen off our radar screen.

I hope thinking of heaven inspires you and gives you hope. More over, I hope that you will enjoy  the “heaven on earth” he offers to all who believe and keep on believing in his Son, Jesus, the rescuer of our souls.

 

Beyond desperation to hope

 

“The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation, and go to the grave with the song still in them.”
– Henry David Thoreau, Walden

 

What does it mean to you to live a life of quiet desperation? Some think it is absurd to cling to faith, that it is only an illusion, and that there is no meaning in living. Others maintain that the real futility is in living a life without meaning, of choosing despair over hope, of making sure that your song is boldly sung each day and not kept within you.

 

Samantha (Sam) Crawford, the character in the movie Unconditional, lived a great life full of excitement and happiness. But when her circumstances take a tragic twist, she comes to a dead-end and loses her faith and her passion for living. The song in her heart died. About to give up, she encounters two children who lead her to a reunion with her long-lost childhood friend, Joe. Despite his crippling kidney disease ‘Papa Joe’ as the children call him, lives for a higher purpose. Joe had encountered his own share of grief, enduring a prison sentence brought on by his own poor choice. But Joe chose to respond to his redemption by bringing redemption to others. He reaches out to the children in the low-income neighborhood where he lives, teaching and encouraging them. Inspired by Joe Bradford’s true story, Unconditional speaks to how the power of God’s redemptive love for us is magnified when it is shared unconditionally with others.

 

Real life doesn’t always present such stark contrasts. Truthfully, we often live somewhere in between. We say we live by faith but we persistently walk by sight. I wonder how often others might observe our actions and ambitions and conclude that we live with a ‘quiet desperation’, clinging to everything that doesn’t satisfy while the song of true joy is kept hidden within us.

 

How we respond to tragic twists in our circumstances is determined by how we choose to respond to God’s redemptive love poured into our own lives…today.  Don’t live a life of quiet desperation. Let the song of his unconditional love flow from your heart today. Whatever choices have marked your life up until now, today is a new day. Choose well.

 

“Live. Breathe. Find a way to believe. Never give up on hope. Life’s not a dead-end if it takes you somewhere you need to go. Talk to God and find his love. It’s the most powerful thing on earth. There is enough love to go around. All you need to do is share it.” (Excerpts from Unconditional)