Tuesday, October 4, 2011
What the world thinks about when they think about God
I'm the kind of guy that likes to read a few verses of God's word in the mornings so it gives me something to chew on for the rest of the day (my simple mind can't handle much more than a few verses at a time). Well yesterday was one of those days that God decided to shake up a bit. Right before I went to bed I had one single verse really resonating between my ears so decided to read through it before I crashed for the night.
2 Corinthians 5:20"We are therefore Christ's ambassadors, as though God were making his appeal through us."
After thinking through this verse I realized that the implications that come with this verse are two fold...
First of all we are Christ's representatives in this world. That speaks volumes for itself! God created us in His image, to be His ambassadors in this dark hurting world. He didn't have to create us, but He chose to create us. Then to take it further He gave us the privilege of representing Him to the world. As mind boggling as this is, it is not even the thought that kept me up through the night...
The aspect of this verse that kept me up through the night was not the excitement or humility that comes with being one of God's representatives (don't let me water that down because that portion alone is the single most mind blowing thought ever, but was simply not the thing that kept me up). But it was the other side of the coin.
A.W. Tozer said, "What you think about when you think about God is the most important thing about you."
Now, when I read 2 Corinthians 5:20, it immediately collided with Tozer's quote and forced me into a cold sweat. If you take Tozer's quote and add to it you'll see a new perspective that hits home pretty hard.
"What you think about when you think about God is the most important thing about you." AND since we are representatives of God, what the world thinks about when it thinks about God is what they see in you (second half added).
This thought almost had me in tears lastnight simply because I began to wonder what we as "Christ's ambassadors" are telling the world about our God. Are we saying that He is faithful, loving, and holy? Or are we telling the world that our God is unfaithful, unloving, and unholy?
After all we bear His image in this world...
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Couch Christianity
While sitting in my living room drinking my green tea (giving up coffee is ruff, but that's a story for another day) and doing the best I can to chase after the heart of God I stumbled on a statement in Exodus 14 that really boggled my mind. To set the stage for this event Moses and the Israelites just made a grand exit from Egypt after 430 years of slavery. The place that I want to key in on is the event immediately following their exit.
Let's jump into the psyche of Moses for a minute as the Israelites make their approach on the Red Sea and realize that Pharaoh changed his mind and wanted his slaves back. I can only imagine the thoughts that crossed Moses' mind when he turned around and saw the army of one of the most powerful empires of that time breathing down his neck, only to realize there was another problem... Let's call that problem the Red Sea! Brother was surrounded on all sides with an Egyptian army on one side and a Red Sea on the other.
I can only imagine the thought that crossed Moses' mind that very moment in time. The first thing out of his mouth is "Do not be afraid. Stand firm and you will see the deliverance the Lord will bring you today. The Egyptians you see today you will never see again. The Lord will fight for you; you need only be still."
The statement I was talking about earlier that caught my attention was God's reaction to Moses' comment. God spoke up and said "Why are you crying out to me? Tell the Israelites to move on." God basically told Moses to get off his butt and move!
Now being still and knowing that He is God is a good thing, but knowing that He is God coupled with action takes it to a whole new level.
I get the gut feeling that we often take Christianity and sit on the couch with it while passively allowing life to creep by so we can escape the other side unscathed. I feel that we were created to do so much more...
That being said I wonder what faith would look like if we put our feet to action. What would faith look like if we were surrounded by an Egyptian army on one side and a Red Sea on the other... Would we have the audacity to march forward toward the sea while expecting dry ground when we get there?
Saturday, April 2, 2011
God is da Man
Some of the coolest comments come out when people are just sitting around shooting straight with each other without fear of getting looked at funny. Thursday night a group of friends and I were sitting around chewing on a thick passage of scripture when out of the blue one of my buddies screams "God is da man"! As a first response everyone rolled on the floor laughing, probably for good reason, but afterward I got to thinking about the impact of that comment.
What would it look like if we approached our faith with a "God is da man" mentality?
I feel that Paul had the same mindset when he addressed Corinth in 1Corinthians by saying "For I resolve to know nothing while I was with you except Jesus Christ and him crucified". I wonder if "Jesus Christ and him crucified" is good enough to float our proverbial boats today. If that statement was all that we had to hold on to would our faith hold up or unravel completely?
I have a knack to try and understand everything about most situations before I make a move. Seems to be a common problem among almost everyone today. Faith on the other hand doesn't work that way... Faith is like saying "God is da man" and that's all I need to know! Now don't hear me saying that knowledge of Christ is unnecessary, because the transformation of our minds is what causes us to take on a Christlike image. But when everything is stripped away the only thing that seems to matter is "Christ and him crucified".
Let's just say we've got two people standing at the base of a mountain. The first guy looks at the mountain and starts formulating the amount of man power and dynamite he needs to make it move. The second simply looks at the mountain and says "I don't know how it's going to happen, but God said you'd move". Which is more likely to see the mountain take a swan dive into the ocean?
I wonder whose faith is stronger... The man who has to know all the angles before he acts, or the man that banks everything on the thought that "God said, and he's da man".