Friday, March 09, 2012

Living Life Looking Back?


Attempting to navigate life while staring into the rear-view mirror will lead inevitably to a crash. We will miss today’s opportunities if we are desperate to re-capture the happiness of another time in life.  If we live in the past, we almost certainly will live in a place that never really existed. History gets rewritten. We tend to minimize the difficulties or failures.  Try to think back even to one year ago. The stuff you were dealing with on a daily basis is largely forgotten. Your recall is limited to banner moments. The ordinary moments - the flat tires, broken appliances, frustrations, arguments... they have disappeared into the fog of memory recalled only with great effort!

Christians fall into the trap of nostalgia in the faith walk, too. Some complain about the state of the church, criticize the youth, and/or long for the preaching of another era.  "It's not the way it used to be," they sadly say; and they are right! Change is inevitable! Any organization that makes keeping all things exactly the same - and many do - become less and less effective. The world moves on and so must we.  A living Christian must grow. But, you say, "Jerry, Christianity is ancient.  Traditions are important."   And you're right.   The Bible assures us that "Jesus Christ is the same; yesterday, today, and forever."   The celebrations of Communion, baptism – remembering the birth, death, and Resurrection of the Lord Jesus – keep us anchored to the core truths of our faith.  Some traditions are helpful because they preserve continuity in the Christian community. And I believe that novelty, just trying to be on the 'cutting edge’ to keep things interesting for the restless, just lead us on a wild goose chase after every new fad. The Bible warns about being "immature like children … tossed and blown about by every wind of new teaching." (Ephesians 4:14, NLT)

How the Gospel is communicated; the forms of our corporate worship, will change over time. Songs that moved us, that shaped our expressions, will be replaced by the songs of new artists who are expressing their love for Christ with new rhythms and melodies.  That is true, but believe me - each generation's innovations in Christian worship has provoked the ire of the previous generation!

Now, let me speak personally to you.  

·         Are you missing out on what God wants to do in your life TODAY, because you're attempting to recreate the spiritual experiences of another time?
·         Do you fondly remember a decade when, in your memory anyway,  God seemed so close to you?   

Rejoice in that!   Don't try to erase yesterday. My great memories of family times with my kids are foundational to my love for them today.  But, if I attempt to relate to my kids who are now adults like I did when they were pre-adolescents, I'll alienate them from me.    So it is with the Lord. What He did for you and with you yesterday is foundational for your walk with Him today, but those things are past, and He's doing a new thing in you, in me!

Ask God to help you to see and appreciate what He's doing today.  If you think the Church has gone a little 'off the rails,'  pray for those who lead, asking the Spirit to make His Presence known - and be ready for God to do a new thing - in you, in your church, in this world!  Consider Jesus' parable -  “No one tears a piece of cloth from a new garment and uses it to patch an old garment. For then the new garment would be torn, and the patch wouldn’t even match the old garment. And no one puts new wine into old wineskins. The new wine would burst the old skins, spilling the wine and ruining the skins." (Luke 5:36-37, NLT)

Here’s a word from the Word. Pray for new vision for the future as you read it.  “Sing a new song to the Lord, for he has done wonderful deeds. He has won a mighty victory by his power and holiness." (Psalm 98:1, NLT)  And remember this, about vision for the future:  “Eyes that look are common. Eyes that see are rare.” – Oswald Saunders

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