Okay, I couldn’t not write about this week's prayer, specifically the first part:
Lord, make me have perpetual love and reverence for your holy Name
While I respect the desire expressed in this prayer, I confess that I’m troubled by make me each time I read it. We recently sang a song at church that expressed a similar sentiment: “Please wipe away the part of me that gets in the way.” I had a hard time singing these words, though I totally understand where the writer is coming from.
Here’s the problem: is it appropriate to ask God to make us do something? It seems to me that if I desire greater love and reverence for God, my prayer should be “Lord, help me to grow into perpetual love and reverence for your Holy Name.”
It’s about responsibility read the complete post
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Today's entry from My Utmost for His Highest is well-timed for me. Chambers says that if we want scientific understanding, go for intellect, but if we want spiritual understanding, we must obey. (I should note here that as far I as I can tell, Chambers was not anti-intellectual; rather, he recognized that God’s economy works differently.)
To illustrate his point, Chambers takes Matthew 5:23--24: “So if you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go. First be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your gift” (ESV). He follows with this: Jesus “is saying, in essence, ‘Don’t say another word to me; first be obedient by making things right.’” Chambers goes on to say:
The teachings of Jesus hit us where we live. We cannot stand as impostors before Him for even one second. He instructs us down to the very last detail. The Spirit of God uncovers our spirit of self-vindication and makes us sensitive to things that we have never even thought of before.
Here’s the thing for me: I find it pretty easy to obey in the single-action situations. When God showed us we should move to Birmingham, I didn’t struggle with that. Giving money to someone isn’t hard. It’s the day-to-day, “obey. repeat. repeat again.” kinds of things that cause me problems. Take self-defense, which I wrote about earlier this week. That day, I did fairly well (I think). The next day, likewise. But yesterday: I was rather unkind to Teddie last night. Strike rather: I was flat-out ugly. As I tried to go to sleep, I was pondering my failure of self-control. I thought, “Holy Spirit, why didn’t you remind me about keeping my mouth shut and letting God take care of things?” Immediately, the Spirit replied: “You didn’t slow down enough to listen.” I could only say, “You are right.”
So I see two things at work here: first, obedience requires discipline. That’s why one-time acts are easy and repeat performances are hard. It takes discipline to do something again and again and again. Second, obedience requires a listening heart. There are times when I’m in conflict and I’m listening for the Spirit’s voice to tell me what to say (or more likely, what not to say). But there are many times when I’m so focused on myself that, like David, I strap on my sword and pledge to kill everything in my path.
Discipline and listening. As always, Chambers brings it down to a simple level, cutting to the core: “Examine the things you tend simply to shrug your shoulders about, and where you have refused to be obedient, and you will know why you are not growing spiritually.” Though I would like to think that I don’t “shrug my shoulders” about anything God says, my heart tells me that’s not true. There are indeed times when I refuse to be obedient. I want to say the hurtful thing; I want to eat when I know I shouldn’t. I want to be lazy when I know I should work.
Just as I’m about to become overwhelmed here by all I need to obey, the quiet voice of the Spirit reminds me that Jesus said, “My yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” And I’m reminded that God is a father, not a taskmaster: just as I work with my children to help them grow in disciplines (like cleaning their rooms), God works with me. When I remember this, obedience and growth don’t seem so hard.
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