Saturday, October 20, 2012

Life Lite!

I have finished writing the third and final installment in the "Lessons from the Phantom" series, but have not edited it yet.  In the meantime, I thought I would share this with you:

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Ever feel like your life is just too full?  Like you've got too much on your plate and just need some relief?  Well, you’re not alone; millions share your plight!

But get this!  The good news is you can join legions of other people just like you who have found the solution.  That’s right!  We’re here to offer you a steaming cup of Life Lite – half the fat, half the calories, half the salt – and you’ll never notice they’re missing (unless you try Full Life… but don’t do that!)!

For half the price of Full Life you get:

-half the danger and half the exhilaration

-half the risk and half the gain

-half the sacrifice and half the value

-half the pain and half the joy

-half the battles and half the victories

-half the ugliness and half the beauty

-half the investments and half the dividends

-half the thuds and half the flying hopes

-half the failures and half the successes

-half the challenges and half the satisfaction

-half the life and all the physical death (We just can’t seem to find a way around full death yet… but trust us – we’re working on it!)

-half the good works and all the testing fire (We haven’t figured out how to cut that in half either… sorry!)

You get all this and less for just half the price of Full Life!  It’s a great deal!  Stop in today to get your cup of Life Lite or call 1-666-NOT-LIFE right now and we’ll half your order!  But hurry!  Offer ends soon!

[Disclaimer:  Full Life is not affiliated with Life Lite and does not endorse this product.  Limited warranty cannot guarantee full satisfaction.  Life Lite is not responsible for consumers’ full experience of regret, death, and trial by fire of half-hearted life work.  Life Lite does not guarantee that the level of benefits will reach expected one half levels or that danger, risk, sacrifice, etc., will not exceed half levels.]

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John 10:10: "The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly."

Matthew 10:39: "He who has found his life will lose it, and be who has lost his life for My sake will find it."

~M.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

One Masked Ball: Lessons from the Phantom, part II

An elder in my church, Steve Mozingo, has repeatedly observed that, when we are asked how we are doing, we often answer with a lie –we say we are doing very well.  This is the second type of mask that The Phantom of the Opera tackles.  In Chapter Three, before we have even met the masked phantom, we meet the retiring managers of the Paris Opera House and find that the Phantom isn’t the only character in the book wearing a mask.  Leroux describes the scene: “Everybody remarked that the retiring managers looked cheerful, as is the Paris way.  No one will ever be a true Parisian who has not learned to wear a mask of gaiety over his sorrows and one of sadness, boredom or indifference over his inward joy.  You know that one of your friends is in trouble; do not try to console him: he will tell you that he is already comforted; but, should he have met with good fortune, be careful how you congratulate him: he thinks it so natural that he is surprised that you should speak of it.  In Paris, our lives are one masked ball…”  The second kind of mask found in The Phantom of the Opera is the mask we put over our true feelings and personality out of fear of appearing weak, inviting ridicule, or not fitting in. 

Isn’t this so true to human nature?  We see it even in small children, like the little boys who try to act tough, while they really just want to be hugged.  Sometimes the masks cover joy and sometimes pain.  Sometimes we mask our talents and sometimes our faults.  All the time, trying to appear to be something we are not.  Jesus encountered this in His day in the persons of the Pharisees.  This was His reaction to the false front of goodness they put up:  “‘Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites!  For you clean the outside of the cup and the plate, but inside they are full of greed and indulgence… you are like whitewashed tombs, which outwardly appear beautiful, but within are full of dead people’s bones and all uncleanness.  So you also outwardly appear righteous to others, but within you are full of hypocrisy and lawlessness.’”  (ESV)  No doubt about it, Jesus detested the Pharisee’s masks. 

Really, a mask of this sort is nothing but a lie.  It is telling people we are something we are not.  And what is the harm in this?  Beyond the fact that lying is wrong, there are two harms that come from this sort of mask.  First, we cannot receive the help we need.  When we pretend to be something we are not, when we cover our pain, our struggles, our joy, and our faults, when we pretend to be someone we aren't  we are unable to receive comfort and aid, share our joys, and interact on a deep level.  This is partly because we are unwilling to receive what others are willing to give because receiving it would be an admission of our needs and would begin to reveal what’s really happening behind our masks.  We want to take care of ourselves.  You have probably read, or seen a movie of, L. M. Montgomery’s classic, Anne of Green Gables.  You may remember the scene when Anne takes a dare and attempts to walk the ridgepole of a roof, falls off, and breaks her ankle.  Remember how she refused Gilbert’s offer to drive her home?  In spite of the fact that she was hurt, she was unwilling to accept his help because that would mean taking off her mask of independence and pride.  And she was unwilling to do so. 

The second harm this sort of mask causes is the flip-side of the first.  When we don’t let people know what our true feelings and needs are and who we are inside, the people around us are often unaware of our needs and the best ways to interact with us.  As a result, however willing they may be, they are unable to help us.  It’s as if you were to become seriously ill but were unwilling to go to the doctor for help.  Consequently, the doctor would be unable to help you because he would be unaware of your sickness.

What lessons can we learn from this sort of mask in The Phantom of the Opera?  First, we must be willing to let our masks slip, to let people see our needs, our feelings, and our personalities.  We must leave our pride behind and stop behaving as if we, too, are living our lives as “one masked ball.”  Second, we must realize that, hidden behind the mask of that person we know who seems to have it all together, is a person with feelings and needs, like everybody else.  And then we must be willing to meet those needs, whether or not the person will admit to needing anything.  We humans, from almost the beginning of time, have tried to hide our true selves and our needs and tried to reject help.  Adam and Eve did it by trying to hide from God after the fall.  But we must be willing to imitate God Who sent Jesus to redeem us when we were dying and still trying to save ourselves.
To be continued…

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Look at the Heart: Lessons from the Phantom, part I

Sometimes a book captures more than your imagination – sometimes it captures your mind and heart, speaking so clearly to your world that the themes in it stick with you long after you’ve forgotten the little twists and turns of the story.  That happened to me when I read Gaston Leroux’s The Phantom of the Opera.

I devoured it in two and a half days, thoroughly enjoying the literary style, the depth of the characters, and the suspenseful plot.

Just as a side note, if you have seen a film/stage version of The Phantom of the Opera, you do not know the real story.  Every adaptation I have investigated has changed major aspects of the story and lost the things in the book that made me love the story.

Now, don’t worry, I shan’t make you listen to the whole plot and meet every character.  And, though I think it is a wonderful book – one that everyone should read – my goal here isn’t to give you a book review.  (Just take my advice and read it!)  What I would like to do it share the three themes I found in the book. 

Today, I’d like to share the first of these with you.  But first, a short background on the story:

The Phantom of the Opera is the story of, Erik, a masked man, horribly disfigured from birth, and yet a genius, living hidden away in the cellars of the Paris Opera House; his tragic love of the beautiful opera singer, Christine Daae; his intense jealousy of the man Christine loves; and his desperate desire “to be ‘some one,’ like everybody else.”

The Phantom has many lessons to teach our world, a world so taken with appearances.  First, the flesh is truly a mask over our real self and has no bearing on who we really are.  Second, often, the emotions we appear to have and the person we appear to be, are nothing but a mask over what we truly feel and are.  And third, our needs and value as human beings remain, no matter what outer masks we may wear.

Today we’ll look at the first.  To the world, Erik appeared a monster.  Leroux describes his face as, “…Red Death’s mask suddenly coming to life in order to express, with the four black holes of its eyes, its nose, and its mouth, the extreme anger, the mighty fury of a demon…”  Elsewhere, he is described as a living man in a corpse’s body.  These physical characteristics made him revolting to look upon and, as a result, people rejected him, drove him away, and called him a monster.  And yet, Leroux goes on to say that Erik was able to do “things no other man could do; he [knew] things which nobody in the world [knew].” He had “extraordinary gifts of dexterity and imagination which he had received by way of compensation for his extraordinary ugliness.”  And his voice!  His voice was such that, when he himself was unseen, it was thought to belong to the “Angel of Music”.  But despite these gifts, “…he was too ugly!  And he had to hide his genius or use it to play tricks with, when, with an ordinary face, he would have been one of the most distinguished of mankind!  He had a heart that could have held the empire of the world; and, in the end, he had to content himself with a cellar.”

Is this tragedy not a trademark of mankind?  We so often judge based on outward appearances, failing to see the true person behind the ugly or beautiful face.  Even Samuel, a prophet and man of God, made the same mistake.  In I Samuel 16, we find the account of David’s anointing as king of Israel by Samuel.  When God sends Samuel to the home of David’s father, Jesse, to anoint the next king, He does not tell Samuel which of the sons of Jesse He has chosen.  He simply tells Samuel that He will show him which is to be anointed king.  When Samuel meets the oldest son of Jesse and, finding him a splendid young man, he thinks, “‘Surely the LORD’s anointed is before [me].’ ” But God says to Samuel, “‘Do not look on his outward appearance or on the height of his stature, because I have rejected him.  For man looks on the outward appearance, but the LORD looks on the heart.’ ” (Scripture from the ESV.)

According to God, it is the inner man that truly matters.  God isn’t picky about the appearances of people.  He doesn’t choose people based on a handsome face or reject them based on what might commonly be considered an ugly appearance. 

But, so often, we do just the opposite.  The Phantom was repeatedly rejected by the people who saw him.  A moment in the story of the Phantom particularly stood out to me.  At the point of this episode, Christine has been kidnapped by the Phantom and taken to his domain in the cellars of the Paris Opera House, where he hopes to make her love him.  Christine recounts her experiences: “‘After lunch, he rose and gave me the tips of his fingers, saying he would like to show me over his flat; but I snatched away my hand and gave a cry.  What I had touched was cold and, at the same time, bony; and I remembered that his hands smelt of death. “Oh, forgive me!” he moaned.’”  Even the kind-hearted Christine is unable to bring herself to touch Erik because of his flesh.  

I think this seemingly insignificant moment stood out to me because of its stark contrast to the conduct of Jesus.  During His ministry on earth, Jesus encountered countless sick people, including many with leprosy, a disease that slowly eats away at the body.  The Gospel of Mark recounts Jesus interaction with one of these lepers: “And a leper came to Him, imploring Him, and kneeling said to Him, ‘If You will, You can make me clean.’  Moved with pity, He stretched out His hand and touched him and said to him, ‘I will; be clean.’  And immediately the leprosy left him, and he was made clean.” (ESV, emphasis mine)  In the time of Jesus, it was considered very dangerous to touch a leper, because there was the danger of contracting the disease yourself.  Beyond that, it couldn’t have been a very pleasant prospect touch a man whose body was being eaten away, even as he lived.  But Jesus touched him.  Regardless of the danger of disease, regardless of the appearance of the man, He touched him and healed him.

What can we learn from the Phantom’s mask of the flesh?  First, hidden beneath a less-than-ideal appearance may be an incredibly talented person, with gifts we will never know of unless we make ourselves go beyond the person’s appearance.  Erik is not the only one whose ugliness conceals an unknown genius and brilliance.  Second, hidden under the mask of a pretty or ugly face is a heart that is the true determiner of who each person is.  And just as God judges based on the heart, we must do the same or else risk completely mistaking the people we meet.  And last, we must be willing to care for the person beneath the mask of the flesh.  Just as Jesus was willing to reach out to, touch, and heal the leper, we must be willing to touch the people in our lives whom we may not consider to be physically perfect.

To be continued…

Friday, July 13, 2012

...It's Apathy!

One night, my mom and I were discussing an orphan ministry that had recently done a presentation at our church.  In a nut shell, we were discussing the fact that there are an estimated 160 million orphans in the world and that, if the church would truly step up to the plate, we could take that number to zero.  But the church is, for the most part, focused on itself.  And so nothing happens.

I used to think the worst of vices was cowardice.  I've changed my mind.  It's apathy.


I wrote these lyrics after that conversation:



Dare

Verse 1:
We close our eyes
To the pain and the needs
Afraid if we see our hearts might feel
Afraid that we might be driven to move
Getting out of our own little world
Getting out of our own little world

Chorus:
I dare you to live
I dare you to see
I dare you to feel 'til it drives you to move
I dare you to live
I dare you to change
I dare you to face all the needs around you
I dare you to live
I dare you to live

Verse 2:
Share vict'ry
And the fight
There's no joy if you won't feel
There's no vict'ry if you won't fight
Feel the joy
Feel the pain

(Chorus)

Just as a side note, I'm not advocating the "listen to your heart" mentality that is so popular in our culture.  The Bible says that the heart of man is very, very wicked.  But I am advocating compassion - something the Bible does support.  Romans says to rejoice with the people who are rejoicing, to mourn with the people who are mourning, and to cry with those who are crying.  And James says that words are not sufficient to meet a need - we have to put feet and hands to work.

Dare lyrics copyright 2012 by M.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

The Race

“Therefore, since we have so great a cloud of witnesses surrounding us, let us also lay aside every encumbrance and the sin which so easily entangles us, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us…”  ~Hebrews 12:1

I love that verse.  It captures an important aspect of the Christian life – the struggle, the ongoing journey, the intensity, and the victory.

I’m thinking about two aspects of this parallel in particular and it all revolves around the fact that we aren’t flying solo.

First, there are our witnesses.  In the stands.  Shouting.  “Come on!  You can make it!  Get back up!  Take another step!  Don’t quit!”  Men like Enoch, Abraham, Noah, Moses, Jeremiah, Stephen, and Paul.  Women like Sarah, Rahab, Hannah, Pricilla, Mary Jesus’ mother, and Mary Martha’s sister.  And more.  My great grandpa.  My grandma.  They’re there.  All those people who have crossed the line and finished the course.

If they were here, any of them, they would tell you and tell me to keep on, keep going, never give up, that God’s strength shows up in our weaknesses.

A picture comes vividly to my mind.  Last week, my sister, my dad, and I took the physical test to progress from a white belt to a yellow belt in the Gospel Martial Arts Union, a Christian martial arts organization.  The test is designed to be so hard that you will only complete it if you are totally committed and not willing to quit.  They don’t want half-hearted students who aren’t willing to work hard.

When we entered the room to begin the test, as we were preparing to begin, one of the test administrators, a black belt, told us that his one piece of advice for use was, “Don’t quit.”  Timely advice.

The test was hard.  I’m not weak and it pushed me way beyond what I thought I was capable of doing.  There were times when it sure would have been easier to quit than to keep on.

But what comes to my mind so vividly was the test administrators’ interaction with us.  They knew when it was getting hard, when we were wearing out, and they knew we could keep going – even if we didn’t.

“Come on!  Don’t stop!  Get back up!”

“You can make it!  Straighten your legs out!  Straighten them!”

“Don’t quit!  Don’t slow down!  One more minute!”

“Give it more power!  Come on!”

They were our witnesses, who had already passed the test, and knew what was possible.

That’s what our witnesses in this race and fight of the Christian life are doing.  Can you hear them?

Second, not only do we have our witnesses, who have finished the course, whose lives tell a story of the faithfulness, strength, and mercy of God, but we have each other.

All throughout the New Testament, Christians are exhorted to encourage one another, to build each other up, to live in harmony, to pray for each other.  The Christians around us are our fellow runners and our fellow fighters.  And we are to hold each other up.

Another thing I remember about the yellow belt test was how all of us who took the test encouraged each other.  I remember people saying, “Come on!  Just three more!”  I remember people who were struggling to complete their own tasks looking over and seeing someone struggling more than they.  Calling out their names.  “You can do it!”  Cheering for each other.  Even grabbing a gi (formal karate training uniform) and helping pull someone up.

That’s how we ought to be living in this race and fight of the Christian life.  We need to be the ones telling our brothers and sisters, “Come on!  Don’t quit!  God’s strength is sufficient! … Give me your hand and we’ll run together.”  Grabbing the arm of the one who is falling and pulling them up.

This requires two things:  First, getting our eyes off ourselves and looking to the needs of others.  It is impossible to encourage someone else if all we can think about is ourselves.  It just is.  And it’s impossible to see the one who needs to be pulled up when all we see is ourselves. 

Second, we need to be willing to accept help.  You won’t always be the one who is strong.  There will be days when you just want to throw in the towel and pitch the running shoes.  And you will need that helping hand.  Trust me.  But the thing is, before we can accept help, we have to be open and admit to not being perfect.  Perfect people don’t need help, or so everyone thinks.  But they do.  Because they’re not perfect.  Neither are you.  And if you wear a shiny veneer of perfection, when you really need help, no one will know it.

When you are almost out of energy physically, others can see it.  And that’s when you will hear them cry, “Keep going!  Don’t quit!”  Be open and willing to accept encouragement and a helping hand.  You never know when you might need it.

And so, my friends, keep going.  Don’t quit.  Never give up.  By God’s grace, we’ll make it together.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Who Will It Be?

“Now, therefore, fear the LORD and serve Him in sincerity and truth; and put away the gods which your fathers served beyond the River and in Egypt, and serve the LORD.  If it is disagreeable in your sight to serve the Lord, choose for yourselves today whom you will serve: whether the gods which your fathers served which were beyond the River, or the gods of the Amorites in whose land you are living; but as for me and my house, we will serve the LORD.” ~Joshua 24:14-15

We are in a battle.  We are being warred over and we are, like it or not, to be engaged in the war.  But in order to do that, we have to choose a side.

As Christians, we owe our loyalty to Christ.  But the question is whether that is merely a philosophical loyalty or a loyalty proclaimed by our actions.  You see, I once heard someone say that if the devil can’t have our soul, he will try to steal our witness. 

“Be of sober spirit, be on the alert.  Your adversary, the devil, prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour.” ~1 Peter 5:8

Who do your actions say you are serving?  God?  Yourself?  The devil?

“…for by what a man is overcome, by this he is enslaved.” ~2 Peter 2:19

It is your choice.  But here’s what God has to say:

“For the death that He died, He died to sin, once for all; but the life that He lives, He lives to God.  Even so consider yourselves to be dead to sin, but alive to God in Christ Jesus.  Therefore, DO NOT LET SIN REIGN in your mortal body that you obey its lusts, and DO NOT GO ON PRESENTING the members of YOUR BODY AS INSTRUMENTS OF UNRIGHTEOUSNESS; but present yourselves to God as those alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of righteousness to God.  For sin shall not be master over you…” ~Romans 6:10-14

Now, it’s easy to give philosophical assent to something.  To mentally subscribe to a cause, yet live in a way that shows that our loyalty, in all practicality, lies elsewhere.

So I ask you: where do your actions say your loyalty lies?  Do they show a complete loyalty to Christ or to your own desires or habits?

Yes, habits.  A habit can be a master.  Remember, you are a slave, giving your loyalty, to whatever you allow to overcome you.  And habits are perhaps the most dangerous of potential masters because we serve them unconsciously.

In terms of the devil’s strategies, doing his best to blind us to sinful habits seems to be effective.  As long as we are serving something other than Christ, he is happy.  As Christians, we are called to be God’s bondservants.  But living in bondage to a sinful habit makes us slaves to sin once again.

What is to be done?

“Submit therefore to God.  Resist the devil and he will flee from you.  Draw near to God and He will draw near to you.  Cleanse your hands, you sinners; and purify your hearts, you double minded.” ~James 4:7-8

Resist.  I wish it was easier.  Resistance is hard, partly because it is on-going.  It’s not a “do-it-once-and-be-done” kind of thing.  But the first step in resistance is to realize that there is someone and something that needs to be resisted.  We need to take a close look at our own lives and see where we are living with misplaced loyalty, what, besides Christ, we are serving.  It might be conscious sin or it might be unconscious habits. 

The next step is to make a choice.  These other loyalties need to go.  Make a conscious choice to serve God in whatever area of life you find is enslaved to sin.  As the Israelites started a new life in Canaan, Joshua issued a challenge.  The people had recently left an official bondage and slavery in Egypt.  Now they faced a new issue. Another potential slavery.  Joshua realized this.  He told them they had to choose who they would serve – God or the false gods of the nations around them.

Now, even when we aren’t fully serving Christ, we don’t usually think of ourselves as serving the gods of the people around us.  But think about it.  If the people around you, who have not declared an allegiance to Christ, are serving their own sinful desires and habits and are putting those things first in their lives, those things have, in a sense become their gods.  And if you are serving those same things, you are essentially serving the gods of the people around you.

So I issue Joshua’s challenge to you:  Choose today who you will serve.  Your choices are the God who sacrificed Himself to redeem you or, if you aren’t willing to fully become His servant, the sinful desires and habits of those around you.

You will serve someone.  Now who will it be?

“…for by what a man is overcome, by this he is enslaved.” ~2 Peter 2:19


“Be of sober spirit, be on the alert.  Your adversary, the devil, prowls about like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour.  But resist him, firm in your faith…” ~1 Peter 5:8-9a

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Waiting... Waiting... Waiting...

I’ve had a sort of feeling that nature isn’t the – bother!  How to put it into words? – the perfect, composed, beautiful, unrestrained thing it ought to be.  That even the most bright of summers; the most gorgeous, wondrous, snowy white winters; the most hopeful, young springs; and the most beautiful falls; it’s not quite right.  Something is missing – not as it should be.  The quiet, twilights; sparkling stars; crisp, shining, silvery frosts; bold blue skies; quiet nights; all seem haunting, somehow.  Haunting – as if, even in all the radiant beauty, there’s some ghost of something that could have been - or should have been.

Surely the fallen nature of the universe has something to do with it – it’s really the cause of it.  But that’s not it entirely.  If that was the whole story, there should be an air of finality about it.  But there isn’t.  If anything, there is a hush, as of waiting.

And I’ve finally put my finger on the reason.  I don’t know why I never saw it before – it’s been staring me in the face for years.  It’s in Romans:

“For the creation waits with eager longing for the revealing of the sons of God.  For the creation was subjected to futility, not willingly, but because of him who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself will be set free from its bondage to corruption and obtain the freedom of the glory of the children of God.  For we know that the whole creation has been groaning together in the pains of childbirth until now.  And not only the creation, but we ourselves, who have the first fruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for the adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies.  For in this hope we were saved.  Now hope that is seen is not hope.  For who hopes for what he sees?  But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it in patience.” ~Romans 8:19-25 (ESV)

Creation is a ghost of what it was – and what it will be.  That is why it sometimes seems so haunting.  The hush is one of longing anticipation.  And I share in that anticipation because the reason for it is within me as well.  Hope.

In clear crisp mornings, the sun peeps over the horizon and there is a whisper of hope in the wind – a hope that all will yet be right with the world, a promise of things to come.


It’s nice to know the reasons why.


~M.

Saturday, May 5, 2012

The Face in the Mirror

[Just as a side-note, I wanted to clarify a statement in my previous post.  When I said, "I must write," I did not mean I am/was being forced to do so.  I meant that I just have to do it - like a horse has to neigh and a zebra has to have stripes.  It's part of who I am. :) ]
---
“But prove yourselves doers of the word, and not merely hearers who delude themselves.  For if anyone is a hearer of the word and not a doer, he is like a man who looks at his natural face in a mirror; for once he has looked at himself and gone away, he has immediately forgotten what kind of person he was.  But one who looks intently at the perfect law, the law of liberty, and abides by it, not having become a forgetful hearer but an effectual doer, this man shall be blessed in what he does.” ~ James 1:22-25

The great wonder of Christianity is that, in giving up ourselves to Christ, we become something infinitely better than what we were before.  God asks us for ourselves and gives us Himself.  He asks for the sinful person and offers His holiness in return.

Why He would want our sinful selves is beyond me.  Ephesians 2 says that you and I were, “dead in [our] trespasses and sins, in which [we] formerly walked according to the course of this world…”  (Ephesian 2:1-2a)  One, we were dead.  Dead things are nasty, rotting, and stinking.  Two, we weren’t just dead, we were dead in sin, the antithesis of the holiness of God.  Three, we walked according to the ways of the world – and friendship with the world, James 4 says, is enmity toward God.  Dead, living in complete opposition to God’s nature, and at war with Him.  And He offered His righteousness in return for our deadness and sin and surrender.  Why?  I don’t know.  But He did.

When we looked in a spiritual mirror before surrendering ourselves to Him, we saw corruption and evil.  That was the face in the mirror.  But with our surrender, we were given a new face – the face of Christ.  2 Corinthians puts it like this: “Therefore if any man is in Christ, he is a new creature; the old things passed away; behold new things have come.”

But the difficulty is this: We looked into the mirror for so long, seeing corruption, that this new man is unfamiliar and remembering his characteristics is difficult.  It isn’t as if we can memorize a physical description.  He isn’t physical.  In that sense, we are the same.  How, then, does one see this new creature, this new face?

James 1 says we are to look into God’s perfect law of liberty.  Why?  The Law of liberty is the reflection of God’s nature.  In looking at this law we see God’s attributes.  And “all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ.” (Galatians 3:27)  Christ’s righteousness is given to us and His righteousness can be seen in the perfect Word and ways of God.

We are told to look into a mirror and memorize our new selves, so that we will remember who we are since we were given a new face, based in the nature and character of God.  What better place to find what our new nature is to be than in the very thoughts and actions of God, whose righteousness we have been given?


You have a new face.  In place of your dead sinfulness, Jesus gave you His perfect face.  But you must live by that new face and the only way to do that is by learning what that new face is like.  In the perfect word of God we see a reflection of His face.  When we look into it – wonder of wonders – by grace, the face of Christ looks back at us.  Oh that we may live in a manner worthy of that face!


~M.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

I Must Write

I must write.

And if I must write, I may as well write something that will encourage and challenge someone else.  Hence, the purpose of this blog.


But just as a side-note, when I say, "I must write," I don't mean I am/was being forced to write.  I mean that I just have to write - like a horse has to neigh and a zebra has to have stripes.  It's part of who I am.


If you read my previous blog, The Great Adventure, you may be wondering at the duplicate name.  It's not that I'm trying to be unimaginative.  Instead, the phrase "the great adventure" encapsulates much of my outlook on life.  I named my first blog The Great Adventure because I believed that life was one grand adventure.  I still believe that.  And so this blog is also called The Great Adventure.


If I'm going to be entirely honest, I have to tell you that the phrase "the great adventure" didn't originate with me.  It is the title of one of my favorite songs of all time, The Great Adventure, by Steven Curtis Chapman.  It has been one of my life theme songs since I first heard it, six or seven years ago:


Saddle up your horses!


(Verse 1)

Started out this morning in the usual way
Chasing thoughts inside my head
Of all I had to do today
Another time around the circle
Try to make it better than the last

I opened up my Bible

And I read about me
Said I'd been a prisoner
And God's grace had set me free
And somewhere between the pages
It hit me like a lightning bolt
I saw a big frontier in from of me
And I heard somebody say, "Let's go!"

(CHORUS)

Saddle up your horses
We've got a trail to blaze
Through the wild blue yonder
Of God's amazing grace
Let's follow our Leader
Into the glorious unknown
This is life like no other
This is the great adventure

(Verse 2)

Come on get ready
For the ride of your life
Gonna leave long-faced religion
In a cloud of dust behind
And discover all the new horizons
Just waiting to be explored
This is what we were created for

(Bridge)

We'll travel over
Over mountains so high
We'll go through valleys below
Still through it all
We'll find that
This is the greatest journey
That the human heart will ever see
The love of God will take us far
Beyond our wildest dreams

Yeah... oh saddle up your horses... come on get ready to ride


(Words and music by Steven Curtis Chapman and Geoff Moore)


It is my hope that, in reading my thoughts on this great adventure of life, you will be encouraged and challenged to love life and to take it by the horns, living a life fully abandoned to Jesus Christ.


~M.