Friday, April 25, 2014

The Privilege of Obedience

  Obedience is a privilege. That can be a hard concept to grasp. I usually do not count it a privilege to obey because, thanks to my human nature, I usually think of obedience as an unpleasant duty I owe to figures in authority. My inner demons are repelled by the idea of submission and oftentimes I hear the message that freedom comes from rebellion.
  Freedom does not come from rebellion though. This sick and twisted world has so warped our minds that we think what is wrong is right and what is right is wrong. Freedom comes from obedience. I am free because, through Christ, I have been born into a life of obedience. In I Peter 2:24 we read, "He Himself bore our sins in His body on the tree, so that we might die to sins and live for righteousness; by His wounds you have been healed." Growing up in church I have heard this verse a lot. It throws a wrench in the world's philosophy about freedom. Christ died so that we would be free from the sins the world says will give us freedom. As a Christian I have died to sin so I can live a life of righteousness in obedience to God. I have been granted the privilege of being able to obey God.
  Christianity is different from other religions. Obedience is not a burden I carry around so I can get more brownie points and climb higher up on heaven's social ladder. I obey God out of love for Him. I live for a God who is so great it brings me joy to be able to obey Him. Obedience becomes my great privilege.
 

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

  Spring. The time of year when it feels good to have dirt between your toes and you want your lungs to explode from breathing in fresh air.






Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Just a Weirdo

  There are times when those of us who are Christians have to bite the bullet and just be weird. The Bible does not bid us to be culturally relevant, we are commanded to be holy as Christ is holy. It is not that we cannot do things that the world does, we have to eat and wear clothes. Chances are we read books and listen to music and watch movies. We just need to evaluate the choices we make in light of Scripture. I have been studying 1 Peter for the past two week and every time I read through the book, I am struck by these two verses:

  I Peter 4:3-4, "For you have spent enough time in the past doing what the pagans chose to do-living in debauchery, lust, drunkenness, orgies, carousing, and detestable idolatry. They think it strange that you do not plunge with them into the same flood of dissipation, and they heap abuse on you."(NIV)

  As Christians we do have to live in this world, but we are not a part of it. We are not being washed away in a flood of dissipation. The world is blissfully unaware the path they are on is a downward spiral into eternal punishment because they are too busy living in the here and now. We as Christians are on the path to life. We see the empty things of this world for what they are.
  So we get to be weirdoes. We do not do what everybody else is doing. We are pursuing holiness, not happiness. We need to expect the abuse the world heaps on us in this life. Better to be thought a weirdo now then to hear Christ say, "Depart from me you worker of iniquity, I never knew you."
 

Thursday, April 3, 2014

dishes.

 
 There are some household chores I do not like. Hate may even be an appropriate way to describe my feelings for them at times. One of those chores is the dishes. I have read lovely essays, written by people who live pretend lives, lauding the wonders of doing the dishes. I have heard people say doing the dishes is therapeutic, I have heard people say it is fun to make dirty things clean again. Something is wrong with people like that. Most days I can grit my teeth and bear it while I swirl soapy water on the dishes used for the most recent meal. Then there are those days when I want to slam each dish on the counter to hear it crash and yell, "FREEDOM!" Last night was one of those nights.
  We ate a semi-hurried dinner before leaving for church, and there was a pile of unwashed dishes to be done when we got home. A mountain of dishes is not a welcoming sight, so I griped while I was up to my elbows in soap suds and thought about what a terrible place the world is because people have to come home to dirty dishes. I guess that is pretty silly. There are much worse things I could be doing like scrubbing toilets or cleaning the fridge. I will be finished washing the dishes at some point, and then someone will get them dirty again, and I will get to wash them again.