This Little Light of Mine
Perhaps since the fall of man, we've struggled to prove
God's existence. By extraordinary design, however, the existence of God cannot
be proven. I believe God designed it
that way so that we must make a very real and high-stakes choice. If God's existence was a matter of
scientifically verifiable fact, we really wouldn't have much of a choice to
make about him. So to believe in God requires faith and that is how God
designed this love relationship to work. After all, it wouldn't require much
love to acknowledge and believe in a simple, verifiable fact.
What is faith? Heb
11:1 defines it as "the substance of things hoped for" and "the
evidence of things not seen" (KJV).
Where is this evidence? The daily
testimony of nature cries out to not only the reality of God, but to his
infinite wisdom and love. My day last
Saturday, for instance started before sunrise in the deer woods. What a magnificent sunrise! No one saw it from my exact perspective, so
this was a gift crafted uniquely for me at that time and place. God created us
in His image and we are awed by his creation.
God wired us to "hear" the testimony about himself from his
inanimate creation so that we would be blessed and by seeing His evidence, our
faith would be increased. After all, who
is it that doesn't appreciate a colorful sunrise or sunset? So, the nearly universal appreciation of a
sunrise or sunset provides evidence of a devine creator who created us to see
Him in his created world. Had we simply evolved, who would appreciate the beauty
of creation? We simply wouldn't
care. God wired us to see Him,
appreciate Him, and know Him, and to love Him in His created order.
The tragedy herein is that when I ask Christian adults and youth alike where they have seen God lately, I almost always get a nature story if I get an answer at all. What's so tragic about a nature story? Nothing if there are other stories to go with it. Jesus said that if his disciples were to remain silent, the very rocks would cry out in testimony to God (Luke 19:40). The tragedy is that we can't supply any evidence of God at work in our lives. By analogy if there is no testimony, there is no faith!
I'll be the first to tell you that in the excess of
America, I really don't need much faith to get through a day. I get up, go to work, apply myself, come home
and do the same, and go to bed. What did
I depend on God to do today? I have
food, I have a steady paying job, I don't really have any real need of God to
meet my needs and so very many of my wants.
Listen to the prayer requests at church - they only really involve the
things we can't control ourselves: health and death. I'll just come out and say it right
here. The problem with the church in
America including FUMC in FWB is lack of powerful evidence of God! We have no faith! (Bring on the comments - show me where I'm
wrong and I'll publicly repent!). We don't set faith based budgets or programs.
We use logic and data to figure out what we can do for God. Here's a clue: the creator of the universe
doesn't need you to do anything, but love and obey Him!
So the answer is to be a bold witness for Christ and tell
everyone we know about Him, right? Why
would you expect the world to believe words if there is no evidence to support
the foundation - evidence of God? If we
can't provide a sound answer to the question of exactly what difference God has
made in our lives and why anyone who is not in relationship with Him should be,
are our words persuasive? I suggest not. So what then?
St. Francis of Assisi said it so well: "Preach the Gospel always. If necessary, use words."
Our actions, then should be a beacon of light for Christ.
The only thing that is keeping me from being more concrete evidence of God than
that spectacular sunrise last Saturday is a lack of faith. I simply don't believe that God is who He
says He is and will do what He says He will do.
Otherwise I would exude the gifts of the Spirit (Gal 5:22-23) in
everything I do and others would immediately recognize it. I would also immediately recognize and give
thanks for the constant work of God all around me. I would be able to bear witness to His work
and have a constant testimony of His work in me and in the lives around
me.
In fairness, there are many things we can never
know. Did God miraculously prevent a
lethal wreck on my way home yesterday? I
may never know if so. I should, however,
be able to clearly recognize those things he does do. There are some things to celebrate. Our church, for instance, is launching a
community breakfast out of deep desire by many to bear witness "under the
shadow of our steeple" without clear knowledge of just how we will man or
fund such an initiative. Clearly we're
boldly stepping out in faith and I applaud that initiative. It is anecdotal, however, and not a way of
life for every program and initiative of our church. We pray quickly that God will guide us and
bless our efforts, then spend hours and sometimes days and weeks talking,
gathering and analyzing data, pouring over results by others, and then move
cautiously in some small direction based on our best and most logical
deductuion from all we learned. What if
we've got it backwards? What if we spent
a few quick minutes analyzing data and hours in prayer? What would data analysis and logic have
revealed to Daniel about being thrown into a den of lions? Or Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednogo about
being thrown into fire? Wouldn't the
analysis show certain death? Reliance on
human experience misses the most important point: only God know the
future. I'm sure that all four didn't need
extensive analysis and multiple brainstorming sessions to deduce almost certain
death, so they opted to make a stand on principle - one that was supported by
unwavering faith that regardless of the outcome, they could trust and rely on
God.
Another reason that we don't see God at work besides not
expecting to, is our own self centeredness.
My observation is that many Christians are so simply for what's in it
for them. It's a me-focused faith. We
hear that message and build mega-churches around it all the time with messages
about God saving us, prospering us, comforting us, forgiving us, and so
on. All true, but the focus is on what's
in it for me. I believe this kind of faith
is what Paul was talking about when we referred to thinking and acting like a
child (1 Cor 13:11)). Faith that is
focused on me is minimal if not outright idolatry. It is this childlike faith that leads
otherwise apparently mature Christians to behave like a two year old throwing a
nonsensical self-centered tantrum and simply decide they don't have to accept
the totality of scripture because God wants them to do whatever makes them
happy. So we see apparently mature
Christian men abandon their commitments to their wives and children and pursue
sexual satisfaction elsewhere. Christians
are divorcing at record rates, going into unprecedented debt, buying into all
sorts of lies by satan, and absolutely refusing to accept or even believe they
need any kind of accountability because of a lack of faith. It's a self-centered attitude that says
"God is just that savior who will take care of me when I'm really sick and
after I'm dead." So we add Him to
our long list of priorities, take him out of the box once a week or less, give
Him an hour or so of divided attention and once in a while when there's nothing
more important to do we volunteer for some minimally impactful project just so
we feel better about ourselves. Evidence of an unseen God? I don't think so. The evidence is plain. We have made ourselves into gods and we're
reaping our reward! Our churches are
shrinking, our families are splitting, and our morals are decaying, in the
meantime, the rocks are crying out.
So does First Church need to build a hot fire and throw
me in? Perhaps so, especially after this
rant. However, if we desire to provide evidence of God that demands a verdict
from those around us in our community, we need to have a more meaningful
testimony than nature. We need to be
able to cry out ourselves and we need a forum to do so! We need to learn how to more readily
recognize God at work, more clearly hear him speak and give testimony to those
events and messages. We will never see
Him at work, however, if we don't expect it and don't have the skill of
recognizing it as God when we see it.
How do we do so? I think it has
to start with priorities. A life that
truly places God in the first priority will truly look different. Our choices will be guided by God and we
won't move until we've clearly heard from Him.
What difference has God made in your life - ever? Last year?
Last week? Yesterday? Maybe we're
not seeing God because we don't expect to do so. Maybe we are like the Jews and simply don't
recognize him at work all around us.
Perhaps we believe we must do for ourselves before God will assist us,
so we're wrapped up in self service and simply don't want or worse don't think
we need God. So where does this leave
us? Does the pattern of my life and
your life, our choices, our actions, our friends provide evidence of God
or are the rocks having to carry our share of His message? We are either
witnessing for or against Christ (Matt 6:24).
So what is the evidence of things not seen in your life.
How has God been made real to you such that your faith has been increased? Where should one even begin looking?
The answer is love. 1 John 4:16 states that God is Love. 1 John 3:14 states that Love is the proof of faith. Love is action - Agape and the subject of another rant.
1 comment:
I like it. I don't think it is a "rant" at all.
I believe all roads lead to faith and every time you get warm and fuzzy about your faith it is revealed to you how much more you need or don't have.
I do like that our church is currently in a "God sightings" mode and encouraging people to send those sightings in as testimony.
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