Eternity

I’ve been wrestling with some of our oft-used words like hope and eternal life. And I thank the Lord that when we are wrestling, He sheds light on truths we need to discover. I’ve been amazed sometimes that just when I’m pondering a certain point … along comes a conversation or a devotional or a Scripture that is exactly what I needed to hear right then. Is it God sending me answers? Or the Spirit tuning me in to hear what I need? However or whatever, I am thankful.

And the word that has been on my mind—and in God’s spotlight for me—lately is eternity.  

Not an easy subject. And one quite foreign to our usual see-hear-touch-prove mentality. Nevertheless, for the next seven days I’d like to share some of the thoughts and truths that have come recently. And I’ll also revisit old, familiar truths that have hit me with new impact.

Just a few questions to get us focused:

Do we really believe we will live forever? Do we believe we will go on living even after these bodies give out and die?

Do we think in eternal terms? Does the eternal have anything to do with today, or is it just some nice, comforting words we say because we are afraid of thinking about the end of our earthly lives?

Do we need some new ways to think about immortality? 

Well, if you’re ready to dive into eternity ….   

 

Whittling

In response to my post on being thankful for the difficult in our lives, a friend’s comments included this line: “A whittling down of ourselves to make us what we need to be.”

That’s a fascinating word. Whittle. It immediately brings ups a related word: carve.

Think of the words we pair with those two.

We whittle away or whittle down. Skilled fingers take a piece of wood and cut away a bit here and a chunk there until eventually, they hold a work of art. We even use this phrase to describe working , bit by bit, at a large project. We whittle away at it; and eventually—the finished result!

We carve out. Sculptors are sometimes quoted as saying they see what is in a piece of marble or a slab of wood before they even start their work. Carving is a prying away of the unnecessary, inessential, inappropriate, irrelevant—until the image the creator has “seen” finally emerges.

Isn’t that the way God forms and molds us? He is at work, whittling away the things in our lives that need to go in order for His masterpiece to finally emerge. “Whittling down of ourselves to make us what we need to be.”

We were created in the image of God! (Doesn’t that just take your breath away?) But as sons and daughters of Adam and Eve, we’ve inherited so much that sullies and burdens and binds and tarnishes that image. We’ve taken on selfishness and disobedience and pride. All of us had trained as citizens of the kingdom of darkness instead of sons and daughters in the kingdom of light.

Yet God’s promise is that we are now His masterpiece, created anew! There are many days I don’t feel like a masterpiece of any kind … let alone a masterpiece of the great Creator. But this word “whittling” has opened a new thought for me. God is whittling away at this chunk of wood I know as Me. He sees the image within; He knows what He has created there (a new person, with a new life born of HIS Spirit!) and He is carving out that image, bit by bit cutting away everything else.

And that is exactly why we can be thankful in all things, even the difficult and trying and painful. God promises that He is at work on His new creation within us. He knows what He intends to make us. He knows what needs to go. He whittles away all the old stuff Self has collected, so that the new life He has given us can grow and thrive. 

Most of the time, we don’t like the whittling. It often means going through hard times. It involves learning new habits and discarding old and comfortable attitudes. It’s discipline, and that requires effort and stretching. Yet Scriptures says this is a sign the Lord loves us!

We often erroneously equate discipline with punishment. Discipline is training, forming, instruction, and exercise. (Think about the discipline of an athlete.) The Lord is disciplining, training, and forming us as His masterpiece. Through everything, He’s whittling away.

From the testing and trials—and remember, those tests and trials are in the day-to-day details just as much as they are in outright persecution—He builds endurance and faith and patience and godliness. As He whittles down ourselves, the image He intends to create in us emerges.

“So be truly glad,” says Peter. “There is wonderful joy ahead, even though you have to endure many trials for a little while” (1 Peter 1:6). What better hope than to know that the Creator is still at work on His creation in me!

 

 

We Want More! We Want More!

A guest post today from Lana Turner.

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WE WANT MORE! WE WANT MORE!

The little girl in the commercial tries to explain why more is better than less.  “You might want to have some more. But then, your parents won’t let you because there’s only a little. If you really like something, you’ll want more of it. We want more. We want more. Like, you really like it, you want more.”

She echoes a theme I hear over and over again when I listen closely to what others and myself are saying. We want more freedoms, more liberties, more property, more food, more control, more money, more power and more, more, more. We live in a “more-ish” society.

There is someone who wants to give us more.

In Ephesians 1, Paul was asking that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, would give us spiritual wisdom and revelation so that we can know him better. Paul’s prayer was that our eyes would be enlightened so we can know the hope God has called us to, the riches of his glorious inheritance in the saints, and his incomparably great power for all who believe. That power is the same mighty strength that raised Christ from the dead!

Wow! Talk about more…!

Jesus Christ wants to give us more. Ephesians 3 talks about the God who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us.

This is the “more” we should be seeking. We need to be rooted and established in love, the love of the Lord Jesus Christ. This is where we get glorious riches and power through the Spirit, and this is what makes us “complete with all the fullness of life and power that comes from God” (Ephesians 3:19 NLT ).

Wow!!

Morning Song

I owe the Lord a morning song
Of gratitude and praise,
For the kind mercy He has shown
In lengthening out my days.

This song was “there” as soon as I awoke this morning.

I would only change the last line–

because David’s last line is my song, too, no matter if my days are lengthened or shortened:

Surely goodness and mercy will follow me all the days of my life and I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever.

I owe the Lord a morning song of gratitude and praise.

Amen.

Bike Path Reflections on Forks in the Road

A guest post today from Vicki VanNatta.

Vicki, two friends, and I recently spent a morning on bicycles in Acadia National Park on Mount Desert Island in Maine. You’ve heard of the “mountains of Acadia”? That phrase is always used to describe the island’s striking topography — except in bike rental shops. There the word mountain is absent from everyone’s vocabulary.

The morning bike ride triggered reflections on our lives. Vicki tells it well …

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Biking Acadia

Have you ever biked in Acadia National Park? Bike rental companies will tell you the hills are ‘rolling’ and ‘manageable’ and assure you that people like me—a seasoned senior who rarely rides a bicycle—can enjoy riding the many miles of carriage roads throughout the park. 

They don’t mention the long stretches where the road steadily inclines—stretches where this senior was pushing her bike for at least half a mile at a time. They’ll also tell you the carriage roads are clearly marked with directional signs and you won’t lose your way.

May I just say here that either I am much more out of shape than they thought and far more directionally challenged or their point of reference is vastly different than mine.

The hills are not steep but they are long. The signs are there, but I felt like Dorothy on the yellow brick road. There should have been a sign at the very first fork after the very first hill, a sign that said “If you haven’t ridden a bike for years, turn back now!”

But the morning was beautiful, the company was wonderful, and I thought ten miles on ‘rolling hills’ was doable. 

By the time we took a break, ate our snacks, and debated if we were going to finish the course or turn back the way we had come, I was very tired and wishing we were done instead of at mid-point. I wasn’t having fun anymore. But going forward or backtracking —  either option meant a lot of pedaling and more pushing.    

Wearily, we got back on the path and turned down what we thought was the correct road. I was delighted to discover that we had an immediate, exhilarating, long decline. I rushed down the hill enjoying every second. It was a welcome relief to the long uphills we had just climbed.

Sadly, after a minute of effortless downhill delight, we arrived at another fork, and here the signs made it plain we had gone the wrong way!

The ride down the hill had been wonderful and exciting, a welcome relief from the hard uphill work. But now, we had no option except turning around and going back up the path we had just come down. For me, it meant a long walk pushing my bike back to that first fork and then starting over in the opposite direction. The forest didn’t seem so beautiful anymore. The mosquitoes were really annoying. I was hot and tired and hungry. And my legs ached. The joy of the downhill cruise was forgotten and it certainly wasn’t worth it once we realized our mistake.

As I pushed my bike back to the place where we had turned right when we should have gone left, I thought to myself how much that thrilling ride down the wrong road reminded me of poor choices in my life. 

Thirty years ago, I stood at a fork in the road. I was struggling. The trip to that point had been very difficult. I looked at the signs, hoping for an easier road ahead.

 As a young girl who was in church since birth, I had studied the map; but somehow, at that time of decision, going down a road that was not on the map seemed so right. And away I went, flying along without effort, enjoying the ride and thinking how much better this road was than the path I had been on.

Only to discover I had gone the wrong way. This was NOT the road I needed to be on.  And oh, how hard it was to get back up that hill and start over in the opposite direction!

Pushing my bike back up the hill in Acadia took only minutes. Putting my life back together after an affair and bitter divorce took many years and far more tears.

Just as turning the wrong way on a bicycle path took all four of us down the wrong road, my choice thirty years ago took many others with me. My daughter, my husband, my family, the family of the man I was involved with—I took them all down that road with me. And when I was forced to face my mistake, we ALL had to work our way back up a long hill—trying to go in a new direction, trying to find strength to finish the trip.

When we finished our Acadia bike trip, I was hot, tired, stiff, and thinking that the morning after I would not be able to stand up straight. Surprisingly, the next morning I woke up and realized that I would do it again. In fact, I want to do it again! But next time I hope to be a frequent rider, stronger and more experienced.  I will be very careful not to take that wrong fork in the road. I will pay more attention, study the map more closely, ask if I need help in determining which direction to go, and learn from my past choices.  And so it is with my life.

If you find yourself at the bottom of the hill, tired, weary, and utterly without hope, turn around. Don’t just keep going, hoping things will somehow get better. Find someone to walk back up the hill with you. And most of all, ask God for the strength to get back to that place where you can, once again, be on the right road. The road home.