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!

 

 

Through the Curtain

King David voiced the yearning: “Let me live all my days in your sanctuary.” Our own hearts respond. Let us live, Lord, as close to you as we can get!

I’ve written before that one of my favorite stories in the Bible is only one verse in length, the simple statement that says at the moment of Christ’s death the veil setting apart the Holy of Holies in the temple and denying entrance to everyone except the high priest was ripped in two.

Christ’s death ripped apart the barrier between us and God. His body and blood, sacrificed for us, gave us the right to enter into God’s most holy presence—washed clean, spotless. The way is opened for us!

So God has given both his promise and his oath. These two things are unchangeable because it is impossible for God to lie. Therefore, we who have fled to him for refuge can have great confidence as we hold to the hope that lies before us. This hope is a strong and trustworthy anchor for our souls. It leads us through the curtain into God’s inner sanctuary. (Hebrews 6:18-19)

I feel the same yearning David wrote into his songs. I seek God, I thirst for God. And here we find that hope leads us to know Him more intimately than ever before. Hope that knows, hope that trusts, hope that is confident, hope that believes what God says—this hope brings us into the presence of the Father, ever closer to the One we long for and seek to know.

Hope — trusting what God says. His promises tell us who He is. Through His promises He tells us of His love for us and His plans for us. How can there be an intimate relationship with anyone if there is no trust in what they say or no faith in who they are? Our trust in our Father, our belief, our hope leads us deeper into Him.

Yet even as we are seeking Him, it is He who is drawing us. God, the source of all hope, by the power of the Holy Spirit will fill us with confident hope as we walk in step with Him (Romans 15:13). I love the wording of the verse from Hebrews: Hope will lead us into the innermost sanctuary of His presence. Even as we long for Him, He leads us into Himself.

Holy Spirit, fill me with strong and confident hope that leads me through the curtain.

 

The Rich and the Poor, Part Three (Or, Resisting the Lure)

(Still not talking about money! We are talking about whatever riches God has given you. Did you come up with a list on Wednesday?)

Consider Jesus’ story about the seed sown on many different types of ground, a parable about how God’s Word does or does not produce a harvest in our lives. Hear again the Lord’s caution about “wealth” in our lives. 

The seed that fell among the thorns represents those who hear God’s word, but all too quickly the message is crowded out by the worries of this life and the lure of wealth, so no fruit is produced. (Matthew 13:22)

Again, the word wealth is a word that refers to abundance. And isn’t this exactly what happens in our lives? When we are busy trying to accumulate, trying to ensure our own comfort and pleasure, trying to protect the luxury of abundance we’ve been given, then God’s Word somehow is pushed aside or completely out and never produces fruit.

The NIV uses the phrase the deceitfulness of wealth. Have we been deceived by the riches in our lives? (Remember—NOT talking about money!) Do we think these blessings are given only for our own pleasure and comfort? I’m going to go out on a limb here and say that very little of what we’ve been given, including comfort in suffering and strength in distress, is given only for our benefit. God’s purpose for us in this world is to further Christ’s mission. He gave up His life to bring people to God. Are we so protective of the abundance in our lives that we choke out any harvest God wants to produce?  

Read again James’s warnings:

Look here, you rich people: Weep and groan with anguish because of all the terrible troubles ahead of you. Your wealth is rotting away, and your fine clothes are moth-eaten rags. Your gold and silver have become worthless. The very wealth you were counting on will eat away your flesh like fire. This treasure you have accumulated will stand as evidence against you on the day of judgment … You have spent your years on earth in luxury, satisfying your every desire. You have fattened yourselves for the day of slaughter. James 5:1-3, 5 (NLT)

Does that sound strange to you? Is it possible that blessings can turn to thorns? Yes. This is exactly what James is warning us of. Our fine clothes become moth-eaten rags, our money becomes worthless, and the very abundance we counted on eats away at us—painfully.

Think about those areas of your own life where you have great wealth. God had a purpose in giving you those blessings. When we hoard and live in luxury only for our own advantage, then what we’ve been given can destroy what God intended to do in our lives. I could give you examples from my own life of such misuse and resulting trouble, but some of those still smart too much to put here in black and white.

Suddenly, Jesus’ warning is clear, and it applies to every one of us. “How hard it is for the rich to enter the Kingdom of God!” (Mark 10:23) Abundance can be a snare if kept for ourselves and used for our own pleasure and comfort. Suddenly, we’re all about getting want we want, protecting what we have, and maybe getting even more of what we want … and our desire and passion to live a life in the Kingdom of God is soon choked out.   

The good news is that it’s possible to have great wealth (of ALL kinds) and live in the Kingdom! Jesus followed up his warning to all who are rich with this: “Humanly speaking, it is impossible. But not with God. Everything is possible with God.” (verse 27)

Hallelujah! Everything is possible—in spite of our humanity! Every child of God learns this: We can only live a Kingdom life by the power of God’s Spirit. (We often learn that lesson quite painfully.) Humanly, we’ll fail at using our abundance well; we will covet and hoard and jealously guard. But living in step with the Spirit and following His teaching and leading makes living in the Kingdom of God possible.

He will do it in us!

May we follow the Spirit into ways that use our wealth well. With God, it is possible.

The Rich and the Poor, Part Two (Or, The Rich YOU)

Yes, more thoughts coming on how we use our wealth — whatever it is in our lives that God has given us in abundance.

In preparation for my next post, ask yourself where your wealth lies. Most of us would say we are “rich,” aside from considering our financial status. Just come up with at least three areas of your life where you have been blessed with abundance.

(And yes, if you are indeed blessed with an abundance of money, you can include that.)

Come back Friday.

The Rich and the Poor (Or, The Rich Me and Lazarus)

Before we begin: This post has nothing to do with money!

I’ve been convicted lately that I’m handling some of my wealth unwisely. It began with reading these statements in Scripture: “You had everything you wanted” and “You spent your years satisfying your every desire.”

Jesus’ Parable

The well-to-do household ignored the beggar in the street outside the back door. All he wanted was a few crumbs, the table scraps that might be thrown to the dogs. But the wealthy man living in luxury ignored Lazarus.

Until both died, and then the circumstances were reversed. Then it was the rich man, suffering in hell, who was begging. And all he wanted was a drop of water. The answer he received is unsettling: “Son, remember that during your lifetime you had everything you wanted, and Lazarus had nothing. So now he is here being comforted, and you are in anguish.” (Luke 16:25)

I’ll be honest, reading this story again made me shiver. “You had everything you wanted in life, while someone else suffered. Now he is being comforted, but you’re in anguish…”

So Many Warnings to the “Rich”– How could they be meant for me?

Have you, like me, wondered why Scripture has so many warnings for the rich? Jesus said it’s easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich person to get into the kingdom of heaven. And James, teacher of practical discipleship, writes:

Look here, you rich people: Weep and groan with anguish because of all the terrible troubles ahead of you. Your wealth is rotting away, and your fine clothes are moth-eaten rags. Your gold and silver have become worthless. The very wealth you were counting on will eat away your flesh like fire. This treasure you have accumulated will stand as evidence against you on the day of judgment … You have spent your years on earth in luxury, satisfying your every desire. You have fattened yourselves for the day of slaughter. James 5:1-3, 5 (NLT)

Grim and terrible warnings!

But since I don’t consider myself in the “rich” class (and neither would any economic measurement!), may I just skim over these verses from James and be thankful I’m not in danger of suffering such dire consequences?

Two words stop me from dismissing this passage: wealth/riches and accumulated.

The word translated here as wealth or riches is the same word used in the Bible to refer to the riches of God’s grace, the riches of His glory, and the riches of a relationship with Christ. The word refers to abundance, and it includes far more than money.

Uh-oh. If this word riches doesn’t necessarily mean money but refers to all kinds of abundance, then suddenly this passage speaks to me forcefully, undeniably, painfully. I am forced to think about how I use other riches, riches that are not owned and wealth that is not counted in dollars.

This passage warns me that abundance accumulated, hoarded, and used only for my own comfort and satisfaction will rot away and become a curse that will stand as judgment against me. Strong words!

Am I that rich man, wealthy in so much and ignoring others in hungry need? (And remember, I’m now thinking of every type of abundance except money—many other areas of my life that overflow with abundance.)

Will Jesus’ words someday be “I came to you hungry, but you would not feed me”? Or will God have to explain, “Daughter, I gave you such riches. But you hoarded it all for your own comfort. It was not for you that I gave it to you!”

What Wealth am I Hoarding?

What riches do we hoard that are not meant to be kept for ourselves? You’ll have your own list; I’ll give you a few things from mine:

My time and energy. I am so guilty. I’m far too jealous of my time. My selfishness wants to hoard it, use it all for my own pleasure.

Grace, Mercy, and Forgiveness. What mercy God has shown me! And no one knows as well as I how undeserving I am. Yet, God still forgives me. Still calls me His child. Am I willing to reach into every life that touches mine and spread the salve of grace and forgiveness? Or do I hold tightly to any “justification” for anger, “understandable” severing of relationship, or a “right” to seek revenge?

Unconditional Love. God showers me with unconditional, unchanging love. Again, undeserved—but He loves me! He asks me to love my neighbor in the same way—and my neighbor is anyone I know is in need. I have many neighbors, in every space of my life, who need unconditional, accepting, healing love. Yet too often I don’t want to risk discomfort by extending that kind of love.

Friendships. There are those lying outside my gate, hoping for crumbs of friendship. People everywhere are waiting—looking for a friendly word, an open invitation, a gesture of kindness. You have them at your gate, too. I’m living in the luxury of dear, cherished relationships that refresh and bolster my life. Will I step outside my gate and invite the poor and needy to dine at my table?

Good News. Father, I confess that I’ve been given the greatest treasure anyone can hope to find on this earth. And still I hesitate to offer it to those I know are seeking.

Spirit, make me more willing to share my wealth.