Letting Go – Taking Hold

.. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, Philippians 3:13

As our grandson wrestled with learning to paddle board last summer we were all treated to a comedy of errors. One moment he was up smiling triumphantly, the next tumbling off to the peals of laughter from his cousin and his older brother. But no matter how funny he looked to us AJ showed that he was serious about mastering the challenge. He was willing to temporarily let go of his pride in order to show everyone that he could be a winner.

Are you and I half as dedicated to the goals God has put in front of us? The apostle Paul was in many ways just like our grandson A.J. . He refused to let the past hold him back. No nostalgic memory was worth clinging on to if it meant missing out on what lay ahead. Also, just like our grandson, the opinions of others held little value compared to what God had in store. Finally, just like A.J.- Paul learned that victory was sure as long as he kept things in balance in life. Paul reached his goal at the moment when he took hold of the prize and stood straight and strong in the presence of Jesus Christ!

Contentment

But Godliness with contentment is great gain. For we brought nothing into this world, and we cannot take anything out of the world. 1 Timothy 6:6-7

Every commercial we see on our television screen has the goal in mind of causing us to become discontent until – we buy their product. Though we may not have worried much about, the style of our clothing, the brand of our car, or how comfortable our pillow is, marketing firms are out to change that in 30 seconds. Watching five minutes of advertisements might be enough to keep us up half the night wondering if our neighbors have noticed that the white shirts our kids wore to school yesterday were a little grey!

Madeline in Easter Dress

But having all the resources of this world at our fingertips will never make us content. No pile of money is high enough to assure a happy retirement. No detergent, toothpaste, car or dating service will ever deliver on the promise of real contentment. At the beginning when God created Adam and Eve they were content. They had neither clothing, transportation, nor possessions, and yet they walked in the cool of the day with God. Their only goals were to care for the garden and to obey God.  As we fold up the weeks and months of this past year and put them away in our memories why not end this year with contentment? Not everything has gone our way. Not every bill has been paid, every obstacle overcome. Yet Jesus offers to walk side with us from this year to next. Whatever we have, or whatever we go through He promises always to be with us. What unimaginable wealth to simply know that I am His and for all eternity He is mine!

Re-gifting!

Because Corinth was a wealthy city filled with business activity it possibly compares most closely to our modern Western church than any of the others. The Corinthians were opinionated, trendy and fell easily for some of the attractions of the world around them. But these people who struggled with more issues than most of the other churches combined also held a special place in the heart of the Apostle. He not only devoted two of his longest letters to them, he also visited them often and built a father/son relationship with many of them. When Paul corrects he tells them he did so with tears and concern. In his first letter one of the issues he addressed was their pride. There were brothers and sisters in their church who began to act as if they were better than others. They got their noses a bit up into the air because they felt they were more talented more wealthy and more gifted by God. Paul finds himself forced to remind these people that they shouldn’t consider themselves as the source of their gifts. Rather than being self-sufficient they were instead supposed to remember that anything they had to give had first been given to them.

Whenever the subject of re-gifting comes up at the holidays, I find myself torn. On one side of the debate are those who say “What a cheap skate!” and on the other “Why buy things that people don’t need with money we don’t have?” The Apostle Paul enters into a debate just to remind us that there is nothing that we have or ever will that originated with us. We are in fact simply recipients of so much that we can do nothing else as God’s children but to give to others what has been given first to us! So don’t be ashamed to be a re-gifter! Tell your friends and family this Christmas. I am just giving a little to you of the many things that I already received!

1512569346348_image.jpg