Meditations based on readings from
The Story of My
Life As Told by Jesus Christ
September 5, 2019
The Cares of Life
Page 98-99
Matthew 6:25 - 7:6; Luke 6:37-42
Sometimes Jesus doesn’t seem very
realistic. Just because he didn’t turn the stones into bread when he was in the
wilderness didn’t mean he couldn’t if he had wanted to. He fed 5,000 people
with 5 loaves of bread and 2 fish. When you have that going for you, it’s
pretty easy to tell other people not to worry. For people with real life worries
about bills, jobs, families and their future, Jesus can sound a bit
condescending.
But I know Jesus well enough to
know that he couldn’t be condescending if he wanted to. That’s just not in him.
What then does Jesus want us to see in his radical statements?
I hear him continuing the theme
from the beginning of the Sermon on the Mount. Jesus is showing us that our
relationship with God is all about trust. Can I trust God with all of my life?
It is one thing to serve a god that only gives me a list of moral and ethical
standards to obey. It is an altogether different thing to trust God with my
life, my wife, my children, my job, my retirement and my future. This
difference causes many people to hear Jesus’ command to “love the Lord your God
with all your heart, all your soul, and all your mind and love your neighbor as
yourself,” as a thirty second sound bite, but it is not a realistic way to live
life unless you live in a monastery and don’t have jobs, bills and family to
worry over.
But Jesus wasn’t into sound
bites; he was very serious in His call for me to enter into a trusting, loving
relationship with God the Father. Because such a relationship is so out of the
realm of anything I have experienced in my life, Jesus gives me concrete
examples of what my life will look like when I live my life by trusting in God
who loved me and gave himself for me.
My Takeaway: I made these examples into a little checklist to help
me stay focused on what is really important to me:
Do I give more time and attention
to my retirement accounts than I do to investing in the Kingdom of God?
What do I invite into my mind the
most: mystery novels and nonsense TV shows? Or do I read Scripture, good
literature and other materials that help me contemplate the richness and beauty
of God’s Kingdom?
Am I anxious about meeting my
needs? Or do I trust God to meet my needs out of the abundance of His riches
and glory in Christ Jesus?
Am I anxious about tomorrow? Or
do I remember that God’s mercies never end; they are new each morning?
Sē’lah
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(Selah is a word that appears in the
Book of Psalms that I often use as the Complimentary Closing in my
correspondence. Its meaning, as I use the word, is to pause and think about
these things.)
These
meditations are written by Alex M. Knight as he seeks the life in Christ as his
way of life. The meditations are
published on the BLOG, http://seekingthelifeinchrist.blogspot.com/
and they are also distributed on the Constant Contact email server. You may
subscribe to this email service by sending an email to: amkrom812@gmail.com. The BLOG is also available on Amazon Kindle, by
subscription.
Copyright © 2019 by Alex M. Knight
Publications by Alex M. Knight:
- Seeking the Life in Christ, Meditations on the New Testament and Psalms has been published and is now available at Amazon.com in paperback and Kindle.
- The second edition of First Think – Then Pray is available on Amazon Kindle.
Unless
otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are taken from the Holy Bible,
New Living Translation, copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House
Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Carol Stream,
Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
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