I am totally thrilled with the response that my last blog received. It was great to hear so many different stories from people about their own struggles with Soft Christianity and what they’re doing to get rid of it. It even made me re-evaluate my own willingness to put Christ first and foremost in my life.
It is strange how some things seem completely obvious only after you think of them. After hearing
The first is one that Harvey brought up, Proverbs 3:5-6, Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge Him and He will keep your paths straight. If we take the Bible at its word (or Word?) then my box is in serious trouble. The key phrase for me here is all your ways. Not one seventh of your ways, not half of your ways, not all of your ways except when you get really angry, but ALL your ways. James teaches us that as Christians we are largely defined by our perseverance. To persevere is to not give in, to not be overcome. When you are overcome by anger, when it’s Friday afternoon and those words you know you just shouldn’t say come tumbling out of your mouth after a long week: Satan wins. Put another way, we cease to acknowledge God in all our ways. If we are different people on Sunday then we are on Wednesday or Friday, we are living a life that stands in direct contrast to Scripture, which brings us to the second verse that comes to mind.
Matthew 5:16, In the same way, let your light shine before men, that they may see your good deeds and praise your Father in heaven. Now back to James. James tells us to expect trials in life, in fact to be grateful for the chance to grow in our faith. Proverbs tells us to acknowledge the Lord in all our ways. Can you hear my box shattering on the floor? Being a Christian is about bringing God to church and taking Him with you when you leave; bringing him to work with you, to school with you, to the dinner table with you. It’s about shining your light into the darkest places, showing patience and kindness on Friday and Sunday and Monday. It’s easy to be a Christian on Sunday morning, but following Jesus is a 24/7/365 gig. Some of those days will be harder than others, but it’s in those trials that we get to see how much we really buy into this whole Jesus thing.
By Aaron Blackwell
1 comment:
Nice thoughts Aaron. One of the images I get is walking out of a pawn of shop, counting the money I just received for selling my integrity, perserverence, my soul. I bump into Jesus causing all the money to fall to the ground and blow away. It is then I realize that Jesus is on the way into the pawn shop to buy back what I just sold. I wonder sometimes if this scene is played over and over again much like the movie Ground Hog Day.
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