DAY 225
GIVE
YOUR “ORDINARY” TO GOD
Psalm 84, 85 & 86 and Romans 12
I love Romans 12. The opening is dramatic, “I
appeal to you…” All the groundwork has been laid, and what follows s in these
final chapters is wonderful counsel, counsel that can now be given because Paul’s
argument for God’s unconditional love…to both Jew and Gentile…has been
completed. And this counsel that is being offered is important. Here is
paraphrase of Romans 12:1-2:
So
here’s what I want you to do, God helping you: Take your everyday, ordinary
life—your sleeping, eating, going-to-work, and walking-around life—and place it
before God as an offering. Embracing what God does for you is the best thing
you can do for him. Don’t become so well-adjusted to your culture that you fit
into it without even thinking. Instead, fix your attention on God. You’ll be
changed from the inside out. Readily recognize what he wants from you, and
quickly respond to it. Unlike the culture around you, always dragging you down
to its level of immaturity, God brings the best out of you, develops
well-formed maturity in you.
It comes from The
Message and I particularly like it. “Take your everyday, ordinary life…fix
your attention on God…God brings the best out of you…”
I know we have been knee deep in
theology, but as Paul so often does, without abandoning the theology, is he
gets practical. In Romans 12 Paul will challenge us to think about our
relationships. John Stott presents as follows:
1.
Our relationship to God: consecrating our bodies and
renewing our minds
2.
Our relationship to ourselves: thinking soberly about
our gifts
3.
Our relationship to “one another”: loving our family,
i.e. the church
4.
Our relationship to our enemies: love not retaliation
These relationships start with our
union with God. Paul’s theology is refreshingly honest. Becoming the people God
calls us to be does not happen instantly, nor does it happen magically. It
happens by us committing ourselves to God, and renewing our minds…that sounds
like work…because it is.
The Gospel is God’s offer of love
to us…that is free…no work needed. The Christian Life is then the task of
living into this love. We will of course not be perfect, and we should let
people know that we are not perfect. Somehow the message of the church has
become one of “judging others” when it should be one of “running a race.”
I attended a marathon a month back
(no I was not running it). What struck me was the community. Here were several
thousand people, turning out to either run 26.2 miles or encourage those who
were. A few did it with style, but for most is was a real struggle, and for a
few you might say “it was not pretty.” But you know what…everybody was cheering
everyone else on. No one, from what I could tell, was judging: everyone just
wanted the others to finish. These strangers all had a common bond, a common
relationship, and therefore encouraged one another.
That is what the Christian Life
and the Church is all about. We are free to exactly be this way because we are
secure that God loves us. So today, I urge you, I appeal to you, my brothers
and sisters, to take your ordinary, everyday life, and offer it to God…and love
one another, encourage one another, to in this walk.
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