Good
Morning All,
Matthew 14:29; “He said, “Come.” So Peter got
out of the boat and walked on the water and came to Jesus.”
Are you one of those people who have a set
routine? Perhaps you read the newspaper the same way every day. You drink the
same kind of coffee every day. When you go somewhere you take the same route. Perhaps
your meals have the same combinations like hamburger and french fries but never
hash browns. We all have routines that
we follow. Some occur because it is the easiest way to accomplish our task. Some
occur because of other factors weighing in. We may have a morning routine that
meshes with our spouse and children. Yet often it is just the comfort of the
routine and the fact that it takes some thought and some energy to change.
So how comfortable are you with change? A
new hair style or a new restaurant, a change in our job or maybe even a whole
new occupation, a new home; for many thoughts of these will keep us up at night.
We are creatures of habit and that can be both good and bad. It can be very
challenging to change but sometimes; change is what is needed.
Often, we become so comfortable with our
life that the devil uses it to make us complacent in our faith life. We are comfortable where we are. We might put
money in the collection plate occasionally, but the amount or frequency has not
changed in 10 years. We read the Bible occasionally but not regularly. We pray
when we are desperate enough. This has become our routine and we are
comfortable in this rut and the devil tells us we are just fine.
Yet one of the most remarkable things that
Christ does to us is to shake us from our comfortable routine. He takes us from
our complacent life in this sinful world; a life that lets us just skirt along
and he changes it and he challenges us. He takes us as we are broken, sinful
beings and changes us into new creations. He makes us his holy people and then
gives to us the power and the authority to bring his kingdom to the world. Then
he looks at us, at our complacent lives, and says, “Come, get out of the boat
and come.”
Now Peter was in a boat on stormy lake late
at night. He got out of the boat. The Lord called to him and he got out of the
boat. He didn’t last long, this time, but he got out of the boat. Later in his
life, Peter changed from his original routine. At the start of the gospels,
Peter is brash, hotheaded, and often speaks long before he thinks. Yet in his
later life, Peter is the apostle of love, patience, and hope. He changed
because he was changed. He truly “got out of the boat.”
What about you? Will you get out of your
boat? Will you step up and live the life that Christ has given you? Maybe you
can volunteer some time at a food bank or a homeless shelter. Maybe you can
mentor a neighbor child who is alone far too much of the time. What about you,
will you get out of your boat?
Father, make me
uncomfortable at the sight of pain and brokenness around me. Break my heart as
yours breaks at the pain of your creation. Move me to get out of my complacent
life and be a force of change for you. In the precious name of Jesus, we pray,
amen.
God’s
Peace,
Pastor
Bret
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.