Good
Morning All!
Revelation
2:10b; “Be faithful unto death, and I will give you the crown of life”
We like to use the word faithful a lot. We
want a faithful dog; we want our car to be faithful; we want our politicians to
be faithful. But what do we really mean by that? Usually, it means we want them
to do what we want them to do. We want our dog to roll over, fetch, sit up and
play catch when we want to. We want our car to run forever with a minimum of
effort on our part to keep it going. We want the politician to always vote for
our interest, whether it is the best for the country or not. We really have a
warped sense of faithfulness.
The Bible uses the word “faithful” often. It
actually starts in Genesis and goes all the way through to Revelation. Throughout the whole Bible; throughout our
whole existence; God shows his faithfulness to us. Through his creative and
restorative process of us; he displays his love for us. Yet God’s love is the
outward expression of his nature to be faithful.
What we as human often fail to see is that
what God truly calls us to be is to be faithful; faithful to trusting in his
promise of forgiveness. As much as we do not like to think it, it is not
disobedience which causes us to go to hell; it is unfaithfulness. Our
disobedience is simply the outward sign of our unfaithfulness. When we do not
trust in God’s promise, we look elsewhere for our security rather than trusting
in God for it. It is not a question of obedience; it is a question of
faithfulness.
Many Christians, especially American
Christians, struggle with this truth. They prefer to think in terms of
obedience and disobedience. If we think of receiving God’s grace because we are
obedient; then we can remain self-focused. We can think in terms of “God is
rewarding me” so what I have is mine. Those who do not have must be disobedient.
I am getting mine and they are getting what they deserve. The problem with that
is that God’s love for us is from his faithfulness not our obedience. When you
look at God’s love as a gift and a sign of his faithfulness, it calls into
question our faithfulness because ours is lacking.
If we are honest, it is our lack of
faithfulness to God’s promise that causes us all our problems. We tend to think
in terms of “deserve” instead “given.”
Imagine you are at a family dinner gathering. As you sit around the
table, the host brings out the food on platters. It is given to the first
person who takes from it and passes it on. What if he thought he deserved that
platter of food, he might just put it down on his plate and keep it; leaving
you and the others to go hungry.
We need to see that God’s call to us is to
be faithful; to be faithful to his promise for when we are we see God’s
incredible grace in our life, and we see the need and we have the desire to
share God’s gifts with others. So, as we go through life and we look at all the
gifts and blessings that God has given us; are we just the first person to
receive the platter at the dinner table?
Are we sharing the platter or are we placing it down in front of us? Are
we faithful to God and his promises and his call to us to be his witnesses and
his agents here on earth? Be thou faithful unto death and I will give you the
crown of life.
Dearest Father, too
often we are unfaithful to you and to your promise. Our faith is weak, and we
fail miserably. Forgive us for our sin. Cleanse us and renew us that we may
fully trust in you as our only provider and savior. In Jesus precious name we
pray, amen.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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