Psalm 84:1-2,12 “How lovely is your dwelling place, O Lord of hosts! My soul longs, yes, faints, for the courts of the Lord; my heart and flesh sing for joy the living God… O Lord of hosts, blessed is the one who trusts in you!
Being the time of year for commencements of all different types I find it fitting to focus on the concept of the idea of celebration. This weekend was marked with several different occasions in which to celebrate, from individuals making small milestones with graduation from college and looking forward to where God is directing their future, to the anniversary of two individuals celebrating 50 long years of marriage and how God has continued to sustain and keep their marriage for this time in order to allow them to be a testimony to His grace and work in their lives, to the celebration of a woman’s life as she nears the end of a battle with cancer. All these opportunities give us the ability to both praise God and consider: What are we doing with the life we have been given, how are we continuing to serve God through all of the ups and down in our lives?
As I sat at a high school graduation and looked on as 54 individuals received their diplomas and are being turned out into the “real” world if you will, it was remarked by one of the speakers that, although corny, “On a tomb stone it is not the date at the beginning that matters most or the date at the end that matters most but the dash in between.” Another author put it this way, “if we view eternity as a line, our lives are like a dot on that line.” As I looked at two individuals who have lived full and lengthy lives together as they celebrated their anniversary of 50 years and as I talked with a woman who is dying of cancer this truth could not have been more apparent. We see individuals live their lives for or against the will of God and that dot is defined by a love for God and a desire to serve Him or a disobedience and hatred (whether apparent or not) towards God. It really is true that it matters how we live our lives in relation to God that matters. We see this mentioned continually within Paul’s prayers for others as he prays, “that they would walk in a manner worthy of their calling.”
Albert Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, recently spoke in his commencement address about the “eschatology of the Christian mission.” All that is is a fancy way of speaking about the end of the Christian mission. He spoke about how the work of the Lord is not one that is ever completed while on this earth. How many people have lived and died and have that “dash” to account for the work they have done on the earth. We know the final completion of the work of God IS coming and WILL be summed up in the coming of the Lord and the end of the age…but until then we are a people called out to live lives that bring glory and honor and praise to God. We as Christians are not given the luxury of neglecting our calling or disregarding the work God has gifted us to complete. The work is at times difficult and brings ridicule and misunderstanding but perseverance in the grace and work of God will always be a rewarding and gratifying one. As we continue to enter into the work of God we continue to be a part of His will and work. As we continue can it be said of us that our soul longs and faints for the courts and the presence of God?
As we come to various times of celebration and joy we see this continual truth held within Psalm 84…How lovely is your dwelling place, O Lord of hosts! To dwell in and continue in the presence of God is one that is to be pursued and sought after in all of the various areas and times of our lives. We seek to remain with and walk with God, to commune with him in prayer and to walk in obedience, grace and righteousness that comes through Christ. As the psalmist says ‘at Your right hand is fullness of joy and at Your right hand are pleasures forever more’. Seek to walk and dwell in the courts of the Lord, place your trust in Him; for as Psalms 84 says… “Blessed is the man who puts his trust in the Lord.”
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
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