Obedience is one of those words that has been occupying my thoughts a great deal lately. It is a word that is often mentioned in scripture. Abraham was obedient to follwot he leading of God out to Ur. He was obedient to offer Isaac as a sacrifice when he was asked to do so by God. Moses finally gave in and obeyed God's call to return to Egypt to be the tool of God's deliverance for His people. David listened to the word of God and did NOT build the temple that he so desperately wanted to build to honor God. Ezekiel ate the scroll. Joseph married Mary when common sense told him to put her away quietly. Matthew, Peter, John, James, and the rest of the disciples heard the calling of Christ and left all to follow him. Paul heard the voice of the man from Macedonia and went there to share the gospel. Lets not forget the greatest illustration of obedience in scripture, Jesus humbly accepting his death on the cross to take away the sins of the world and give us life.
The word of God reminds us that God desires obedience even more than he wants sacrifice and worship. (After all, is worship really worship if there is disobedience in our hearts?)
So why is obedience so hard for us? God asks us to do things, or not do things and something rises up in us that resists doing that which we are asked. Churches struggle financially because disciples hoard their resources and withhold tithe. Classes go untaught because people with the gift of teaching are afraid to step out on faith and exercise the gift. Worst of all, unbelievers do not hear the good news of the love of Jesus Christ because we do not tell them. Let's face it, obedience is hard.
I think somewhere deep inside us we know why it is so hard to obey God. We have yet to surrender our will as well as our life to the control of the divine one. We hold on to those last vestiges of the illusion of self-autonomy. The greatest lie that Satan deceives us with is that we are in control of our own destiny and life. The fact is that we, apart from the freedom of God's grace, are in bondage to the tyranny of our will, taste, habits, and passions. The only true freedom comes when we are liberated for and by God as we surrender the totality of our lives, including our will, to Him. It is then that we can know the peace that comes from a life of obedience and trust.
I confess that there are times when obedience costs. Yet the fact remains that the cost is not nearly what we think it will be. Obedience yields the grace of God, his care, his provision, and his presence. The reward that we receive is the image of the divine one in us, the freedom that comes in knowing if we are following the will of God, he is responsible for the results, and the peace that comes in knowing that he is faithful and will complete his work in us.
I invite you to join me on the journey that is a life of surrendered obedience. I haven't arrived perfectly yet, but he is still showing me the realities of life in him.
1 comment:
we must also remember that ther is a cost for not being obedient and decide which we can live with. the cost of sacrifice in this life or the cost of sacrifice of the after life...not choosing is still a choice.
Post a Comment