I’m in Michigan this morning. Technically you can hopscotch
between Michigan and Indiana with ease, but to be geographically precise, I’m
in Michigan. I woke up with a hinky back from sleeping in a strange bed, and I
realize I’m getting older. We’re going to visit some friends this morning, I’m
supposed to preach a sermon, and I’ve got nothing. That’s usually the way it
goes, though, so I’m not worried or troubled. Ready vessels are filled in
opportune moments. It’s never the preacher’s job to manufacture a sermon. His
only job is to be a ready vessel.
It’s strange how the older we get we think about things
differently. We see everything from odd angles, and I’m starting to catch
myself doing it more and more. At some point along this journey, people stop
planning vacations and start planning for retirement. They stop wondering
whether what they’re wearing is fashionable and start considering whether it’s
warm enough. It’s just the way of things, and if we try to cling to youth
longer than we ought, we miss out on all the things graying hair and achy
joints have to teach us.
Whenever I’m away from my kids, I think about them. My wife
too, but I’ve been with my wife longer than we’ve had our kids, so I tend to
think about them more. As is my mind’s custom to wander, I replayed some of the
memories we made this past week, from jumping into the giant leaf pile in the
backyard to my little one playing her own modified version of the trust game.
Instead of turning her back, she closes her eyes and falls on her face hoping I’ll
catch her before her nose and the floor connect.
Then something else came to light as my synapses began to
fire after an average night’s sleep. Just as you can’t trust halfway, you can’t
die halfway, either. The closest you can come to death without actually being
dead is a coma, but once you’re comatose, you no longer have control over
yourself, your choices, or your actions. You are limited in every way.
One might say this is analogous to the church’s current
condition, wherein it’s not truly dead, but save for taking a ragged breath now
and then, it is utterly, tragically useless. I know this might sting a bit, but
God’s army isn’t marching through the land; it’s on a ventilator. What’s worse
is that its condition is self-inflicted.
The Book is clear that everyone stands at a crossroads and
must choose one of two divergent paths. If you live according to the flesh, you
will die, plain and simple, no ambiguity. If, however, by the Spirit you put to
death the deeds of the body, you will live.
I get that the following is not something the Jesus take the
wheel crowd wants to hear, but the Spirit gives you the power to put to death
the deeds of the body; it doesn’t do it for you. You’re not hiring a hitman.
You have to do the work yourself.
As I said, you can’t die halfway. Anything less than true
death for the deeds of the body means that you are not fully alive, not fully
living for Him, and not fully surrendered. Sin is a paralytic. It keeps people
from growing in their faith, and unless you live in a big city and have never
wandered out to the country, we all know what a stagnant pool of water starts
to look like after some time.
The longer you are rooted in one spot, the harder it becomes
to break out of that place and move forward. That’s why the devil is content
with part of you for now. He knows that given a long enough time horizon, he’ll
have all of you. I get that many people like walking the razor’s edge barefoot,
but it never ends well for them. It’s a zero-sum game. You’re either dead to
the flesh, having put to death the deeds of the body, or you’re not. There is
no in-between.
Do you want to live, or do you want to die? It’s a binary
choice, as most of the critical decisions you will make throughout your life
are. Everything else is filler, opinion, rationalization, or some slick guy
trying to sell you his six-week course on how to love yourself the way you are.
You are not Schrödinger’s cat, and this is not an experiment. You cannot be both alive and dead. You are either alive or dead. To be dead to sin is to be alive in Christ. To be bound by sin is to reject the life-giving grace that Jesus offers. The choice is yours.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
2 comments:
This battle for me isn't always a straight line. I am always questioning my life.
I completely understand sin, got it. Yet, I trouble my mind with am I living for the Lord?
Should I be out on the streets preaching? I am not a preacher or, a teacher. I am a woman, wife, mother. Yet, the kids are grown.
My trouble is appropriating the work to who I am. The Word talks about women of ease.
I worry about my days at home, now that we are retired.
My husband gets upset when I talk of these things. He doesn't fret if He is using his time wisely. He immediately goes on the defense.
He says, you are to be my wife, a mother and, a grandmother.
Is it not a daily endeavor to lay ones life on the alter for Him? For me, I must commit or re-commit myself daily. And the worst of days are those when I fail the most. Either way, I made the decision to bet it all on Him. And when it looks like I'm losing the most, He tells me I'm a winner.
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