Meditation: There is More
My Dad used to believe some crazy things about me. Every so often he would tell me I could do anything. He said I was smart and funny. He thought I could beat up any kid in my class. It was comical because I was the pee-wee of the school who ran his mouth way too much and then hid behind the teacher’s skirt. Clearly, my father didn’t live in the same world as I did.
I was convinced my father had no clue about my life, so I ignored his advice. Years later, when I came to the pages of the New Testament I began to hear the same voice urging me to lift my vision. I’ve heard that voice at least four times, and I know it’s talking to all of us, not just me.
“God had planned something better for us so that only together with us would they be made perfect.” (Hebrews 11:40) After describing incredible heroes of faith, the writer of Hebrews turns is attention to us. Compared to all those other guys in the Bible, God has planned something better for us. There’s more. And it’s better. And it’s for us. wilder still: the stuff God has planned for us completes the faith of those from ages past. Are you kidding me? Something is lacking in the experiences of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, and well, the whole list—and they are looking to us for the fulfillment of their experiences? No wonder there is a great cloud of witnesses looking on.
“His intent was that now, through the church, the manifold wisdom of God should be made known to the rulers and authorities in the heavenly realms.” (Ephesians 3:10) To begin with, I have no clear idea who the “rulers and authorities in the heavenly realms" are, but when God wants to put his wisdom on display, he points at the church. Are you kidding me? I love my local church, but it hardly reaches the level of manifesting all of God’s wisdom. God points at us, and we turn around as if he’s pointing at someone behind us.
“I tell you the truth, anyone who has faith in me will do what I have been doing. He will do even greater things than these, because I am going to the Father.” (John 14:12) Are you kidding me? Is he really talking about us? When Jesus opens up with “I tell you the truth” it means, “read my lips, this is serious.” Still stranger--his words are in the singular: “anyone” and “he.” My favorite rationalization about this verse used to be that Jesus meant that all the aggregate works of all believers in all times: but there’s no way you can read it like that. He means me, and then he means you. Actually, I would be thrilled to settle for just doing the stuff he did, but Jesus says there’s more.
“His divine power has given us everything we need for life and godliness through our knowledge of him who called us by his own glory and goodness." (2 Peter 1:3) The reason I have so much trouble with this verse is that it lays so much responsibility at my feet. Everything for life and godliness? Are you kidding me? He’s given us everything we need? Well then, go get ‘em.
My Dad may not have been a part of my childhood world, but my God knows this world better than I do. My natural father spoke to me out of parental hope and pride. Our Heavenly Father speaks to us out of transcendent truth. Why don’t we listen more often?
Reader Comments (4)
God has promised amazing things. It is a lifelong process of us to take hold of them and walk in them by faith.
All very challenging stuff, to be sure. Another verse, my personal favorite, is just as challenging, though it also provides comfort. And God is able to make all grace about to you so that in all things at all times having all that you need you may abound in every good work. II Cor. 9:8 The ALLS and EVERY of that verse make me stand up and take notice. There are no excuses, none. Yet, all of the alls and every point back to God. Yes, he's talking to me, but the power and the grace are all his. They pour out from the fountain of his holiness and might on to me, always, giving me all that I need to always ABOUND in EVERY good work. Challenging stuff, indeed.
i love this rallying cry. the passage in john gets me every time. we have a mighty calling indeed. thanks for the wise words and encouragement here.
Cassandra: A lifetime, indeed. Lewis would say, "farther up and farther in."
Rebecca: Yep. You start looking for the amazing dreams that the Father has for us and you begin to discovere that we have not hoped for too much, instead, we have settled for too little.
Suzannah: The Father has so many ways to encourage us. The marvelous gift of the scripture is one for-certain address to find vision and hope.