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I Do Not Like it Sam I Am... 06/22/2010
1 Comment
 
I see it's been a while since my last post, but I did promise up front not to do this just to do it, that I'd wait till I had something to actually say.  And I'd prefer to just put this one off even longer.  It's a whole heck of a lot easier to tell YOU what you should be doing differently than it is to have to deal with anything concerning myself. Hey, I'm a pastor, I'm perfect! (let me say it for you...yeah, right!)

I have been married for 30 years now, and you would think that after 30 you'd have learned just about everything there is to be learned, you'd have perfected just about everything about the marriage gig. And Ann really is pretty close, but I'm probably just a slow learner.  Here's what I'm finally coming to understand after 30.

Jesus has a couple of things to say about following him that if we're honest, we really would rather just gloss over and get to the good stuff about peace and joy and no worry. He says, "Greater love has no man than this--that a man lay down his life for his friends." (He then goes on to astonishingly call us friends which is a topic for another day.) And he says "If anyone would be my disciple, [and I really don't like this one] let him deny himself, take up his cross and follow me." And then John picks up on this and drives it home in his first letter: "This is how we know what love is, that Jesus laid down his life for us. And we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren." Or for our wives.

Now this doesn't just have to do with marriage, in fact doesn't really have marriage in mind here, but I can't get past the idea that marriage is included in being a disciple of Jesus, that Ann is one of the brethren I should be laying down my life for.  Which doesn't sound right, but you get my meaning here, I hope. Following Jesus is about denying ourselves, about laying down our lives for each other, about sacrificing our own wants and rights in order to love like Jesus loved. 

Denying myself. You don't hear a lot about that kind of thinking in our culture. Fulfilling myself sure. Looking out for number one absolutely. Becoming self actualized...did you hear about the man who went into the bookstore and asked the salesgirl where the self help section was and she said, "Well, if I told you that would kind of defeat the purpose wouldn't it?" No?  Well, I'm just stalling anyway.  We rarely live in such a way that we are more concerned with denying ourselves than we are with focusing on ourselves.  Without going into too many specifics, I have spent 30 years in pursuit of my rights, my wants. Not totally, I'm not a complete slouch on this discipleship thing. But in some pretty important areas I have been more selfish than sacrificing.

And now, probably not for the first time, but maybe for the first time that I'm willing to consider this possibility, I'm being called to deny myself, to lay down my life, and to sacrifice. And I don't like it, because it is sacrifice, and as sacrifice implies, it requires giving up something.  It requires a choice to love someone else more than I love myself, or love what I consider to be my rights.  For me at this moment in my life, that has to do with my relationship with the woman I have loved for more than 30 years. But there are so many other relationships, so many other ways this needs to be applied.  Your kids. Our church family. Our co-workers. Wherever and whoever. the way of the cross is through the path of denying ourselves.

I'll be sure to let you know how this all works out. Next time I'm writing about you.
 


Comments

Masked Elephant
07/09/2010 12:15pm

It's weird, my whole life I have taken the "There is no greater love than to lay down one's life for one's friends." to heart, in a way. I think it comes from my morbid thoughts of death all the time. I have always had this thing about death, I don't want to die in a boring way. For a long time, that included not wanting to die of old age. I've come to terms with it now and have decided that however God wants me to die will be ok with me, but I'm still hoping for something amazing.
Along with these non-boring death wishes, I always tried to love everyone I meet enough to be able to die for them. I know, not a normal concept and definitely not something my parents taught me, but I just always felt that if I wasn't willing to die for someone, then what really was this "loving the world" thing all about. When I would get really angry at someone, I would stop and think to myself, if I had the choice, their life or mine, would I let them die instead of me? The answer was always an easy one for me. I knew I was going to heaven so what was the big deal in letting them have one more chance with redemption, one more chance to find God's love. Now, my thoughts weren't always so self-sacrificing, sometimes I figured it would be easier if I died instead of them so I wouldn't have to live in a place that had that person in it. I'm not perfect.
I say all this more to have people reflect, I don't think that we will really ever have the choice, I just want to be ready, just in case. I'm not saying that you have to take it to the extreme way of thinking like me either. I always figured if I start at the most extreme everything below might be easier. Isn't always true, but I try anyways.
There is a less intense way to see this as well. Love those around you with utter abandon. If you have the means when you pass a homeless person, give them a little bit of money. The idea that they will only go buy drugs or alcohol with it isn't always true. The way I see it, if they use that money to buy drugs, they are going to get food for themselves as well. If the money that I gave them is able to sustain their needs for one more day, that means that they have one more day for God to impact their life, one more chance for God to reach them. I'm all about second chances.
I just use the homeless person as one of those prime examples, but really loving people can be as easy as sharing your pudding cup with that little girl who didn't bring a lunch to school or even just making an effort to get to know that new person at work who everybody thinks is a duck (steve talk for the socially awkward). Everything God taught was about love, that is the bottom line.

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    Jim Miller

    Privileged to serve the role of pastor for Oasis Community Church, blessed to be part of this family.

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