Tuesday, February 16, 2010

1 Kings 15

3 comments:

Unknown said...

"He did all the same sins his father before him had done. Abijah was not faithful to the Lord his God as David, his great-grandfather had been." v3

This verse is very fitting to something I have been contemplating for over a week now. A hard truth. I taught about faithfulness in club last week. It required asking some tough questions. In our sermon for small group, we were asked some tough questions. I'm convicted, and I'm sad and concerned for the message that our choices reveal when it comes to faithfulness.

My club lesson was on being faithful in the little things in our relationship to God. Little acts of faithfulness equate to big victory and blessing and glory to God. It's easy to give our faithfulness an isthmus test. Where are we spending our time, and where are we spending our money? Where do things fall in order of priority?

Does spending time in the word and prayer top my daily priority list? No? What is crowding it down (or right off) the list? Computer? Other books? My to do list? social activities or hobbies? Then I am not being faithful and I need to evaluate if one or more of these things has become an idol in my life.

Does being faithful to the body through attendance and ministry and giving stand at the top of my priority list for my week? Or would something else trump it if I had to choose? This was a tough one to talk to the kids about, in a culture where sports vies for their Sunday presence and activities threaten to squeeze quiet times right out of their busy little lives.

Being faithful comes at a cost. It is not about what we WANT, or FEEL, but about giving up what we want or feel to lay our all on the altar for the one we have pledged fidelity too.

We have it so easy. So many lost everything to be faithful. We may sacrifice something by only putting it a few notches down our priority list. Heavy handed thoughts for this morning... eek.

Chris said...

heavy, to be sure. Faithfulness can look different for each of us, it seems, but it always means God first. I got a little tidbit of wisdom from an article that said that in a busy stage of life, one Mom kept a Bible open in many rooms of her house... that way, with little ones to constantly care for, she was able to take a snippet of scripture as she was changing the baby, stirring a pot, playing with toddlers. Neat idea. Nothing to do with this passage, really, but I'm passing it on, nonetheless.

Unknown said...

>>Faithfulness can look different for each of us, it seems, but it always means God first. <<

This is perfect. Thanks for this. Wise, wise words.