“Don't let
the fear of striking out hold you back.” Babe Ruth
Did you watch Nik Wallenda last Sunday night walk
between two skyscrapers 600 feet above downtown Chicago? Then, he did his second tightrope
walk blindfolded. Wow! 600 feet up without a net or safety straps. I love what
he said during his tightrope walk, “I'm
so blessed for these opportunities. You guys watching think I'm crazy, but this
is what I was made for.” It’s estimated that 50,000 came to watch him
accomplish this death defying feat.
“This is what I was made for.” Those
words really convict me. Too often I forget “what
I was made for.” We were made to glorify God! We have a mission! It’s found
in Jesus’ last words before He went Home, “Go
therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the
Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that
I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age”
(Matthew 28:19-20). The truth is that I can easily get distracted and focused
on nearly everything else but “what I was
made for.” Can you relate? Yet, most of the stuff that can absorb my focus
is so temporary.
I wonder if believers
in other ages had our struggles, particularly with our specific struggles. For
example, I have to work to not be absorbed with politics. I know better.
I know it’s all very temporal. I’m not sure why. I think that part of it is
that we’re inundated with it. Part of it is that my friends are nearly always
talking about it. Part of it is that I am so grieved to see the country I love
degenerating and moving toward a moral collapse. Part of it is the lack of critical
thinking, not to mention comprehension of the long term effect of an
antichristian worldview generationally. Yet, I know that politics is not the
solution. I know that those who hold views that are anti-Christian are not the
enemy. And I know that I’m to love, pray and reach out to leaders who despise
Christianity, but I still struggle to not be distracted by something that makes
little difference in eternity.
Then, I
struggle with being a workaholic. I love to work…always have. Now some of you
are probably thinking, “Well, you’re in the ministry…isn’t the ‘mission’ part
of your work?” Yes, but there are many things that I can focus on that are
non-mission oriented. This will probably surprise some of you, I tend to be an
introvert. I could easily hide out in my office and go weeks without any human
contact. I’m sure that I have enough work to keep me busy for several decades.
That’s part of why I’m part of organizations that have a lot of unchurched
people or those from other faiths. It pressures me to be mission focused.
Because when I’m with those who don’t know the Lord, my heart breaks. It weighs
on me that so many that I love and care about don’t know Jesus.
Then, I love
creature comforts. It’s easy to be distracted with ME. I can convince myself I
deserve this, that I need a break, that I owe it to myself. While there is a
time or place for that, I have to work to keep it all in balance. Now I don’t
have the sports bug, but I have my own obsessions of entertainment. I love
reading. I could easily keep my nose in a book 24/7. Then, I enjoy good drama.
I’m also a news junkie. And I love to spend time with my wife and my family.
My point is
that though our distractions may be different, it’s easy and tempting to be absorbed
with that which is good, that’s not evil or bad, yet it’s not “what we were made for.” I’m sure that
if you took some time and prayed about this and did some reflecting, you’d find
your own list of distractions that can easily absorb all your time and totally
distract you from “what you were made
for.”
Have you ever noticed how easy it is to talk about
everything else, nearly anything else, BUT the Gospel? We can even talk about
the Bible, spiritual truths, even church…yet never get around to the Gospel. We
make ourselves feel good that we’re having a lot of “spiritual talks,” yet
we’re often neglecting the greatest need of the person we’re conversing with –
the Gospel.
Some of us just
need to get out more. We’re so trapped in our safe Christian bubbles that we
really don’t have deep relationships with any lost people. Maybe you need to
join a group that has some common interests but that’s NOT a church group or Bible study,
so that it opens opportunities to befriend unbelievers and share the Gospel.
Yet, for
most of us, that’s not the problem. We’re inundated with lost people. We work
with them, play with them, and have good relationships with our neighbors. For
some, a large percentage, even the majority of our relatives, don’t know the
Lord. And we will talk about anything and everything else, but that which
really matters, that which is our mission, “what
we were made for.”
The next several
weeks are literally filled with Gospel opportunities. Take the Thanksgiving
Season. It’s not “turkey day,” it’s Thanksgiving. But who are we thanking? Who
has ultimately given us everything that we’re thankful for? Our loving Heavenly
Father. What a great opportunity to segue a conversation to the Gospel.
Next Sunday
night we’re even serving an opportunity up for you to reach out to a lost
person that the Lord has brought into your life on a “silver platter” with our
Harvest Celebration. What an easy opportunity to build a Gospel bridge. Just
inviting someone to be your guest can open a conversation about the Gospel.
During the
Christmas Season, they are truly singing our songs. For over a month, great
songs about the Incarnation and God’s great plan of salvation will be heard
everywhere. Even atheists will be singing Silent
Night. What an opportunity for a Philip and the Ethiopian moment, “Do you understand what you are ‘singing’?”
(Acts 8:30).
So why don’t
we share the Gospel? Think about this. If I told you that I loved my wife,
Jane, yet I never talked about her. If I never wanted to be seen with her in
public and didn’t introduce her to any of my friends, would you believe that I
really loved Jane? If I flirted with other women, if I talked about other women,
if talked about and obviously enjoyed everything else, but the one who I said
was the love of my life, would you believe that I really loved Jane?
The point is
obvious. If we believe that sharing the Gospel, sharing the One that we say
that we love is “what we were made for,” you
couldn’t shut us up. So take a small risk, not a Nik Wallenda risk, and share
the Gospel, share the old, old story about the One who is the only hope for this
world, for your world, for you lost loved ones and friends.
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