Today's Journey
Sep.07,2012
http://getmorestrength.org
"I said to the LORD, "You are my Lord; apart from you I have no good thing." Psalm 16:2
Several
years ago, as I passed the fifty mark on the calendar of my life, I
discovered a new and distinct desire to go deeper and pursue God more
intentionally than ever before. I had dreamed a lot of dreams and seen
many of them materialize. God, for reasons best known to Him, had been
abundantly good to me. But after all those years of fast-paced busyness
for Him and of conquering frontiers that loomed large in front of me, I
found that beyond and under it all I still had a yearning in the core of
my being that kept drawing my attention back to God.
I had given
God my best years and maximized my energies for Him, but busyness had
not drawn me closer to Him. I discovered that, in some ways, busyness
creates a false and treacherous sense of spirituality that leads to the
assumption that spirituality is a performance and that intimacy with God
is a business arrangement. It creates a flat and dull sort of
Christianity that can begin to turn our hearts cold and even sour if
we’re not careful.
I am awakening to the reality that we do
ourselves no favors when we act and live as though Christianity were a
stage on which we perform as if there were no deep need for an intimate
relationship with the One who is the focus of our activity.
I have
begun to sense as well that in the abundance of God’s goodness to me, I
am prone to lose touch with the reality of how much I need Him. I know I
need Him—my problem is that I find it easy to lose touch with the
reality and ramifications of that knowledge. Early on in my life and
ministry, my sense of need was apparent. I earned less than needed to
meet my family’s expenses. Without God’s gracious, over-and-above
financial provision, my family would not have made it. We needed Him. My
insecurities as a minister and public figure also kept me very much
aware of how much I needed Him. Each new church I shepherded challenged
my sense of self-sufficiency.
When we forget that we need Him, our
Christianity becomes little more than a task maintained by
responsibilities and requirements. God really doesn’t need to do much
for us. We are pretty well set. While we count on Him for the big
things—redemption, bailing us out if life goes in the ditch—we miss the
pleasure and wonder of needing Him and being in touch with His presence
and power that alone can satisfy, sustain, and secure us as an ongoing
experience of life.
While my life has not been without God in some
ways, it has been a life that has yet to cultivate the kind of adoring
dependency that is required to experience Him most fully and to be most
powerfully used of Him.
It’s not that I haven’t felt His touch. I
have—in some very special ways. In fact, those periodic brushes with His
wonderful reality are part of what drives me to live in the constancy
of His touch. And it’s not that I haven’t loved Him. I do. It’s that I
stand ready and wanting to know Him in a more personal and intimate way.
I am hearing the longing of my soul for more of Him.
I want to go deeper with God. Want to come along?
YOUR JOURNEY…
- Does your heart resonate with a longing for a deeper relationship with God?
- Make a list of the things and/or people you lean on to fulfill and sustain you. Where does God rank on the list? How might the others on the list be preventing you from complete dependence on Him?
- Do you sometimes feel as though “spirituality is a performance and that intimacy with God is a business arrangement”? If so, what led you to that conclusion?
- What can you do today to begin cultivating a deeper dependence on God?
- Psalm 16:2 says, “You are my Lord; apart from you I have no good thing.” Recite these words aloud to the Lord throughout the day as a reminder of your dependence on Him.

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