October 9, 2016

 

The Burning “Yes”

You will show me the path of life;

In Your presence is fullness of joy;

At Your right hand are pleasures forevermore.

Psalm 16:11

Seeking God, we gladly relinquish the things that interfere with what we most greatly long for: life with God. Giving up the lesser in order to gain the greater does hurt sometimes. There’s no question that self-discipline can be quite uncomfortable, even painful. It does no good to deny the pain. But this pain we gladly accept if our hearts truly burn with the passion of what matters more to us than everything else.

The “thou shalt nots” that confront us are not simply the arbitrary rules of a God who wishes to keep God’s creatures as unhappy as possible. There’s no inherent virtue in abstinence, and God does not expect us to give up things just for the sake of giving them up. Instead, there’s always some gift that God wants to place in our hands, a gift we’ll have no room to hold until we put down the load of lesser packages we are presently holding. In the end, we’ll see that God asked us to give up only those things that interfered with the exchange of real love.

No one knows more than the victorious athlete how valuable it is to give up the lesser for the greater. Gold medals aren’t won by self-indulgence. They’re won by years of focused training, the choice having been made to forgo other things that might have been enjoyed in order to single‑mindedly pursue a dream. While the athlete trains, he may wistfully watch while others entertain themselves living for the moment, but he is wisely living for a goal.

In the Scriptures, we are taught that hope has a “purifying” effect. “Everyone who has this hope in Him purifies himself, just as He is pure” (1 John 3:3). To the extent that our spiritual hope matters as much as we say it does, we’ll purge our lives of anything inconsistent with that hope, eager to abstain from things that even distract us from God. If we’ve paid the price to know what matters most, and if we’ve realized that the only thing worth having is God, God’s self, then our daily choices will be much easier. The joy of the Lord will be our strength.

 

We find ourselves able to say “No!” to some things because there is a bigger “Yes!” burning deep within us.

Stephen R. Covey