Supporting
•November 3, 2012 • Leave a CommentThe need to know
•November 2, 2012 • Leave a CommentWe have become used to being able to find out the answer to everything. Research is breaking boundaries of things previously not understood. A Google search helps us find out things we don’t know. With our thirst for knowledge our tolerance for the things we can’t understand has become less and less.
Today’s set reading is this:
Genesis 2:15-17
15 The Lord God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to work it and take care of it. 16 And the Lord God commanded the man, “You are free to eat from any tree in the garden; 17 but you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat from it you will certainly die.”
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And it got me thinking…
Are there some things that we are not meant to know? Some things that should just be left to God?
If we did know, would it help us? Would we use the information in the right way? When we think we know, do we just use the information to sit in judgement?
Can we leave not knowing with God, or do we want to understand him fully? Can we ever fully understand God and his ways?
Just wondering – what do you think?
Edit: interestingly I’ve just read the comments on this passage on The Methodist Church daily Bible Reading notes – making a similar point from a different angle…
Very Important
•October 31, 2012 • Leave a Comment
The question, “If your house was on fire, what one thing would you grab on the way out?” is meant to be one of those to make you think what is the most important thing to you in your life. (If you’re interested, my answer would be my car keys – not because I love my car, but because it would be somewhere warm and dry to shelter. The more sensible answer of course would be my meds!)
Anyway, the point being it is important sometimes to know what our first priority is.
Jesus was asked about the various elements of the Ten Commandments, which matters most?
Mark 12:28-34
The Most Important Commandment
28 One of the teachers of the Law of Moses came up while Jesus and the Sadducees were arguing. When he heard Jesus give a good answer, he asked him, “What is the most important commandment?”
29 Jesus answered, “The most important one says: ‘People of Israel, you have only one Lord and God. 30 You must love him with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength.’ 31 The second most important commandment says: ‘Love others as much as you love yourself.’ No other commandment is more important than these.”
32 The man replied, “Teacher, you are certainly right to say there is only one God. 33 It is also true that we must love God with all our heart, mind, and strength, and that we must love others as much as we love ourselves. These commandments are more important than all the sacrifices and offerings that we could possibly make.”
34 When Jesus saw that the man had given a sensible answer, he told him, “You are not far from God’s kingdom.” After this, no one dared ask Jesus any more questions.
No doubt, as usual this question was asked, not for knowing the answer, but as another opportunity to trip Jesus up. But he does answer it,
you have only one Lord and God. You must love him with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength.
That makes sense. If we are seeking to love God with everything we’ve got, everything else should fall in to place as a consequence of that. It’s not being blinkered to only doing “God” things, but being aware that if we sort out where we are with God first, the rest will follow.
- Does God have top place in our lives?
- Is he the most important thing? Above and before everything else?
- Do we look to him, and let everything else fall in behind that?
Though Jesus does go on to make a further point – therefore that must be important too. Loving God is important, but we also need to look to
Love others as much as you love yourself
Loving God is not an abstract. It has to be worked out in and through what we do each day. Loving God means that we will also live to love others. Wow! Quite tricky then…
which is why we have to love ourselves too.
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Do you find it easy to love yourself? After all, we have to live with ourselves. We know what we are like, our weaknesses, our low moments, what we have got wrong. We are left alone with those parts of us we keep from everyone else.
It can be hard to love ourselves. Yet unless we do, unless we appreciate in ourselves how awesome we are, our unique hand in life, the things we have within us to offer, we will never unlock the love within us to share with others. As we learn to love ourselves, we learn to love those around us. As we learn to love God, and let him love us, we may allow ourselves to love what we are and can be.
These are the important things in life, not ‘things’ but love. God’s love in us. Our love for him. His love in and through us for others.
Today, can you let God love you – enough so you can love yourself? Enough so you can pass that love on?
Lord,
I come
to let you love me.
To stay here,
as your arms stretch out
and hold me tight
– comforting,
healing,
warming,
letting me know
that I am known
and loved.
May I allow your love to sink deep into me.
And from there,
may I be at the point
of being able to love others,
from the security of knowing what I mean to you.
And may I learn to truly love you,
that you are
the most important thing
in my life,
and I may give you
all that I am


