Consider your situation with contemplation
In the sermon I heard
in church yesterday, the preacher asked what each of us would consider the best
news ever to receive. Thoughts raced through my mind like someone who had met
with a genie that could grant three wishes. How we can so rashly lose advantage
in the face of a great bounty.
The child in me was
ready to blurt out an ephemeral desire, but my better angels constrained me to
think deeply about what it is that is indeed the news that would best be
fulfilling of a desire, a wish, a hope, the news that would keep me beaming
stronger than the midday sun in the tropics.
In the scheme of
things, some would desire winning the lottery, so much money coming into your
possession, it neither defines wealth nor health, many have had more money than
can be counted and have had no peace, no health, no happiness, or no contentment
to enjoy what they have. They are miserable and miserly, depressed and full of
despair, the momentary thought of things taken care of can also be the
suddenness of the better things taken away.
Something life-threatening
suddenly solved
No, it was not the
lottery I wanted as the best bit of news for me, useful as it might be, I saw a
story I never wanted written about me. He won so much money and had no life
with which to live and enjoy it. Cecil John Rhodes was said to be probably the
only commoner apart from the royal family that could bring London to a
standstill when he visited. On his deathbed, despite being one of the world’s most
influential men of substance of his time said, “So little done, so much to do.”
[Quotes: Cecil John Rhodes]
His health failed him
at the age of 48, he had won the stupendous lottery of money, but it could not
save his health.
Which brought me to another
thought, I am facing prostate cancer, a condition that somewhat exists in a
place I can neither see nor access. It presents no pain or discomfort, but the
doctors in their conversations among themselves without telling me, until I
read it in their notes had assessed it as malignant. Heck! It is cancer in a
seemingly little place that can so easily kill you too.
You can imagine, I
then thought having dismissed the good news of winning the lottery that I
wanted to be totally healed. In one moment, every trace of cancer and infirmity
obliterated in an instant and wholeness, nothing missing nothing lacking nothing
broken – this being the full meaning of Shalom that we usually translate glibly
as a greeting of peace. If only we knew in truth what peace and the peace of
God really meant.
Surely, there is more
to desire
Yet, I felt something
was still missing from this thought, it was desire fed from my situation and
circumstances, no less valid but still wanting. I could have my full health but
then have no means or capacity to do the amazing and pleasurable things of
life. I find myself thinking many times that there is more to life than this.
Jesus hung on the cross for more than just us getting by and still we barely enter the fundamentals of the goodness of why God gave His only begotten Son for the world, but we should dare to personalise it. If the King of Heaven thought I had this much value for Him to willingly sacrifice Himself, how is it that I am desperately failing to understand and appreciate it?
It might seem I was
so long in thought, but I soon realised where I should set my hope, my desire,
my need, and my fulfilment. It is in the Word of God, saying what God thinks,
says, and desires about me. It came to me in these words, “Beloved, I
wish above all things that thou mayest prosper and be in health, even as thy
soul prospereth.” I was thinking in King James English, and it had much
to say to me. [Bible Hub: III
John 2]
It has unparalleled completeness
It addressed
everything I could ever desire for the best news, a full life of blessing in
spirit, soul, and body. Another translation, the New Living Translation, says, “Dear
friend, I hope all is well with you and that you are as healthy in body as you
are strong in spirit.” How can you not want wellness in your soul,
health in your body, and strength in your spirit? The prosperity of the soul
includes the fullness of your years too. There are more reinforcing
translations of the same text to confirm purpose and intent.
I will take that
every day and be thankful for every moment of the goodness and mercy of God
following me all the days of my life. The Psalmist concludes the 23rd
Psalm with, “And I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever.” [Bible
Hub: Psalm 23:6]
The import of that
message is as grand as we so easily dismiss its meaning. Nothing can touch you
in the house of the Lord even as you are well cared for and catered for by the
very best that the universe has ever had to offer.
To think it alone is mind-blowing
and yet there is every means to live it from this moment onwards.
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