I heard the front door open and in walked my six year old
son - 20 minutes before I was to pick him up from school. I was confused. Was the clock wrong? Why didn't he call me? When I questioned him, I discovered there had
been a cancellation of his activity and some confusion at the school regarding
the use of the phone, so he'd walked home.
Then I panicked. I'd never shown
him how to walk home or what to do in this circumstance. He'd made it home but he'd traveled the long
way.
Immediately he and I set out to practice walking home from
school. I showed him the safest and
shortest way. We also discussed friends
who lived along the way so he could go there to phone me.
I thought about being prepared for change in life when I
read the parables in Mark chapter 4. I
got the feeling that Jesus was preparing His disciples for what He knew would
be happening in their future. He spoke
in parables to the masses but He spent time explaining the parables to the
disciples.
In the first parable about the farmer sowing seed on various
types of soil, Jesus tells the disciples he is giving them the secret to the
kingdom. I'm not sure they
completely understand what He meant by
the kingdom (they probably hoped it meant kick out the Romans and crown Jesus
King) but He certainly gave advice on what He expected from them. He expected them to keep sowing the seed of
The Word regardless of the type of soil and the quantity of the harvest.
Jesus used a lamp to illustrate their new way of life. Don't hide the Good News. The secret is to be revealed. They were to be the leaders and show others
the Way.
He warned them that since they had been given the knowledge
of the kingdom there were expectations that they use it. Use it or He'll find someone else to
share. He expected them to share.
He reiterated that their job was to scatter the seed of the
kingdom. They really had nothing to do
with the success of the seed sowing.
Just like the farmer, who sows the seed and then the seed grows whether
the farmer sleeps or gets up. The farmer
can't force the seed to sprout and grow.
The farmer is responsible for planting the seed and collecting the
harvest.
I have the opportunity to be in a study group using A.W.
Tozer's book The Knowledge of the Holy. It is fabulous! It makes God so much bigger! Chapter 9 in Tozer's book is on the immutability of
God. God does not change, He is holy, He
is perfect. In our constantly changing
world He remains ever the same. We lust
for permanence but He is the only permanence.
Mark Chapter 4 reminded me that change happens and will
continue to happen. I jotted down some points to remember when change enters my
little world:
1. God
expects us to do our job, our God-given mission, regardless of how the world
may evaluate. The farmer still sowed the
seed everywhere. We are not to judge The
Harvest, just sow the seed of the kingdom.
2. The
Kingdom is to be revealed, so share and don't hide it.
3. Listen up
to Him. Several times in Chapter 4 Jesus
tells His disciples to listen and hear.
4. God
expects us to change. Conquer the thirst
for permanence.
5. The
Kingdom is bigger and so much better
than we can think or imagine.
6. Jesus
wants us to know so ask Him to explain.
Chapter
4 ends with a storm. Jesus wants to head
out in a boat. While He is napping a storm
comes, a storm so big that the seasoned fisherman fear for their lives. They wake Jesus because they think He doesn't
care if they drown. He quiets the wind
and the waves! He asks them why they are
so afraid and if they still lack faith.
They are terrified and ask "Who is this? Even the wind and waves obey Him!"
When
the storms come into my life, and they have and will in the future, Jesus will
be with me. He has been preparing
me. To deal with change I am to trust
Him. He is the constant, the unchanging,
the permanent. This great
"secret" of His permanence in this chaotic world of unmanageable
change is not to stay a secret but to be shared. Jesus will get me through the storms of life
and my role is to let the world know He is the reason, and only reason, I
survive the storm.
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