(Listen
to an audio version of this column at http://media1.imbresources.org/files/193/19330/19330-106637.mp3)
The new year has barely begun and you’ve already failed to keep your New
Year’s resolutions.
Don’t
take it too hard. New Year’s resolutions tend to be unrealistic, poorly thought
out, too general to measure. They can even be counterproductive, cautions
Jessica Lamb-Shapiro, who writes about the self-help industry. You fail to meet
a self-imposed goal or deadline and feel like a failure. Or, you tie your hopes
and dreams to an arbitrary date on a calendar.
Sure,
we experience mountaintop moments and make life-changing decisions in our
spiritual lives: the day we decide to follow Christ as Lord, the first time we
lead someone to faith in Him, the day we respond to a call from God to missions
or a particular ministry. But daily growth in Christ usually happens quietly,
behind the scenes, as we seek Him, love Him and obey Him.
“[T]he
transforming work of grace is more of a mundane process than it is a series of
a few dramatic events,” writes pastor and author Paul David Tripp. “Most of us
only make three or four momentous decisions in our lives, and several decades
after we die, the people we leave behind will struggle to remember our lives at
all. You and I live in little moments, and if God doesn’t rule our little
moments and doesn’t work to recreate us in the middle of them, then there is no
hope for us, because that is where you and I live. … This is where I think ‘Big
Drama Christianity’ gets us into trouble. It can cause us to devalue the
significance of the little moments of life and the ‘small-change’ grace that
meets us there.”
Thousands
of such moments come to us day by day. How we respond to them determines the
course of our lives. Do we choose to seek the Lord in the quiet before dawn, or
sleep another hour? Do we choose to meditate upon His Word, or ignore it? Do we
choose to notice the lonely person in need of a kind word, or hurry on our way?
Do we choose to speak up for Christ when the opportunity arises, or remain
silent? Do we choose to pray for the lost, or curse them with indifference?
Most
spiritual battles are won or lost in the unseen regions of the heart.
In
the 1800s, Scottish missionary Mary Slessor went to West Africa, then a
notorious graveyard of missionaries. She braved many hazards and spread the
Gospel for nearly four decades. But Slessor wrote a simple truth to her
supporters back home: “Praying is harder work than doing.”
Many
believe the historic Shantung Revival in China began with the prayers of one
person: Norwegian missionary Marie Monsen. Monsen was a missionary second, an
intercessor first. No one except God “saw” her prayers. Their impact, however,
changed the world.
“You
see, Jesus is Immanuel [‘God with us’], not just because He came to earth, but
because He makes you the place where He dwells,” Tripp observes. “This means He
is present and active in all the mundane moments of your daily life.”
(Want
to change history through prayer? Visit imb.org/main/pray)
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