Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Connection

And I will very gladly spend and be spent for you; though the more abundantly I love you, the less I be loved.
(2 Corinthians 12:15)

When someone is talking with you and you are really listening intently they usually can tell and are eager to share more about themselves. When you show interest others become interested, and in a sense, in obeying God, it works a lot like that. If we are interested in His way, He shows us more of it more clearly. He is the only One who won’t ever ignore you when you truly seek Him. When you pour out to God He will always pour back on you.

Paul was defending his ways before the Corinthians, who had approved of false apostles and turned away from him. He says, “I’ll tell you about great and marvelous things I have seen and done, things those “super apostles” can’t even dream of let alone demonstrate. Now God hasn’t rid me of this thorn and you all run after the false apostles and despise me, and yet I still will be spent for you. That is what is going on that is what it is all about. They care about themselves, I care about you, and the poor among you, that is why I collect funds, for them, not me.”

Here we see Paul poured out and even doing so if it meant they loved him less. He will keep spending even if they don’t spend, he will keep pouring in even if it seems unfruitful to him. We can give, and give in any number of ways. But do we resent it when we give or serve? A good way to measure this is to see our reaction when our service is unappreciated. Do we resent it? If Paul’s service was unappreciated by the Corinthian Christians, he did not resent it. We need to learn to give where we can get nothing back, to lay up treasures in heaven, to trust God that He is watching our labor. Paul cared about God firstly and was poured out to Him and that is how he stayed connected even through the trials of the thorn and the anguish of being turned away.

What is worse, feeling the pain of the physical or suffering the anguish when you try and help someone and they despise you for it? For example, when your children turn from you, or think of Jesus weeping over Jerusalem, or Paul understanding what the sovereignty of God meant in dealing with the Jews. Would you do it then? Would you serve God anyway, even if it meant He didn’t rescue you, didn’t revive you, didn’t restore you, and didn’t reconcile you to your loved ones? Well, that is the place where God works. That is part of the fellowship of His sufferings. Is He worth it? Yes He surely is, and when you can get to that place you will see God work like no other way you’ve known.

Pleading prayer is a start. Paul pleaded for the thorn to go away but it wouldn’t and he still was willing to sacrifice for the Corinthians. Even through God did not help him in the way he wanted, and those he was called to minister to even turned on him, still he served. That is consecration. That is powerful. That is like Christ, and that is the Holy Spirit living through you; that is connecting to God’s heart.

That is how Jesus was, how Paul was, how I hope to be, and what I am encouraging you to be like. Poured out; this is the example I am exhorting you to follow. Now I am no Apostle Paul, and Paul was only a shadow of Jesus Christ, it is Him we look to as our ultimate example, and it is only Him that can empower us to live this way. He will do it if we will get connected.

“Living For Today With An Eye For Tomorrow”©

5 comments:

donsands said...

"Not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit says the Lord"

It's the most difficult for me, when someone judges me wrongly, and they have an intenseness about themselves, that they are very right, and they claim they are on God's side.

Man, that is difficult for me.

But your words ring true again JD. Thanks.

Even So... said...

Don, these thoughts on scripture are born out through my experience, and like you, I have a VERY hard time dealing with these scenarios, but as a pastor, I have to time and time again...and I see God working in and through them, sometimes seeing miraculous spiritual growth in me and in the people I minister to, and sometimes, well, it can be most difficult, but we dare not listen when Satan accuses us of "well you did that wrong!", etc., etc...we live, we learn, we love our God and the people he places in our spiritual care...

donsands said...

"but as a pastor, I have to time and time again"

And you're a good pastor. Thanks for pastoring JD. Lord bless.

Zoarean said...

“Here we see Paul poured out and even doing so if it meant they loved him less. He will keep spending even if they don’t spend, he will keep pouring in even if it seems unfruitful to him. We can give, and give in any number of ways.”

The fullest example of truly Christ-like love. William Carey continued pouring love into the people of India for five years before a single one of them responded to His evangelistic call. William Tyndale loved the king unilaterally as he prayed for the king’s eyes to be opened even as the king was closing Tyndale’s eyes with a fiery execution. But that’s kind of love 1John 4:10 talks about- Christ’s preeminent love for His children- a unilateral love that does not require the object to love Him neither first nor concordantly.

I think perhaps this kind of love is truest kind of love.

Even So... said...

Indeed...good examples...