Wednesday, December 23, 2009

FOREVER!!!


Here is a thought for you this morning. Last Sunday at church we sang, "I Could Sing Of Your Love Forever" and as we sang that song, I was consumed with the glory of that thought in a way that I had not known recently. Later on as I was continuing to reflect upon that song and its message, I began thinking of the things I could do forever. My first thought was I could golf forever... But then I remembered the golf outings in North Carolina where I golfed 36 holes for 3 days straight and 18 holes on the last day, and I remembered how tired I was and how nice it was to get home and take a break even from golf. Then I thought I could sit on the beach and enjoy the ocean forever, but the truth is even our 2 week vacation in Hawaii on Maui got old after a while. Don't get me wrong that vacation was fabulous but coming home was equally great. Eating ice cream seems like something I could do forever but even my nightly love feasts with that frozen stuff can only last so long before I am full. And even as much as I like Taco Bell - 2 combo burritos, 3 tacos and a nachos supreme can make anybody...well you know what I mean.

No matter how great the things of this world are, you can only do them for so long before they loose their lustre. To do something forever would require that thing to be unending in its attraction. It would have to have an increasing power to draw us into its greatness. It would have to be able to grow moment by moment in its enticing magnificence. People spend their entire lives frantically searching for that thing. Every generation thinks they have what it takes to find it. But the truth is no amount of money or fame or mistresses (just ask Tiger Woods) or drugs or activity or effort can fulfill that forever yearning within us.

There is one thing, however, that does have the ability to fill the forever void within our hearts. The Apostle Paul found it. Actually I should say it found him. In the midst of all his brilliance and striving, God poured out His love upon Him and he was changed...forever. The more he became overwhelmed by God's love, the more he realized that life was not really about the things he accomplished, the churches he started - it wasn't about his earthly resume. His writings reveal that life for Paul was about one thing - living every moment basking in the love of God. This thought so consumed him that he became convinced that nothing could separate him (or us) from that love. "Neither death nor life, angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord."

King David understood that as he proclaimed in Psalm 27 that there was only one thing that he really wanted in life. There was only one thing that he sought. That was to, "dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of his life." John also understood it as he wrote about God's love in 1 John and as he concluded his life by telling the churches over and over, "little children love one another..."

The question this Christmas season is do you understand it? Do you understand with all your heart, mind, soul and strength that there is nothing in all of eternity like the revelation of God's love? God did not send His Son so we could become exhausted in our lives and even in the church celebrating His birth. He sent His Son so we could experience without question His gracious and abundant love, not just once a year, but forever... May that incredible revelation consume you this season both now and always.

Living with you in the glory of God,

Dave Hampson

Friday, December 18, 2009

Wow! God truly is Amazing...

Sorry to be so inconsistent with this blog. If anyone is still reading it, here is an amazing thought about God's heart for each of us. The initial idea comes from the book The Sacred Romance which I highly recommend. In the Bible our relationship with God is described by using a variety of metaphors. Starting at the very bottom we are the clay and He is the potter. Then we are called sheep and He is the shepherd. That may sound good in Psalm 23 and John 10, but remember that sheep are not known to be the brightest lights on the block. Next we are called servants of the Master, which gets us in the house but does not give us the freedom to relax and take our shoes off. Many Christians never get beyond that point but the Lord has much more in store for us. We know that because He calls us His children and reveals Himself to be our Heavenly Father. This parent/child relationship with the creator of the universe is an amazing picture of love and care but the Lord was not even content with that. He takes it up a notch and actually calls us friends. That opens a level of communication that no child can know with their parents. But as good as that is - there is more. In God's Word He reveals His heart to be in the most intimate relationship of all. He actually calls us lovers. This "courtship began with the honeymoon in the Garden and culminated in the wedding feast of the Lamb." God says, "I will take delight in you as a bridegroom rejoices in His bride, so I will rejoice over you." Therefore we can say with Solomon, "I am my beloved and He is mine."

If those thoughts do not give you goose bumps and stir the depths of your heart, read that paragraph again and again until it does. The God of the universe calls us into relationship that is consumed with passion and joy and life at its absolute best. To make sure we did not miss His intention, He sent His Son to deliver the message personally. Every year at Christmas we celebrate the arrival of this message and yet so many, even in the church, miss it. We become so consumed with the little stories of life that we often miss the headline news that God offers us love and grace and intimacy that is designed to lift us beyond the insignificant stories of this world. Those stories of daily life loom so large and seek to drown us in their consuming details, but the truth is those stories are small if you can just see them in light of the incredible revelation of God's love and provision. Oh to have hearts that are connected to the intimate love of God.

My prayer for you in this Christmas season is that your heart would be open to the Lord like never before. That you would let your eyes look beyond the daily grind and gaze upon God's goodness and love for you. That is God's Christmas gift and it is personally addressed to you. May you open it with joy and excitement in this wonderful season of life.

Celebrating the Glory of God with You,

Dave Hampson