Has someone bumped into you recently?
What was your reaction?
What came out of your mouth the last time your flight was cancelled and the airlines lost your luggage, upsetting your plans?
John Piper repeats often that what we are REALLY like is made evident in how we respond unconsciously to life’s ‘bumps’. In fact he goes so far as to teach that only about 10 % of our thoughts/actions and words are pre-meditated. The vast majority turn out to be unconscious.
But, we can influence our subconscious mind. It turns out that our life and its impact on others depend on what we pour into our ‘cup’. Just what is this ‘cup’?
If we consider that we carry around a perpetual reservoir of feelings, thoughts, and desires out of which spring our reactions, we might take care to pre-pack the tank with some truths that will soak up any acid that life’s bumps might activate!
Recently I heard Tim Keller refer to the sweetness at the bottom of his heart. The context was the very fact or existence of a Christian’s inheritance, something about which we meditate little.
John Newton, puritan pastor from 200 + years ago also nurtured himself in Gospel facts. Quoting from Newton’s preface to The Olney Hymns (a Newton- William Cowper collaboration) Pastor John Piper shared this encouragement: “The views I have received of the doctrines of grace are essential to my peace; I could not live comfortably a day, or an hour, without them.”
I’ve taken to heart this wisdom from the past. Given the political and social chaos of our times, I am choosing to limit my intake of what is fleeting in favor of focusing proportionally far more on what I know to be True, Beautiful, Good and forever. Those are the truths of my inheritance, purchased for me by Jesus, imparted to me by the Holy Spirit and lovingly planned for me by Father God.
But unless I meditate on them, they won’t seep down into my ‘reservoir’. They won’t line my cup.
Listen to Thomas Manton, another puritan pastor from a previous century: “The promise of eternal life is left with us in the gospel, but who puts in for a share? Who longs for it? Who takes hold of it? Who gives all diligence to make it sure? Who desires to go and see it? Oh, that I might be dissolved, and be with Christ! If these hopes have so little an influence on us, it is a sign we do not cherish them more in our hearts.” (published originally in a book, By faith, sermons on Hebrews – volume two, pages 16 and 17)
I don’t SET MY MIND enough on things above, where Christ is seated. (Colossians 3:2)
But what about those mornings when you don’t wake up with a ‘full tank’ of Gospel truth? What about those times when you can’t find it in yourself to rejoice?
Dig into this rich food for your breakfast. (before any screen time!) Your cold heart can’t help but warm up if you soak awhile in this series of facts from the Heidelberg Catechism:
What is your only comfort in life and death?
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