But he said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me. 2 Cor 12:9
I recognize that I am needy. I experience my inadequacy most often as a teacher. There never FEELS like enough time to get my plans done. And to think on my feet and change gears to meet the interest and energy level of my middle-schoolers stresses me.
So DAILY I ask God for His help. And He comes through. Always. As He has done for the past 27 years of teaching.
So what’s the problem? Plain and simple, I just don’t like having to depend on God day after day. That’s the truth of the matter. This past Monday, God enabled me to be sharp, to sparkle, and to adjust rapidly to my students. It was a packed day, but because of the grace He supplied, I made it successfully to the end. My heart response after thanking Him was pathetic and belied my spoken gratitude: “Oh no, now I have to depend on Him all over again. Tomorrow!”
Then by God’s kind providence, on my drive home I listened to a John Piper sermon. Piper was preaching on the duty and joy of delighting in God, his favorite topic. IN PASSING, he spoke of Paul’s personal reaction to being needy. Linking to some recent teaching by Nancy Guthrie, I recalled how she pointed out the POWER Paul describes as a benefit to neediness. (See above verse clause highlighted in red).
I also remember previously looking up the Greek word for ‘boast’ because that English translation didn’t seem to fit the context Paul was describing. Why use a word that means to vaunt or strut?
The Greek word is kauchaomai and it means to glory in, to take joy in, to be glad about.
There you go! Paul is glad about being needy because God’s power episkēnoō or ABIDES WITH him.
Do you see it? Not only is it NOT a bad thing to be needy and dependent on God, but it is a gift, a BLESSING. After our salvation, awareness of our state of neediness is another advantage or aspect of our divine endowment. How so? Our weakness or ‘poverty’ keeps us calling on Him, keeps us close by, in His shelter. This is how we have ‘communion with God’. Do you recall how David says, It is good for me that I have been afflicted; that I might learn thy statutes. (Psalm 119:71 KJV)
When we rely on God for everything, instead of depending on our ‘gifting’ or strengths, we receive Christ’s supernatural power. He ‘tents’ over us, descending and RESTING on us.
Just picturing God’s power hovering over me prompts connections to other facts. For instance, James (1:2-4) exhorts us to…. Count it all joy, my brothers, when you meet trials of various kinds, for you know that the testing of your faith produces steadfastness. And let steadfastness have its full effect, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing.
This morning I affirmed how good my Father is to create me to be needy, for then I cling to him. And that is the conduit for communion with Him and power from Jesus, via the Holy Spirit.
Father, please remove that deep groove of wrong thinking that values ‘IN-dependence’ over neediness. Carve a new and permanent default pathway in my thinking, through constant gratitude for such a mighty God like you!
Feb 07, 2019 @ 20:41:59
So good, Maria. There are spiritual benefits to being afflicted, we learn to depend on Christ. But I am so stubborn! 🙂
Feb 07, 2019 @ 20:51:15
Reblogged this on Praying for the millennials.
Feb 09, 2019 @ 22:30:47
Love your handling of Scripture and use of contrast. Clear point you make, and a valuable one. A couple students have told me over the years that a way for them to make an “A” in my class was to quote John Piper. I’ve read significant majority of his books, and love the blend of his scholarly mind and pastoral heart.
Terry Powell Columbia International University Box 3122 Columbia, SC 29230 tpowell@ciu.edu CIU Phone: 803-807-5453 Personal Blog: http://www.terrydpowell.com/
________________________________
Feb 10, 2019 @ 01:12:52
Well, I am biased toward Piper. He has taught me to think about what is not said and what could’ve been said. Thanks for your comments, Terry. Coming from you, a professor and pastor and professional writer, they mean a lot!