I’m guessing that you haven’t thought about this lately. You are seated with Christ in the heavenlies. You remember reading about it, but you haven’t thought about it, because you have no idea what it means.
Well, I think I know now. Not completely. I’m still learning things.
I mentioned last time about God being our Father. The entire Old Testament was spent teaching
us who God is, what He is like, His power, His holiness, His awesomeness.
Now in the New Testament, we learn that this God, the
Almighty, the Everlasting, is our Father.
Some people will think that I might be taking God too casually here, and
I think too many people are missing the whole point.
But that was last lesson.
I have had things that I have prayed for for decades. With no resolution. Things even getting worse in some cases.
Hmmm, is this God’s will?
Why won’t He answer my prayers?
I think this is the answer.
When our children were young, they were dependent on us for
everything. We made them breakfast, we picked
out their clothes, bought them, and even dressed them for a few years. Our goal is that they would be able and
actually do many of these things for themselves.
When the text says that we are seated with Christ in the heavenlies,
are we sitting on folding chairs or small stools? It doesn’t specifically say, but generally
speaking, when we are sitting with somebody anywhere, we mean we are sitting at
the same table or on the same furniture in the same room as this other person.
Too many of us are still living in the Old Testament where
we are afraid of displeasing God, uncertain of where we stand with Him from day
to day.
To use a modern illustration, it’s like we got a job at this
huge company. The pay and benefits are
decent. But we are always worried about
losing our jobs, how well we are doing at work, performance reviews, worried
when the boss calls us into his office. But
then you learn that the founder and owner of this company is actually your
Father whom you never knew you had. You
are immediately promoted to one of those jobs where you go around to all the
stores and check in on things. If you find
things you don’t like, you can either have it corrected immediately or you have
access to the one who will.
Like Paul says in Romans 5:17
(NASB95) 17 For if by the transgression of the one [meaning, Adam], death reigned
through the one, much more those who receive the abundance of grace and of the
gift of righteousness will reign in life through the One, Jesus Christ.
This word
‘reign’ is the same word used of kings and queens in the Bible. They have real authority. Now we certainly know that God knows more and
better than we do, and we would never want to think that we know better than
Him. But I think too many of us are
afraid to make any decisions at all.
At some
point, you will see things and situations that you know full well what God
would want. We may pray and ask God to
change it, but I think a lot of times He will say, if we listen, you fix
it. You’re a big boy or girl now. Take control of the situation, and change
it. Like when Jesus talked about moving
mountains by talking to them. Mark
11:23,24 (NASB95) 23 “Truly I say to you, whoever says to this mountain, ‘Be taken up and
cast into the sea,’ and does not doubt in his heart, but believes that what he
says is going to happen, it will be granted him. 24 “Therefore I say to you, all things for which you
pray and ask, believe that you have received them, and they will be granted
you.
We aren’t
to pray that God will move the mountain.
We are to command it to move ourselves.
We are
always so afraid that God might not want that thing. Like kids who are afraid to do anything,
because their parents might not want them to.
Afraid to get their own food out of the fridge to eat, afraid to spend money
on anything, afraid to make any decisions at all.
Hey, I
am talking to God all the time. I want
His input on everything. But I think too
often, we are praying that God will move the mountains, and He is saying, No, you
move it. I told you how, and I told you
that you can.
Jesus
wasn’t mad at Peter for wanting to walk on the water. He was disappointed that he didn’t. Matthew 14:31 (NASB95) 31 Immediately Jesus stretched out His hand and took
hold of him, and said to him, “You of little faith, why did you doubt?”
I think
too many of our unanswered prayers is not because of God’s unwillingness, but because
of our fear in believing that we have any authority or responsibility to act on
our own.
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