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If It Is The Lord's Will I Will Live
by: Pastor Ray Stark
My thoughts can get a
little edgy at night. Possibly even deep. Reflecting on almost a
half century of life. Some of it better than I would have imagined
in my youth. Some not.
All in all I am glad
that this present life is not all I have been given from the hand of
God. At night I tend to wonder what it will be like to be on the
other side of death's door.
According to the
Reverend Gary Davis "Death don't have no mercy in this land." Thank
God, Jesus does. Two or three mild strokes and a minor heart attack
over the last 6 years could well have something to do with the way
the stream of my consciousness flows.
Not melancholy
thoughts. Thoughts of a hope and future God has prepared for me
beyond the valley of the shadow of death. Makes me want to do right
and be appreciative of what He has given me on this side of the
valley and yet not to pin all my hopes and dreams on family and
friends and the things that make life enjoyable in the present.
There is a day of
reckoning and a day of rewards coming which will fit all of us out
for eternal life. James, the brother of Jesus says it much better
than I could hope to.
James 4:13-15 Weymouth
NT
Jam 4:13 Come, you who
say, "To-day or to-morrow we will go to this or that city, and spend
a year there and carry on a successful business,"
Jam 4:14 when, all the
while, you do not even know what will happen to-morrow. For what is
the nature of your life? Why, it is but a mist, which appears for a
short time and then is seen no more.
Jam 4:15 Instead of
that you ought to say, "If it is the Lord's will, we shall live and
do this or that."
I need to learn
humility. I wrote "we need" first but decided that was a cop out.
This isn't a lecture, it's me sitting here in a nice warm quiet
room, comfortably reflecting on the nature of human life.
What is the nature of
human life? Nothing substantial, whether it's you, me or Michael
Jackson. We live our lives from day to day and at any moment our
breath could be terminated and our next conscious thought would
occur before the presence of almighty God.
This life which seems
so concrete to us is no more solid than a mist or vapor, a fog we
walk through while heading towards God's light. That doesn't mean it
is unimportant but it is impermanent and insubstantial compared to
the life awaiting beyond the confines of incorporation.
Instead of steadfastly
setting our faces towards our own plans and purposes, there I go
with that "we" business again. You have to figure this out for
yourself, you can't ride on my revelation of impermanance.
Anyhow, here's my
thought:
I have some things I
want to do and accomplish while still in the body, but I need to
learn to temper my desires with the the fact that, "If it is the
Lord's will, I shall live and do this or that." If it is not His
will then I will be moving on to bigger and better things in the
presence of the Lord.
Peace.
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