with Bob Condly
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present

Timing Our Life in the Spirit

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As a new year gets underway, it’s natural for us to take a little time to examine our time. We review the highs and lows of the past 12 months, going over the goals we achieved or missed.

We can take stock of where we are in the moment, what sort of person we’ve become, and whether we like our present condition.

Using a calendar and a notepad, we can plan an agenda for the next 12 months. What do we aim to produce? What do we seek from the Lord?

Taking steps like these is commonplace, but not everyone treats the three main phases of time in equal fashion.

I found a few images that illustrate the differences.

For example, some folks downgrade the past; what’s done is done. We can’t change the past but we can improve on it.

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Others esteem the past as the basis for productivity. The better we understand our history, the more we can achieve as we build on what it provides.

(http://fpvision.org/wp-content/uploads/past-present-future.jpg)

There are those who stress the present moment; it’s all we have. The past is out of reach and the future is an imaginary construct.

(https://medcitynews.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/future.jpg)

But others take the opposite approach and overlook the present. They accept it as a given but invest themselves in exploring the treasures of the past or realizing the possibilities of the future.

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Some people harmonize past, present, and future in equal proportions.

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This idea of balance aligns with the biblical teaching about the significance of time for our spiritual lives.

“Remember your leaders, who spoke the word of God to you. Consider the outcome of their way of life and imitate their faith. 8Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever.” – Hebrews 13:7-8

All three stages of time–past, present, and future–have value. And role models authenticate this–church leaders and Jesus Christ Himself.

Let’s take them in reverse order and start with the Lord.

Verse 8 emphasizes the stability of Christ’s character and His eternal nature. Like God Himself (see Malachi 3:6), Jesus doesn’t change. We can rely on Him without consternation.

Our circumstances may fluctuate, we abandon opinions we once held firm, and sometimes we have a hard time reaching a decision. In contrast with our erratic and unpredictable ways, Jesus merits our dependence. He won’t let us down. The One who performed miracles 2000 years ago works wonders today and He’s promised to continue. Who He is doesn’t vacillate; what He does never crumbles.

Jesus is the paragon of spirituality stability; but His perfection may tempt us to treat Him as too distant to relate to us. Verse 7 counters this fear by introducing church leaders as examples whom we may emulate. These men and women exhibit steadfastness because they draw their personal strength from Christ. In this way, they demonstrate what discipleship looks like across the years.

First, we look to the past. The writer of this epistle instructs us to remember these leaders, in particular their speech. Those who invest the truth of God’s Word in us deserve our respect. And we do ourselves a favor by recalling what they’ve told us about the kingdom of God.

Second, we engage in reflection. Before we chase the dreams of the future, we will do well to dedicate time now to contemplation. As we reflect on the lives of leaders who’ve served the Lord with honor, we give ourselves the opportunity to tie things together. We clarify how to prioritize Jesus, what we can expect of God’s guidance, and how the commitments we make now will affect others.

Third, we set up ourselves for a blessed future by copying our leaders. We may feel second-rate compared to those whom we hold in high regard, but these godly men and women are no different than us. They had rich spiritual lives because they followed Jesus Christ. He’s the One who made them the mentors and guides they became.

We can experience the blessings of God in the new year that will unfold before us. As we look to the Lord Jesus and receive the wisdom of those who’ve walked with Him, we will set ourselves up for what the Father has in store for us.

May 2019 be a year of balance and fulfillment in your discipleship journey.

“He will be the stability of your times, abundance of salvation, wisdom, and knowledge; the fear of the LORD is Zion’s treasure.” – Isaiah 33:6 (ESV)

Remembering the Present

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Do you exercise? If so, what do your prefer? Jogging? Lifting weights? Lounging on tree branches? Lots of options!

Do you keep a record of your workouts? My routine includes calisthenics like deep knee bends, push-ups, and planks. But to keep track of sets and reps, I have to write them down. Otherwise, I won’t recall what I’ve accomplished. A log also helps me to review progress (or the lack thereof!).

I record my exercises because of a simple principle: it’s easier to read than it is to remember.

But there’s a potential problem–forgetting to write down my workouts!

Recently I was doing some pull-ups, and I took a breather between sets. During the break, I glanced at my notepad and saw that I hadn’t jotted down the sets I’d done. No problem, I told myself, I’ll repIay them in my mind and then count the total. Except that I had no recollection of what I’d been doing!

Always primed for a spiritual lesson, a thought struck me as clear as a bell while I was reflecting on this situation: I forget things because my mind isn’t in what I’m doing.

Why is that? Well, I like to listen to podcasts during my workouts. I get twice the benefits in the same amount of time: exercise for my body and my soul. I’m trying to follow Paul’s advice in Ephesians 5:16 to “redeem the time.” Who can argue with that?

However, as Richard Wurmbrand, the founder of The Voice of the Martyrs, observes, “Most of us, when we are praying, think of the pancake on the stove which might burn. While making pancakes, we think how nice it would be to pass our time in prayer. While speaking with one man, we think how useful it would be to pass our time with another. We never do anything well. Only one thing can be done well at a time.”

What’s my real problem: memory or multitasking?

And what’s the solution?

Mindfulness.

Kevin Tupper defines mindfulness as “paying attention . . . noticing what you are doing, feeling and thinking at the time you are actually doing, feeling and thinking it.” Or in Jon Kabat-Zinn’s succinct phrase, it’s “being here, now!”

How do you develop mindfulness?

Surrender yourself to God.

The Jesuit priest Jean-Pierre de Caussade wrote a book that has been printed with two different titles: Abandonment to Divine Providence and The Sacrament of the Present Moment. They’re two ways of saying the same thing. Holding nothing back from Jesus frees you to focus with Him on what’s right before you.

Here’s how he describes believers who’ve yielded themselves to Christ: “in the state of abandonment the only rule is the duty of the present moment . . . they abandon themselves to Him, and, entirely absorbed by their duty, they think not of themselves, nor of what may be necessary for them, nor of how to obtain it. The more assiduously do they apply themselves to their little work, so simple, so hidden, so secret, and outwardly contemptible, the more does God embroider and embellish it with brilliant colors” (59).

When you give yourself up to God, His will becomes clear to you.

“Therefore I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service of worship. 2And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.” – Romans 12:1-2 (NASB)

And with God’s guidance, you can appreciate the value of His work in the present moment.

“The Lord has done it this very day; let us rejoice today and be glad.” – Psalm 118:24

“God deals out joy in the present, the now.” – Ecclesiastes 5:20 (MSG)

“Forget the former things; do not dwell on the past. 19See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it? I am making a way in the wilderness and streams in the wasteland.” – Isaiah 43:18-19

“Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.” – Matthew 6:34

Reducing distractions will help your memory because you’ll have less to remember. But doing the right things matters more than mere efficiency.

Ask Jesus what God’s will is for you today and abandon yourself to Him. Then you’ll accomplish something worth remembering.

with Bob Condly

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