Living in Narnia

Monday, August 04, 2003

"For we cannot but speak the things which we have seen and heard." Acts 4:20

"C.S. Lewis once surmised that each person is created to see a different facet of God's beauty, something no one else can see in quite the same way, and then to bless all worshipers through all eternity with an aspect of God they could not otherwise see."

I write all these things in my blog because I have heard and seen such wonderful and marvelous things from God, and I cannot help but share them, and pray that you may be blessed in some way by them. It is not by my own wisdom or strength, that I want to make clear; it is by the grace of God. I have done nothing, God has done everything, and that has been the case in every part of my life, not just in writing this blog. I thank Him with all my heart. I never really understood what Paul meant when he said, "He that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord." (1 Cor. 1:31) until today. Truly, I can only give glory to and testify about the marvellous things that God has done in my life, nothing else.

And I would like to encourage you too, to share the wonderful things that God has done in your life, for I am sure there are plenty. Sometimes we don't even realise it; maybe it's time to start looking. Share it with anyone, in whatever way you want to. Bless others with what you have experienced, and they will also bless you. And do not underestimate the power of God's word and works; even the smallest things from God can change lives. Your testimonies will glorify Him and accomplish His purposes. Let us go forward and boldly testify, so that one day everyone around will know about how wonderful our God is. But before we do all that, let us pray that He and He alone will enable us to do that. Amen.

I want to take this chance to talk about the very controversial New Creation Church doctrine. I have not personally been there myself, but I have heard a lot from my friends who have been there. What I do know about their doctrine is that it emphasizes that we as people must decrease and decrease until we are nothing, and let God increase. It also emphasizes receiving- life is all about God's grace, and receiving God's great and wonderful gifts, material or spiritual. We must stop trying in the flesh, and let the Spirit take over.

When I first heard it I believed that was something wrong about it, and yet I also felt that there was something right. I believe it is right that we should receive gifts from God, most of all His love and grace. Yes I believe it is right to decrease and let God increase. I believe it is right that we should become nothing so that God can become everything, and so that He can use us as He wills.

And yet I believe there are some things that are wrong. First of all, the emphasis on material gifts. If we find ourselves constantly asking God to bless us with material things because He is good, then I think something is fundamentally wrong. Because if we really knew God and had a relationship with Him, we would know that what matters are really not material things, but spiritual things. We would be praying to know God more and to love Him more.

And secondly, more importantly, receiving is not everything. It definitely isn't. When we place the emphasis on receiving, we are already beginning to focus on ourselves, and if that is so we cannot decrease. Yes, when we learn to love God with all our hearts and souls and minds as in the first commandment that Jesus gave, we will receive wonderful things from God. But Jesus also gave a second commandment, which was to "love thy neighbour as thyself". The Christian life is about loving and giving.

So how do we reconcile receiving, and giving? How do we reconcile the ceasing of effort, or trying, and being able to reach our and love our neighbours. The key lies in the commandment itself. "love thy neighbour as thyself." God did not give us His love and His gifts for us to be happy by ourselves in our own shells. God wants the whole world, every single person, to receive those things. If we really love our neighbours as ourselves, that means that whatever we have received from God, we would also want them to receive from God! If we have received such great love from God, would we want to keep it for ourselves? If we are selfish, as in by nature, maybe, but when we decrease and our self dies, then definitely not. God's love compels us, stirs us to love our neighbours. This is what it is really about- the more we decrease and receive the love of God, the more we will very naturally and willingly want to bring it to others, in very practical ways, and to attempt great things for God, to reach a world in need of Christ. And that is one of the greatest marks of a life truly touched by Christ- that it lives not for itself, but for others.

"Master, which is the great commandment in the law?"
Jesus said unto him, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind. This is the first and great commandment. And the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself."

Matthew 22: 37-39

I can't sleep! For the past hour since I wrote the last entry God has been speaking to me so powerfully and wonderfully. It is really like the floodgates opening after a long, long time of drought. And I'm writing this now because I want to share what I have heard in its full form, before Satan gets the chance to dilute it.

Ever since I came out of the army I have been trying very hard. Trying very hard to get my life right. Trying very hard to serve God. I knew that God was calling me to a life of total dedication to Him, without distraction. And I was willing to go there. And I started trying to get it right. I thought about all the great things I could do for Him, about the kinds of service in university, and to the community, I could get myself into, about giving money to this and this charity, about all sorts of things I would do for Him. But at the same time I also thought about the things that I wanted to do. Things that I enjoyed, things like travelling, mountain climbing, flying, etc. etc. If you know me you'll know that I'm like that. And I grew very confused, and tired. I knew these things had to go, and yet I struggled so hard to let them go. I knew something was wrong.

And it continued, until yesterday. When God gifted me a book- The Life You've Always Wanted by John Ortberg. It changed everything. Because it talked about something that I had not had for a very long time- joy.

And tonight, I finally realised the folly of my ways, and why I have struggled for so long and so hard. It is simply because I have tried too hard. I have tried to be someone that I'm not; I have tried to be more than I could be. Even though it was for the right reasons. I realise now that I am not Superman, and that I can never be. I realise now how great my limitations are. I can try and try and try to serve God as best as I can, but if I'm trying on my own, then everything will collapse, like it did.

And that opened the floodgates. I realised, like I have many many times before, that serving Him is not about what we can do. It is about what He can do. I realise that when we stop trying, like Martha, and just sit before Him, like Mary, He will pour our His love and goodness into our lives. And when we have learnt to cease trying and just be ourselves, who He has created us to be, then His love and goodness will transform our lives. And then He will use us, weak as we are, for His glory.

I have been such a fool to think that I should intervene! John the Baptist said "I must decrease, He must increase." Paul talked about this so often. "For when I am weak, then I am strong". "...for if this counsel or this work be of men, it will come to nought...But if it be of God, ye cannot overthrow it..." "I have planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the increase..." "But we have this treasure in earthen vessels..." Now I am finally beginning to understand what being an earthen vessel means. An earthen vessel is nothing, crude and rough, sitting there, waiting to be filled. And when it is filled with the goodness of God, then it is transformed into a powerful vessel, a spiritual vessel.

Moses never tried to find God in the desert. God found Him. Moses did not seek to find the burning bush; God placed it there, and Moses turned aside from his way. "And Moses said, I will not turn aside, and see this great sight, why the bush is not burnt..." Ex. 3:3. John Ortberg wrote in the book that God's responsibility is to provide the burning bush, and our responsibility is to turn aside. Whether it be the conversion of a new Christian or the recommitment of an old, experienced Christian, it is the same- God stirs the flame, and we respond. Without the Spirit's first work in our hearts and lives, we would have no hope of ever drawing near to God. And as I look back upon my whole life, I find that this is so true. Those times that God moved so mightily in my life were those times when He provided a burning bush, and I turned aside. I want to say it again- God showed the way, and I followed. Not when I looked for a burning bush; whenever I looked, I would never find.

What is the place of pleasures in my life then that i have talked so much about? What happens to those things that I love and enjoy so much? I have learnt that it is okay to enjoy life and its pleasures. Simply because they are gifts from God. They really are. "All good gifts come from the Father in Heaven." On two conditions. One, that they are not sinful or viceful. That much is obvious. And two, that they do not become what we seek. It is so easy to end up seeking the gifts instead of the Giver, and that was what happened to me. The gifts have their place, as gifts. Our focus must always still be the Giver. If He chooses to give us gifts, then we will receive gladly. I know that it sounds good to all of us if we can live simply with serving God and nothing else. With all our time devoted to Him. And I believe that is possible; but God's grace, and if He wills, one day I hope to reach that stage. But I must admit that at this point, I am what Jesus described the disciples as- "The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak." I still need rest, I still need enjoyment. But my heart is bent on Him, and I will not substitute any other pleasure for Him. Like Jesus, we must be able to say, "My meat is to do the will of him that sent me, and to finish his work." John 4:34.

Gifts are gifts, and as they can be given, they can be taken away. Suffering will come in our lives. We will suffer, and we must be ready to suffer for Christ. Moses made the choice to obey God, and He suffered much. But I have no doubt that in his heart always was the joy of God. When our hearts are right with God and we are obeying Him wholeheartedly we will no longer suffer because of ourselves. Our greatest enemy- ourself- has been defeated. And whatever suffering we face is merely external, and this means that we will always have the endless joy of Christ in our hearts. Amen!

And so I have decided to stop trying, and let God take over the reins. Do not mistake this for being passive; waiting and obeying when the call comes is different from waiting and doing nothing at all. If you are struggling with your spiritual life and you feel that no matter how hard you try, nothing is changing, then maybe that is the problem- that you are trying to hard. Let God take over. And let Him know that you are letting Him take over. And He will.

I can only end by saying, Praise the Lord.

I just watched Forrest Gump, and boy I believe it is the best show I have ever seen in my life. I don't know if you have seen it before, but I greatly urge you to see it if you have not. It is the closest show to life that I have ever seen, so much closer than all the trash that is polluting our screens nowadays.

There was one verse that came to my mind after seeing the show-

"But God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things that are mighty..."

How long are we going to deceive ourselves any further? We chase after the things of this world- money, honour, glory, fame, popularity, happiness, thinking that these things are what life is about. We take so much pride in our society and in our race, and how "far" we have come. And yet we fail to realise the more we chase after these things, the more we have nothing.

If you have seen the show, perhaps you will know what I mean. Because it shows what really matters in life. Faith, hope, dreams, courage, honesty, simplicity, passion, forgiveness, reconciliation, restoration, innocence, love. And above all, the God who gave us all these things. Would we trade everything we have in this world for one day in Gump's shoes? To know what it is really like to love, dream and believe? I would. And perhaps we would come away from that day a bit wiser, just a little bit wiser, about how to live life.

"And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love." 1 Cor. 13:13