|
The medical profession
likes to tell the story of the matronly patient that was on
a strict diet but continued to gain weight. Finally, after
weighing her for the sixth straight week only to find that
she had put on another four pounds, the doctor asked her if
she was eating anything else beside her diet and she replied,
”Only my regular meals.”
There are many nominal Christians who take their religion
just like this lady took her diet. Serving God is fine so
long as it does not get in the way of the things they want
to do.
Everyone who has
ever dieted knows that self control and restraint are necessary
to lose weight. Everyone who has read the Bible also knows
that the natural inclinations of the flesh are as opposed
to God as candy is to dieting. We can not truly be in Christ
and also be slaves to the flesh.
If our faith in God does not change our way of life and produce
works for him, then our faith is a dead faith for James tells
us, ”faith if it hath not works is dead, being alone.”
Jesus said, ”If
ye love me, keep my commandments,” and Paul warned us that
”in the last days perilous times would come when men would
be lovers of their own selves, lovers of pleasures more than
lovers of God; having a form of godliness, but denying the
power thereof.” Paul’s words aptly fit our day and generation
and if we are not careful they could even fit us.
Out of the 168 hours each of us spent this last week, how
many were spent for our own pleasure and how many for God?
Time spent before TV or on a golf course could only be charged
up to our own pleasure. If our days are spent working or keeping
house just as our neighbors spend their days and then our
free time is taken up with the trivial pleasures of this life,
how are we different from the world which Christ commanded
us to come out from?
This type of self
examination is uncomfortable but how much better that we ask
ourselves this question now, than wait until our Lord calls
us before him to ask us what we have done.
If our life is not different because we are in Christ, then
Christ is not really in our life. If we eat our regular meals
in addition to our diet we are not really on a diet. The reward
for dieting will only come to those who are faithful to their
diet. The reward Christ has promised will only come to those
who are faithful to his precepts.
May our way of life so reflect Christ that when he comes he
will find us in top condition spiritually, trim and fit, so
that we may hear those longed for words, ”well done.”
|