Going Through the Motions

imageYesterday was a very good day at the Women of Faith Conference in Indianapolis:  good speakers and good music. Since I left there, I have Matthew West stuck in my head singing…”I don’t want to go through the motions, I don’t want to go one more day, without your all consuming passion inside of me. I don’t want to go through my life, asking what if  I had given everything, instead of going through the motions…” 

We often do go through the motions on a day to day basis: going to church on Sundays, Bible Study on Wednesdays, pot luck dinners, and committee meetings. None of these activities are bad in themselves but where is our passion for Jesus?  I was conversing with a friend of mine about this very topic this last week. My comment to him was “if only people would truly read the gospels, it would make such a difference.  If only they just read the gospel of Luke, they couldn’t help but fall in love with Jesus!”

This is passion:  when there is a fire burning within that cannot be put out.  It’s like our first love; we can’t help but talk about it with everyone.  They can see it on our face.  It overflows into everything we do.  And then our love becomes like Jesus’ love.  As the apostle Paul wrote in 1st Corinthians 13, “Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never ends.”  This is not romantic love. It is sacrificial love lived out because of our deep passion for Jesus.  Paul didn’t write this in the middle of his letter to the early church in Corinth, Greece as an exhortation on love.  He wrote in response to those Christians “going through the motions” without love. They had numerous spiritual gifts and talents but Paul wanted to show them “a more excellent way” to live.  He basically was saying that we can speak, we can serve and we can move mountains for God but if we don’t do it with the intention of love, it is all worthless.  Going through religious motions without a passionate love for Jesus and each other is all for naught. And it gives us no joy.  This leads to burnt out Christians.  Service is done out of duty or to look good to the rest of the world.  We don’t fool anyone. The world knows authenticity when it sees it. 

Passion is contagious. It attracts others to it like insects are attracted to light.  When a person is passionate about their love of Jesus and lives this out by loving everyone around them, this gets people’s attention.  If this passion doesn’t burn out in a moment but lasts throughout a lifetime, they want to know this person’s secret. 

So what is the secret to sustained passion?  Matthew West tells us in his song.  It’s giving everything we are and everything we have to God.  Love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your mind and all your strength. Everything. If Jesus is our first love then our passion for him will persist and everything else of importance in life will fall into place. I don’t want to go through the motions and wish at the end of my life that I had not held back but had given my everything to Jesus.

Lord, today revive my heart with a deep, fiery passion for you. Let me speak and write out of an overflow of love for you.  Otherwise I am like the resounding gong or clanging cymbal Paul wrote of in his letter to the Corinthians. Without your love burning in me, I am nothing at all.

Praying for Deliverance

imageRecently Tim and I traveled to the Lamb Farm in Lebanon Indiana to join with a number of others for a time of praise and prayer for the country of Liberia in West Africa.  Hoosiers have many connections to this part of the world through United Methodist missions such as Operation Classroom which has educated hundreds of children even in the midst of the recent civil war.  Hope in the Harvest International is carrying on this tradition of care for the Liberian people by training them to farm.  Gina and Travis Sheets are the founders of this mission and have been living in Ganta, Liberia for the past year.  They flew home to Indiana early in August with plans to return in September with tickets they had purchased nearly a year ago.  But soon after they arrived in the US, the borders of Liberia were closed to anyone wanting to get in or out of the country in an effort to contain the Ebola outbreak there. At our gathering, they tearfully spoke of their concern and grief over the Ebola crisis.  They have lost people who they have grown to love like family on the farm in Ganta. A young man named Gabrielle, particularly affected many of those from Indiana who had gone there on a mission trip this July.  It was difficult for them to accept that someone so vibrant and full of life could be taken so quickly by this deadly virus.  His grandmother also has died as well as the son of one of the farm staff.  The crisis hits home when those Gina and Travis worked with on a daily basis are now gone.

Tearful, heartfelt prayers were lifted to God asking for the deliverance of the Liberians from this plague.  Music and voices praising God filled the barn where we gathered together sending sweet harmony heavenward.  Are we able with our prayers to move God to action?  I believe so.  Maybe this was His plan all along that we might come to Him with our pleas so He could answer our prayers in a mighty way.

When I pray for the Liberian people, I think of Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego as they stood ready to be thrown in the fiery furnace for not bowing to King Nebuchadnezzar in Babylon.  My friend, Dr. Shadrach Gonqueh is from Liberia and is named for one of these brave souls.  They said to the king, “We do not need to defend ourselves to you in this matter.  If we are thrown into the burning furnace, the God we serve is able to save us from your hand, o king.  But even if He does not, we want you to know, o king that we will not serve your gods or worship the image of gold you have set up.”  They knew God was able to save them.  But it was up to God what He would do.  He chose to rescue them by sending an angel to walk them through the fire unharmed.  Many centuries later, a group of believers in the early church gathered together secretly to pray for the Apostle Peter when he was imprisoned.  God released him by sending an angel to the prison to unshackle him and lead him out. They were amazed by the mighty way in which God answered their prayers.

God is able to lead the Liberian people out of the crisis as He led the 3 out of the fiery furnace and Peter out of prison. He could do it in a miraculous, supernatural way and heal the people. But it is more likely that He will raise up capable people who have the heart to help them.  This is the way He usually operates.  We act as His healing hands and feet on the ground.  But even so, many will not see God behind human actions.  Where does the will to serve and the ingenuity to discover medications to heal the sick originate if not from God himself?  Zmapp, the experimental medication that was given to Dr. Kent Brantley, probably saved his life along with intensive supportive treatment at Emory University Hospital.  Who was behind the scenes orchestrating these interventions but God?  Dr. Brantley recognizes this, even if the media discounts it.  He gives credit to God who directs humans to do His work.

God is able to supernaturally rid West Africa of Ebola but more likely He will use us to do it.  We often feel helpless in situations like this. What can each of us possibly do that would make a difference?  Pray and keep praying for insight and wisdom.  Open your eyes to see possibilities right in front of you. The answer may be supporting those who are already there so they can do their job.  But most of all simply care enough to do something even if that something is only prayer.  In the rush of life, it is easy to be distracted by our own worries.  Never, never forget our brothers and sisters who suffer more than we ever will know around the world.  We have no idea how much our prayers and concern mean to them.  Prayer may seem like a little thing when the needs of the people are so great. But never underestimate the power of prayer to start a chain reaction to mobilize God’s people into action.  The results can be miraculous!