”Wherever
I go, there I am.” This little saying is so obvious one would think
that it did not need saying, yet we constantly hear of people sometimes
traveling great distances to ”get away from it all.” When they get
”there,” they haven’t gotten away from it all after all, for they
took it with them.
The
problem is not where we are or what we have. If we are in the business
of manufacturing misery, then we keep right on turning it out even
when we try to ”get away from it all.” We simply take our miserable
thinking with us. If we decide to be happy we can also take that
with us. Paul said, ”I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith
to be content.”
Outside circumstances do not really dictate our happiness or misery,
our thoughts do that. It is not necessary for us to travel to find
happiness or get away from misery. ”Wherever I go, there I am,”
and our carry-on luggage will always include our own mental attitude.
Abraham Lincoln said that ”most people are about as happy as they
make up their minds to be.”
Of all the people on the earth, we ought to be the happiest. Paul
felt this way and told us 19 times in four short chapters in Philippians
to be happy, to rejoice, to be filled with gladness. He said, ”I
can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me.” He could
and we can, too. Paul was in prison when he wrote this letter on
how to be happy and we might think that no ane could talk this way
being chained to a Roman soldier, but he did.
When
we consider the fact that all things are working together for our
good, we should be encouraged to accept the few little problems
that come our way realizing that God’s strength is made perfect
in our weakness. All things really does mean all things, and so
we can sing, ”if thou but suffer God to guide thee, and hope in
Him through all thy ways, He’ll give thee strength whatever betide
thee, and bear thee through the evil days.”
Whenever we are tempted to feel discouraged or downcast, we should
sing the question and the answer we have in our hymn, ”Why should
His people now be sad? None have such reason to be glad, as reconciled
to God.”
We do sing this. We need to live that which we sing. In another
hymn, we ask God to ”help us this and every day to live more nearly
as we pray.” We need to live more nearly as we pray and more nearly
as we sing, as well. Believ- ing this, we can really mean it when
we sing, ”Father, I ask that all my life may be o’erruled by Thee;
the changes then that surely come I shall not fear to see.”
Many
of our hymns will help us to totally commit our lives to God and
”trust in Him in all our ways.” ”Take my life and let it be, consecrated
Lord to thee” becomes our goal in life and the ”wherever I go, there
I am” will also mean that He is there as well, for He has promised
”never to leave us or forsake us." With joy then we sing, "Take
myself and I will be, ever, only all for Thee. "
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