There
is a story about two deer hunters who bagged the biggest buck they
had ever seen. They were struggling as they tried to drag the huge
animal by its rear feet back to the road across rugged terrain.
Another hunter observed their difficulty and advised them that they
could pull the deer much easier if they would grab the deer by its
antlers and pull it head first instead of feet first. They thanked
their advisor and began to pull it by the head as he suggested.
The one hunter exclaimed happily, ”It really is a lot easier to
pull it this way.” The other hunter shook his head and replied,
”Yes, but we are getting further away from the car all the time.”
It is important to know in what direction we are going. Some people,
like our deer hunters can use all their energy doing the right thing
to go in the wrong direction. If we don’t know where we are going,
then the method of locomotion is relatively unimportant.
As
brethren and sisters of the Lord Jesus Christ we ought to be moving
in the direction of the Kingdom. Whatever we do, whatever we think,
whatever we plan, we should always be asking the question. ”Is this
taking me closer to my goal of the Kingdom or away from it?” We
may laugh at the hunters as they struggle with their trophy as they
got further and further from their goal, but it is no laughing matter
if we struggle through life getting further and further away from
the one important thing in our life, a place in God’s soon coming
Kingdom.
Many times a person has been promoted and transferred into isolation
only to fall away from the truth as a result. Sometimes when trouble
arises in an ecclesia some decide to stay away. There have been
instances when someone bought a boat or a plane or some other possession,
maybe a cottage at the shore or in the mountains, and soon found
that they were getting further and further away from their goal
of a place in the Kingdom.
If we really do want to be in the Kingdom of God more than anything
else in all the world, will we allow anything or anybody to come
between us and our goal? Paul did not think so. He said, ”I am persuaded,
that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor
powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor
depth, nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from
the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
Paul was determined that nothing would come between him and ”the
love of God.” Is anything coming between us and the love of God?
The answer is in our dedication to our number one goal in life,
a place in God’s Kingdom. If this really is our goal then we will
not allow any of these things to take us from it. Oh, it does not
mean that we cannot have a promotion, or a cottage, but they will
not detract us from our goal. When the kingdom is everything to
us, we will either use the temporal things to our advantage or we
will get rid of them. When trouble comes (not if) we will work harder
and pray for those who are opposing us. If we should admit that
a hypocrite is coming between us and God, then we are admitting
that the hypocrite is closer to God than we are. We will not go
away from God just because there is strife. Jesus could have boycotted
his last meal with his apostles because one was attending who was
a thief and a betrayer and another was a liar and swore.
Let us measure everything we do to see if it is helping us get closer
to our goal of the Kingdom. If it is not, then are we going to let
it (whatever it is) separate us from the love of God? No matter
how great or how awful the ”it” is, if it separates us from the
love of God, then it is too high a price to pay. Paul gave the answer
to his own question of ”Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?”
by saying, ”If God be for us, who can be against us?” The real answer
is ”nothing” but we sometimes let ”something” change our direction
as the foolish hunters did. Let us be persuaded, as Paul was, that
nothing will ”separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ
Jesus our Lord.”
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