Sunday, December 27, 2020

Three Words for the Road Ahead

 “The point of your life is to point to Him.”—Francis Chan

“What Would Jesus Do?” often sounds heroic — too heroic, in fact, for just a WWJD wrist band. It can also be subject to “but what if?” hypothetical situations, and suggest a sense of keeping a safe distance, of observing rather than engaging in His first call to every disciple: “Follow Me.”


But “What Did Jesus Do?” gives you something you can wrap your arms around, something tangible, something you can model, something that can deepen the greatest relationship of them all and help eliminate a lifestyle built on someone else’s quotes and bumper sticker slogans. And not only that, as 2020 has taught us, the very idea of WDJD can cut to the heart of what really matters faster and better than a million good ideas, books, programs, the latest and greatest worship songs, and the implication that everything happens on Sunday morning in a building. 


So, what did Jesus do? A lot of things; so many, in fact, that the disciple whom He loved wrote: “There are so many other things Jesus did. If they were all written down, each of them, one by one, I can’t imagine a world big enough to hold such a library of books.” (John 21:25, The Message)


But here’s one, maybe a little less obvious than others, to carry into the new year:


“Each day, Jesus was teaching at the temple, and each evening, He went out to spend the night on the hill called the Mount of Olives…” —Luke 21:37


Each day. Each evening… What Jesus did was give us the blueprint for cultivating good habits that will help point our lives to His, both before we head out the door and after a long day. They are things we know but quickly forget — regular healthy rhythms in the Father’s presence that will buffet a world filled with the pressure of people demands, conflicting messages, and non-stop noise, and will build our faith, strengthen our resolve on the Journey, and brighten our reflection to those around us.


Some days, some evenings, the cultivating is like plowing through soft soil, and is refreshing if not powerful. Many days and evenings, though, the cultivating feels like plowing through rocks. Life happens. But WDJD says, in so many words...


 “...Forward, never give up, fix your gaze steadily on Me just as I looked to My Father, for lo, I am with you always.”


Each day. Each evening.


And don’t forget the WDJD importance of place. Jesus had a go-to place called Mount of Olives — a place to get away, to reconnect, to refuel. It’s a reminder that cultivating good habits in the new year also means tapping into those places where you know you regularly meet God in a special way — a mountain trail, a roaring ocean or still lake waters, a woodworking shop, a favorite chair in a quiet room. The Mount of Olives places in our lives are not just beautiful, or peaceful, or energizing, they are sacred places of Encounter. This year, like Jesus did, I want to be more intentional about not taking these sacred spaces lightly, because they have been designed for me — for us — before time began when God knew just how each of us would be wired to best connect with Him.


There's much more to living in the land of What Did Jesus Do, and a lot of it is challenging to the sensibilities if not costly. But the longer I walk this highway, the more I realize that the simplicity of regular rhythms of Presence and places of Encounter are what God uses to carry us through even the craziest of times. It's a simplicity that needs continual recalibrating, but it is where the foundation of all that really matters can be found. Words from Martin Luther drive the point home:


“What more would you know? What more do you need, if indeed you know Christ, if you walk by faith in God, and by love to your neighbor, doing to him as Christ has done to you? This is indeed the whole Scripture in its biggest form: That no more words or books are necessary, but only life and action.”


Thursday night, when the calendar moves forward to a clean slate, my list of “the point of your life” goals and resolutions will probably be short. Behind them will be an anthem of just three words, but a weighty theme song for every 24/7 ahead…


...Give me Jesus.



Traditional Spiritual; sung by Danny Gokey, from the album "Christmas Is Here"


[Updated from 12-31-17]

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