My apologies.

I apologize to you for my neglect of the blog over the last several weeks, couple months or so.

As I mentioned some time previously, I am writing a new book – Beyond Pretend: The Grass Really Is Greener on the Other Side. With the other things I am doing – like working so we can pay the bills – that kind of puts me over the top. I hope to have a solid first draft done by the second week of July. I am taking a week off work then to help make that ambitious goal a reality.

God is not only good, he is “gooder” than we realize.
Many of us aren’t tasting God because we aren’t truly trusting him. We are in love with the life that God has given but we are enjoying things on the “creation track” and the best of God comes in trusting him on the “redemption track.”  Sometimes we mistake tasting God for merely tasting the things that God has provided.  We are in love with the gifts of life but not the giver of life.  However, Psalm 34.8 exhorts us to taste God.  How?  By taking refuge in him; by trusting in him.

(Psalms 34:8 ESV)  Oh, taste and see that the LORD is good! Blessed is the man who takes refuge in him!

 (Psalms 34:8 MSG) Open your mouth and taste, open your eyes and see– how good GOD is. Blessed are you who run to him.

The best stuff, the abundant life that Christ came to provide, comes through living in the redemption track.

(John 10:10 ESV)  The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life and have it abundantly.

The entire world in one sense enjoys the goodness of God as every good gift comes from him, everything thing we see, touch, feel, smell and taste.  It is spring in Indiana and it is absolutely beautiful this morning.  God began this beauty project on the third day of creation and said it was good and it still is very good.

The majority of people in this world only taste God’s goodness through this creation track.   Unfortunately many who profess to know God only know him in this way.  The goodness of God and some religion can add up to a pretty good life on this Earth.

But it is not the abundant life that Christ promised to bring when he came.  It is not the best that God has to offer.  Many people who passed through the broad gate and who are tasting the goodness of God’s creation and have some Bible and theology “under their belts” mistakenly believe they know God.  You can find this group in Matthew 7.22 and following.  They missed the narrow gate Jesus spoke of earlier in Matthew 7 and their religion deceived them until they came before ultimate reality in the presence of Christ.

They had built their lives on a knowledge of the Bible but they were not living the knowledge on the redemption track.

As believers in Jesus Christ, we are each assigned to, called to, a life on the redemption track.

(1 Corinthians 7:17 ESV) Only let each person lead the life that the Lord has assigned to him, and to which God has called him. This is my rule in all the churches.

Understanding these things and living them not only helps us to walk in God’s abundance but walking the redemption track reflects not just the goodness of God’s creation but the goodness of God’s redemption.

As we walk the redemption track, people see God, get a whiff of God, a smell.  Maybe like walking into Wal-Mart and the smell of cotton candy catches your sensory attention as it wafts through the air.

Walk the redemption track and people smell eternity, something deep within them is stirred.  Maybe they don’t come to Christ but they have at least seen his reflection, been flashed by the light and love of God.

And as good and powerful a witness that God’s creation of grass and trees and flowers and water is, it doesn’t compare to having a reflection of God’ life and light beaming from one of his children in their private world.

May God bless us as we follow the path of Jesus.

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One Response to My apologies.

  1. Mike says:

    Dave –

    First of all: Yes, I’m still reading your blog. 🙂

    I’m looking forward to your book, and I’d love to talk to you about it sometime.

    My comment isn’t as much on your post as it is on your book title/subject, “Beyond Pretend”. Wow, those 2 words really just about say it all. So, here’s my comment. 🙂

    The young man who spoke at our teen rally on Saturday was invited to give the message Sunday morning at church. He spoke about getting a bigger vision of who God is – the God who measured the universe in the span of His hand, but still cares deeply for us.

    It’s not enough to just “see and know” – we need to *live* the redemption story. I was just discussing with my wife this morning how I feel that God is calling me to “something”. I don’t know that it’s a ministry, but I definitely feel that it’s a radical redirection of my attention away from “the stuff of earth” (as Rich Mullins put it) and onto the stuff of God. Do I *say* I love him, or do I *LOVE* Him? What about the people around me?

    The speaker also talked about faith, and how *real* faith is missing. Do we really believe that God will do what He has promised to do for us? That He will answer our prayers? That He will bless us abundantly above and beyond all that we ask or think?

    Another speaker at the teen rally said something to the effect of “if God hasn’t given you something to do that absolutely *scares* you to death, then you need to check and see if you’re really walking with Him like you think you are.” 🙂

    Anyway… looking forward to more posts.

    – Mike

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