Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Adjustments


I am the vine; you are the branches. He who abides in Me and I in him, the same brings forth much fruit; for without Me you can do nothing. John 15:5 (NKJV)

Abiding in Christ truly is a requirement for those wanting to enlarge their borders. You see, I maintain our borders are more of our own making than that of God's! It is the truth:

I can do everything through him who gives me strength. Philippians 4:13 (NIV)

So, why are we held captive by these borders? Why do these borders seem so difficult to overcome? Think about what John is saying. If Christ is the vine, then we as branches must adjust our mindset to conform to that principle. The branch can't do anything apart from the vine. Where the vine goes, the branch must follow.

Do you see the problem? We, Christians, do not adjust and abide in Christ in all we do! Therefore, the borders not only remain; they become reinforced by our own actions.

Quite the conundrum isn't it!

So what do we do? Blackaby and King have good insight into this dilemma and I suggest you read or reread their book, Experiencing God. In this, they posit seven realities of experiencing God in your life. One of those truly addresses the need let God expand and use you according to his will. "You must make major adjustment in your life to join God in what He is doing." Blackaby and King go on to say, "You can't stay where you are and go with God." I maintain this ideal is as much spiritual as it is physical.

We need to adjust our lives and lifestyles to God's! Our natural response to things begin with changing the external, but God wants to change the internal. Maybe the borders that need expanding are within us, not around us. If we want to enlarge our borders, then we must become more Christ-like in our daily habits!

Here is the way I see it...The enlarging of our borders begins with us. It is not a physical move, but it is a major move just the same. We are new creations, but in reality we don't change that much! He needs to expand our faith, our trust, our belief, our knowledge, our heart, our prayer, our worship, our...You get the point! We first go with God and let him change us; then, our circumstances begin to change as well.

Blackaby and King suggest that "the adjustment requires moving from doing God's work according to your abilities, your gifts, your likes and dislikes and your goals to being totally dependent on God and His working and His resources."

That is powerful! Totally dependent on God and His resources. Now, that is abiding. Make those adjustments and depend on God in your...
  • circumstances (job, home, finances)
  • relationships (family, friends, peers)
  • thinking (biases, methods, potential)
  • commitments (family, church, traditions)
  • actions (prayer, giving, service)
  • beliefs (God's ability, purposes, ways)

Paul is the quintessential model for these adjustments. Conduct a google search on Paul's life and see where he made adjustments to remain in Christ -- even unto death.

As you reflect on that, see where God began the work in Paul. It was not with his knowledge, but with his heart. The rest is quite clear to me! Paul, the Christian killer, became the new creation he was meant to be, a Christian leader. That map at the top of the page certainly becomes clearer doesn't it.

Now that is enlarging one's borders...

Be Blessed

1 Comments:

At 1:39 PM, Blogger Dick said...

Dean, I couldn't agree more with your premise that we are the limiting factor when it comes to enlarging our territories, or maybe to put it another way, to be enlarged. Why don't we become enlarged? I would guess fear and pride are amongst the leading causes as well as comfort.
I believe that God is constantly moving and wants us to follow Him down our own respective paths. That is not to say that we can never rest in Him, but it should be Him that determines that, not us.
I know in my own life when I have had sea changes (large faith leaps), that they were not without pain. Nevertheless, they were necessary and the blessings most certainly followed. That is not to say that every change has to be a huge one because it is in the daily humdrum ordinary times that God is with us (Emmanuel). Your blog brings to mind this scripture:

Phillipians 1:6 (Message)
There has never been the slightest doubt in my mind that the God who started this great work in you would keep at it and bring it to a flourishing finish on the very day Christ Jesus appears.

God is at work energizing us, bring ing action to our lives and asking us to ride with Him!!!

 

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