Increase Our Faith (Luke 17:5) Podcast
Imagine you wake up one morning and you open your front door as you do every morning to pick up your newspaper or to take your dog out, only to find a treasure on your doorstep. Please use your imagination freely here, how ever you would like to picture this treasure is fine… a suitcase full of cash, a chest filled with coins or a stack of gold bars, you pick. But the treasure sits there unattended. There is no one there… just a treasure with a note that says: “For you.” This is not a mistake, it is yours. What would you do with this treasure? If you are like the average lottery winner, you might live the next few years of your life in the lap of luxury. And then, after those first few years, you would probably end up in a worse position than you started in, financially speaking… The problem most jackpot winners face is that they adopt a much more expensive lifestyle, but without ongoing cash flow, they can only sustain their new luxurious habits for a short period of time, and then end up back where they started. Or worse. The Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards estimates that one out of three super jackpot winners end up filing bankruptcy. Now, take a few more steps with me down this imaginary path… Many years have gone by since your unexpected doorstep discovery, and now someone runs up to you out of the blue and asks: “So? What did you do with the treasure? Did it change your life? Did it make you happy? Did you use it well?” And so the mystery of the treasure is finally revealed to you: This stranger explains that he sold everything he had ever owned, his house and all of his belongings, he gave up everything he possessed for that treasure and left it on your doorstep, for you. This stranger gave everything he ever owned to you. How would you feel about your ability to account for how you spent that money? You would undoubtedly start to reflect back on how you spent this treasure… Did you share in your unearned bounty? Did you pay any of it forward? Do you have anything to show for it today? Are you a better person for it? What would you feel upon this revelation about the source of the treasure? Gratitude? Or would you be struck with self-loathing and condemnation at the recollection of your reckless spending? Would you regret gambling a large part of the money away? Would you be embarrassed about purchasing luxury items that have since tarnished and lost their value? Or would you even start to resent the stranger for this unimaginably extravagant gift that you never asked for, but which now weighs on you as an unrepayable debt? Would the knowledge that what you had gained came from someone else’s sacrifice change the way you viewed it? Would you have valued it any differently? Would you have used your resources differently? Uh oh… Are you onto me now? Do you see where I’m going with this flight of imagination? You have an opportunity right now, today, to live the kind of life that will ensure that when you meet Jesus Christ face-to-face, you can give an account for each and every day that makes him smile, and say to you: “Well done, good and faithful servant.” You have that opportunity to live a life that is pleasing to Jesus. Forget WWJD? What Would Make Jesus Smile? This is not a new revelation, but sadly, rather than feel overwhelmed with gratitude and joy at the notion of pleasing the one who sacrificed everything for us, we too often feel weighed down by a sense of burden and of condemnation that such a life is too far out of our reach. We may even resent the Giver because we cannot shake the notion that his gift comes with strings attached. That is why I was so encouraged this week when I was reminded of this simple truth while reading Jesus’ Parable of the Talents in Matthew 25. I was struck by the fact that the Master does not just congratulate the faithful servant, he says, ‘Well done, good and faithful servant. You have been faithful over a little; I will set you over much. Enter into the joy of your master.” (Matthew 25:23) In pleasing Jesus, you get to enter into Jesus’ joy! We have the opportunity to bring joy to our saviour and then to rejoice with Him! I apologize for the excess of exclamation points, but that is an incredible picture! A true celebration of life, a life well lived, a life that was lived in the light of its preciousness, a life that was not taken for granted but recognized the costly sacrifice that made it possible. I want that! I desire to live my life with an ever-present gratitude for the tremendous cost that was borne by Christ. Christ delivered a treasure at my doorstep even as a stranger to me: He gave me freedom from the fear of death, he granted me a life to be enjoyed in the light when I was plunged in darkness. At a time when I believed that everything I wanted in this life was going to have to be earned by the sweat of my brow, swindled by the deviousness of my mind, or taken from someone else by the ruthlessness of my conscience, that is when Christ revealed Himself to me and showed me that it is all already mine, and I am free to do with it as I see fit. Free to me, because the cost was paid by Him. I acknowledge that after receiving this treasure, I then spent the next little while trying to understand where the strings were attached and when the catch would finally be revealed. Some people tried to convince me that although there were strings, there was also a loophole: You just had to point at the strings and call them Legalism. But I have come to understand and accept the truth of the matter: There are no strings and there are no loopholes. The truth was much simpler and the truth is what set me free. Christian freedom is not just about forgiveness of sins, it is not even just about growing in sanctification by the Spirit. Christian freedom is looking forward to the day when you go through every one of your receipts with the man who dropped a treasure at your doorstep and together you can rejoice over all the ways you spent that treasure. The ways it brought you joy, the ways you shared it and gave it and used it to tell others of the lavish generosity of the Giver… The hope it brought, the burdens it relieved, the fears it calmed, the pains it soothed, the tears it dried. The love it spread. Sure, life is not easy. It can be down right hard. And some days feel like studying for a hard math test: You are not sure what is going to be on the test, or which concepts you should be working on more. You are confused about which formulae apply to which equations. You hope a certain kind of problem never comes up. But, having recently experienced this I can tell you that it is a special kind of joy when you get to rejoice with your child, whom you saw labour over his math lessons, as he brings home a hard earned A… or even B-... or, well… It was a pass anyway! Rejoice! Jesus has relieved us of the burden of the fear of failing. That is no longer a possible outcome, so we can carry on and fight the good fight, we can finish the race, we can keep the faith, knowing that there is laid up for us the crown of righteousness. But we all know that on some days, that fight feels exhausting, and that race feels wearisome, and on other days, our strength is renewed. That is because some days, I am driven by the slight nausea I experience at the thought of seeing disappointment in Jesus’ eyes. And while that might spur me on for a little while, it invariably leads me to exhaustion. Even though I know Christ sympathizes with my weaknesses and he readily forgives me, yet still, there are days when my efforts are fueled by guilt, fear, and condemnation. These make for bad fuel. But on my best days, I run on the good fuel of Christ’s joy. On the days when my strength is renewed, when I feel like I am soaring on wings like eagles, and I can run and not become weary, I can walk and not faint, on those days, I have set my mind on entering into Christ’s joy. To share in the joy of Jesus with Jesus as he rejoices in what I chose to do with this day, which cost him so much and yet which he gifted to me so freely… that is my most cherished desire, and that is the only truth that encourages me to run the race with endurance. Thanks for reading Increase Our Faith (Luke 17:5)! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit somestephenjones.substack.com [https://somestephenjones.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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