OVERCOMER

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Daily Scripture Readings

Monday: 1 Kings 17:15-18

Tuesday: John 14:15-31

Wednesday: John 15:1-17

Thursday: John 15:18-16:4

Friday: John 16:5-16

Saturday: John 16:17-26

Sunday: John 16:27-33

Opening Prayer

Abba Father, how we thank you for your son, Jesus, who better than showing us the way is The Way Himself. Thank you for the way Jesus is so kind to keep waking us up to this reality of trouble and problems and that we should not be surprised by them. Thank you even more for the way Jesus keeps waking us up to his overcoming presence in us. Holy Spirit, we need to be transformed into this mindset and mentality, that our lives might take on the very transcendent glory of Jesus—not despite our difficulties but because of them. Praying in Jesus’ name, Amen.

READING:

This devotion is from J.D. Walt, and Seedbed’s Daily Text (August 19, 2022) titled, “Surprise: Life Is Difficult”

This is not a story about rain. I wonder how you might fill in that blank in your own life with your great challenge and need right about now. This is not a story about cancer or bankruptcy or miracles or death or a cure or a financial lift and on it goes. This is a story about God and the journey from glory to glory, come what may. This way we reference—from glory to glory—is Jesus. He is the glory of God and as he is in us through thick and thin, as we are becoming the glory of God.

Something tells me I’m preaching to the choir when I say what I am about to say. Brace for it: Life is difficult.

Life is a long series of unending problems, unforeseen difficulties, endless struggles, and unrelenting hardships. There—I said it. Remember when I said the Bible is not the story of God with the interruption of human wickedness but the story of human wickedness intervened on by God? Same with life. Life is not the story of ease and comfort and smooth sailing with the occasional interruption of a problem or difficulty. No, life is the story of difficulty, struggle, hardship, and even suffering with the constant intervention of Jesus. Life is difficult. Jesus is here.

Just as sure as this happens:

So there was food every day for Elijah and for the woman and her family. 16 For the jar of flour was not used up and the jug of oil did not run dry, in keeping with the word of the Lord spoken by Elijah.

Then we get this:

17 Some time later the son of the woman who owned the house became ill. He grew worse and worse, and finally stopped breathing.

Life is difficult. Miraculous survival of the family followed by the untimely death of a child.

Here’s what I don’t yet understand about myself. Despite knowing this irrefutable law of the universe, I continue to be surprised by almost every problem, difficulty, struggle, and hardship that comes along. I think it is because deep down in the echo chambers of my soul the ancient whisper of Eden tells me it was not supposed to be this way. This leads me to try and construct my own pseudo Eden by trying to wall out problems or to make enough money to keep difficulties at bay, or to develop strategies to temporarily escape the pain of struggles and medicate my hardships with a thousand distractions.

In my early twenties, a friend passed a book to me by M. Scott Peck. Many of you know where this is headed. The book: The Road Less Traveled: A New Psychology of Love, Traditional Values, and Spiritual Growth. So for starters, beware of books touting new psychologies of love, traditional values, and spiritual growth. I remember appreciating the book and going on to read several of his other works, all of which were insightful and helpful. Like so many self-help authors, they tend to be long on diagnostics and short on solutions while offering lots of prescriptions to think different and try harder—filling us with aspirational energy while never quite getting to actualizing realities. Said another way—self can’t help. If you haven’t read it, you don’t need to read it. I’ll give you the gem of the book here, which comes in the very first paragraph.

“Life is difficult. This is a great truth, one of the greatest truths. It is a great truth because once we truly see this truth, we transcend it. Once we truly know that life is difficult-once we truly understand and accept it-then life is no longer difficult. Because once it is accepted, the fact that life is difficult no longer matters.”

Thirty-something years later, I still see the basic truth here and yet it remains trapped in its own circular Zen based logic. So . . . life is difficult. Check. We accept it. Check. We truly understand and accept it. Check. Life remains difficult. Check. The fact that life is difficult still matters. Why? Because we have not transcended it. Why? Because acceptance is not transcendence. Acceptance is just that—acceptance. I suppose if you are the Dalai Lama and you have mastered the illusive practice of detachment and are something of a master in Zen meditation techniques you can experience some approximation of transcendence, but it will be fleeting and will depend on your ability to maintain all the functions required to stay in such a place and perhaps moving to a Tibetan monastery.

There is a better way. It is not actually a way or method or approach at all. He is a person. He goes by the name of Jesus of Nazareth—The Messiah—The Lord of Heaven and Earth. Here’s how he says it.

“I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.” John 16:33

Here’s how I would say it:

Life is difficult. This is a great truth, one of the greatest truths. But life’s greatest truth of all is this: Jesus Christ of Nazareth—The Messiah—The Lord of Heaven and Earth, has overcome all that makes life difficult: sin, death, Satan, indeed the world. Once we behold this truth who is Jesus, life does not cease to be difficult but we become empowered through an abiding union with him to transcend life’s difficulties.

Let’s be honest, though. Jesus says it better:

“I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.” John 16:33

This is the way—from glory to glory.

Do you tend to think/expect the normal state of life should be ease and comfort and smooth sailing, or difficulties, challenges, problems and choppy seas?

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