Nothing interferes more with our ability to serve God than our need to earn a living. An observer from one hundred years ago would be awestruck by the "improvement" in our living standard and by the amount of leisure time our technology now provides us. Few North Americans regularly work more than a fifty-hour week; most work forty-four hours or less. In addition, we now live an average of eighteen years longer than we did one hundred years ago and have at least one-third more diposable income per family. When all of those factors are weighed, together with the fact in America alone there are perhaps twenty million Christians, it seems clear that we ought to be getting out the message of Jesus Christ much better than we are.
The simple truth is that most Americans are too busy to serve God. We have grown complacent and comfortable in God's blessing and have forgotten the first commandment. In the meantime, immorality and cults have grown to alarming proportions because their advocates are more zealous in their support than we are. Since God asks for obedience rather than demands it, many Christians simply ignore the very reason for their existence: to glorify God. Without exception, God has a unique and meaningful plan for every believer that does not depend on age, income, or ability.
It is also clear that God calls each of us to fill this gap. Like Esther, every believer must decide either to be used by God or to be bypassed and allow another to be chosen instead. What a loss that we allow temporary comforts and laziness to rob us of true riches, both immediate and eternal!
(Giving & Tithing by Larry Burkett; "Giving and Tithing -Too Busy To Serve" - pp. 4)
ALarry Burkett was wronbg.
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Clint, I will stand and read your post for the sermon on Sunday and then extend the invitation....enough said.
ReplyDeleteWhat an indictment upon us...you have echoed my sentiments exactly..
Great post friend....
Be Encouraged.
Tony R.
I agree with you on all accounts. My husband and I often discuss how much competes with our committment to our service in this era in time. As one being almost 60 years old, I can remember a time when we could not go to the local swimming pools, theaters, amusement parks,even some public parks, eat in most restaurants, stay in fancy hotels and drive highway ready automobiles. This was not the lifestyle of African Americans. It was still a very segregated society back then. All social and religious fellowship revolved around the church. If you wanted to find a suitable mate, they were found in the church. Today, doing all these things as a priority takes time away even with the help of modern technology. There use to be a law (Blue Law) that prohited all businesses being opened on Sundays, but now we can shop until we drop, thus poor church attendance. I think we can safely say, some are busy doing nothing a lot of the time. Great Post.
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