Posted by
jgrantswankjr on Thursday, February 19, 2009 6:30:16 PM
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J. Grant Swank, Jr.
To begin with, learn how to surrender your thoughts to Jesus each day—during the day. And at nighttime when you wake up.
Surrender thoughts and let go.
That
will fall in line with His counsel: “Take no thought for tomorrow. . .”
He means that. He’s not speaking poetry. He’s speaking practically.
Matthew 6:34
We spend too much time planning for future
security when we should be living for Jesus’ plan in the moment. Forget
your plan. Live for Jesus’ plan.
After all, that’s what Christian commitment is all about. “Submit yourselves a living sacrifice, holy. . .” Romans 12:1
As you surrender your mind to Jesus, He will speak to your head. Your thoughts will recess. His thoughts will take mortal thought patterns’ place.
That is what you want.
Isaiah promises that whoever keeps his mind stayed on God will
experience “perfect peace.” Isaiah 26:3
Then
live that peace by surrendering your thoughts to Jesus. This takes some
discipline but after awhile it becomes a lifestyle. The more you faith
those thoughts to Jesus, the more excited you become in realizing that
Jesus is actually alive to work in your minutia.
But what do you do when Jesus says nothing?
You let the quiet remain. You rest in the nothingness. You permit Jesus to keep the rhythm of speaking and then not speaking.
You know that in music there are the black rectangular boxes on the lines of the music scale. Those boxes are called “rests.”
Rests
are when the music is to stop for silence to take over. Our ears need
the rest. Musicians need the rest. Our heads need the rest. The rests
help make the melody balance.
It’s the same with surrendering your thoughts to Jesus. He plants the rests in the life music. Then let them
stay right where He puts them. You need them. He knows that.
Do
not think that Jesus has left you. He promised that He would never
leave you or forsake you. He keeps His promises. Being quiet does not
mean that He has taken off. He’s there, alongside you, but quietly so.
Jesus
knows that one cannot take His divine input every second. That would be
overload. In those silent segments, thank Him for the silence.
During those rest moments, praise Him. Lift up your soul in thanksgiving. “Bless His holy name,” as the Psalms advise us.
Sometimes
conscientious believers conclude they have to be super spiritualizing
their souls every second. Not so. We mortals cannot take such strenuous
activity. And it’s not necessary.
Therefore, in the middle
of the day when Jesus seems to have taken a short reprieve, let Him do
just that. He is there, working beneath the surface, far more than you
realize.
I say to friends that Jesus is always working in
the disciples’ lives in the subterranean levels. We cannot imagine how
intricately Jesus is moving, preparing, arranging. Only when we look
back do we begin to understand how Jesus was programming certain
variables that we had never thought possible.
Our minds are
so limited that even then we do not pick up on all the dimensions Jesus
has worked and is working. We miss much of what His love is performing.
Eternity will provide us the span to take in that analysis.
However, in the silences Jesus is doing what needs to be done for you because He loves you.
Then He breaks the silences to give you another Jesus-thought. Take it. Live it out. And go on from there.
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