Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Comparing Robs Life of Contentment

I have not posted on my blog in almost two years!  That doesn't mean I don't have anything to say.  Far from it.  In the last two years I've been saying quite a bit to family and friends to mixed reviews - they run the gambit from "just what I needed to hear" to "rude". 

"YES" to Don's status update question, "Does the world really need more gurus?"  (I almost want to ask, "Is this a trick question?"  "Do we need more wisdom in the public square?"  "Yes, Yes, a thousand times Yes!"

If God has given me insights it is my responsibility to share them with those I believe can benefit from them.  If one cannot come to faith unless they hear and not come to hearing unless there is a voice (my paraphrase of Paul in Acts) then how can people make good choices and live well without input and feedback? 

I get most of my input from books, you? 

What if one does not read?  Maybe watch the lives of others and take note of what they are doing and what they aren't doing?  Or maybe just make up the rules of the game as you go?  I have to believe that we need more gurus, people willing to put themselves out there even if only a few will take the gift they offer to heart.

This year my goal is to read more slowly and think about what I'm reading more deeply.  I'm hoping to make more connections, have more original to me thoughts, and then pursue a response to what I am reading.  The response may take the form of a blog post, like today, or it may show up as a Facebook status or some snail mail to you. 

Unfortunately the writing will not be polished as I don't want to use my time in that way.  So think of these writings as you and I having a talk over coffee, happy hour drinks, or a good chat in the hot tub at the Y.

Happy New Year 2020! 



While reading The Pursuit of God today, Tozer was talking about people who compare. He was talking specifically about how people tend to compare their material possessions to the possessions of others.  If I compare my lovely house to your house and your house is bigger, or nicer, all of the sudden my lovely house is small or dated. 

The idea of making comparisons threw me right back to a few years ago when I was sitting in my chair and my eyes looked up at a Van Gogh print of sunflowers.  What I sensed in my spirit was God saying to me - after I had spent a moment picking out the prettiest and then the ugliest sunflowers was, "What if one of the not-prettiest sunflowers was in a vase on your table?  How would you describe it?"  I thought a moment and said, "Pretty."  It was an Oprah "AHA!" moment for me.  "STOP COMPARING!"

Want to know what I thought today about that specific epiphany?  I thought what an important lesson to teach our children and I didn't learn it till I was 60. For a moment I was sad about that because I so wanted to pass all the important life lessons on to my kids.  But I didn't know anything about how comparing robs life of contentment.