Showing posts with label Resolute. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Resolute. Show all posts

Sunday 6 November 2022

We Soldier On

'If we live, we live for the Lord; and if we die, we die for the Lord. So whether we live or die we belong to the Lord.' Romans 14:8

Pat's Uncle George passed on to Glory this week. He was 93 years old, the last surviving sibling of the my father-in-law's family of 3 girls and 4 boys. This generation had a Bishop, a senior pastor and one Bible woman.

At the wake, the family shared fond memories of Uncle George. He was quite a resourceful person, a maverick, who was in the timber business in the jungles of Indonesia when young and a contractor when he was older. But most of all we recognised Uncle George for 

        • His Fervent Faith. 
        • His Generosity
        • His Love for Friends and Family.
To my regret, I did not give him much time of day and missed his many stories and adventures which he shared so generously to those who would listen to him. These stories inevitably led and testified to his love for the Lord. 

The youngest in the family of seven and outliving all of them, he believed in the adage

'Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.' Galatians 6:9 

George soldiered on till health got the better of him. He bore witness to a familial love  for the Jesus and service to the Church. 

What does it involved to soldier on? St Paul wrote to young Timothy using 3 metaphors to describe endurance in the Christian Life
  • A good soldier 
    • who can endure hardship, 
    • has a single minded focus on the mission, a good witness for Christ
    • is unencumbered by the burdens of life
  • A prize winning athlete 
    • who subjects his body to training
  • A hardworking farmer
    • who will enjoy the fruit of his labour
'Endure suffering along with me, as a good soldier of Christ Jesus. Soldiers don’t get tied up in the affairs of civilian life, for then they cannot please the officer who enlisted them. And athletes cannot win the prize unless they follow the rules. And hardworking farmers should be the first to enjoy the fruit of their labor.' 2 Tim 2:3-6

There is another lesson I learnt from Uncle George. That is it did not matter to him whether he lives or dies. He was happy to be released from the pain of his end-stage terminal cancer as death approached. He was willing to meet his maker many years before. This indicates an appreciation of eternity and everlasting life. 

St Paul declared to the Roman Christians that whether we live or die we belong to the Lord. This understanding and attitude frees us from the shackles and limitations of the physical life. It belies an inner strength and tenacity.

'If we live, we live for the Lord; and if we die, we die for the Lord. So whether we live or die we belong to the Lord.' Romans 14:8

This assurance releases us from the finiteness and time-sensitivity of our current limited physical existence and gives us an unlimited eternity perspective.

So let us not be weary nor lose heart; the hymn 'Stand Up, Stand Up for Jesus' extols this stoic and resolute Christianity 


Stand up, stand up for Jesus,
Ye soldiers of the cross;
Lift high his royal banner,
It must not suffer loss.
From victory unto victory
His army shall he lead,
Till every foe is vanquished,
And Christ is Lord indeed.

Stand up, stand up for Jesus,
The trumpet call obey;
Forth to the mighty conflict
In this His glorious day.
Ye that are men now serve Him
Against unumbered foes;
Let courage rise with danger
And strength to strength oppose.
Stand up, stand up for Jesus,
Stand in His strength alone;
The arm of flesh will fail you,
Ye dare not trust your own.
Put on the gospel armour
Each piece put on with prayer
Where duty calls or danger
Be never wanting there
Stand up, stand up for Jesus,
The strife will not be long;
This day the noise of battle,
The next the victor's song.
To him that overcometh 
A crown of life shall be;
He, with the King of Glory
Shall reign eternally.  


Lionel



Sunday 27 December 2020

Give Me This Mountain

The Dolomites

 'I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith' 2 Tim 4:7


Caleb was a man that could truly claim that he had fought the good fight and finished the race. He was one of two spies that Moses sent to recce the promised land across the Jordan who came back with a positive and optimistic analysis of the terrain and enemy. The other spy with the same analysis was Joshua. Ten other spies brought back negative and depressing news that obstacles before them could not be surmounted. In Joshua 14:7-8 Caleb recalled, "I brought him (Moses) back a report according to my convictions but my fellow Israelites who went up with me made the hearts of the people melt in fear.
 
So at age 85 years, just as the the Israelites were dividing the conquered territories of Canaan amongst the tribes, Caleb staked his claim, "Now give me this hill country that the Lord promised me." Joshua 14:12 

Caleb in Hebrew means 'faithful, devoted, whole hearted, bold, brave'. True to his name, Caleb was a remarkable man, resolute and tenacious. Dr Alan Redpath who wrote Victorious Christian Living, Studies in the Book of Joshua (Ref 1) described Caleb's legacy as 

  • A Faith that never wavered
  • A Strength that never weakened
Caleb left an example for all who are living out the Christian life for many years. Our faith should not grow dim even as our eye sights may be failing us. Dr Redpath hoped that "the faith which is ours in youth may be undimmed in old age, that the vision of the Lord shall be clearer as we grow older, that when life's journey is almost done we shall not be content merely to survey the past but be ready and eager still for battles with the enemy".

Alan Redpath hit the nail on the head when surveying the challenges of the older and grey-haired Christians. Many of us who had retired from our lifelong employments think also that we can retire from our Christian duties and service. We feel that we have done enough and now it is time to sit back and relax and allow the younger Christians to take up the cudgel. Nothing can be more threatening to our continuing faith if we take a backseat, trying to rest upon the laurels of past service as though we can now cash in on our past investments. 

When we become Christians we have a perspective of eternity which has no place for retirements. Harry Blamires wrote, 'A prime mark of the Christian mind is that it cultivates the eternal perspective. It looks beyond this life to another one'. (Ref 2)

Caleb at a ripe old age said, "So here I am today, eighty-five years old! I am still as strong today as the day Moses sent me out; I'm just as vigorous to go out to battle now as I was then" Joshua 14:10-11.

Most Christians do not live like Caleb who was wholehearted in his faith and steadfastly resolute to defend it. Bishop Solomon told the story that when the Irish tribes were baptised, their warriors raised their right hands above the baptismal waters, the hands that wielded their swords. The Bishop commented that they were willing to give up certain parts of their lives but hold back other parts from God (Ref 3). Most Christians are like that, half-hearted sacrifice and half hearted surrender. Hudson Taylor, the founder of the China Inland Mission, now known as OMF said, "Christ is either Lord of all or is not Lord at all".

Where are the Calebs today? In 1874, Frances Havergal wrote a familiar hymn, 'Take My Life'

Frances enacted her lyrics, a line of which says "Take my silver and my gold; not a mite would I withhold." In 1878, four years after writing the hymn, Miss Havergal wrote a friend, "Take my silver and my gold" now means shipping off all my ornaments to the Church Missionary House, including a jewel cabinet that is really fit for a countess, where all will be accepted and disposed of for me...Nearly fifty articles are being packed up. I don't think I ever packed a box with such pleasure."
  1. Take my life and let it be
    Consecrated, Lord, to Thee.
    Take my moments and my days,
    Let them flow in endless praise.
  2. Take my hands and let them move
    At the impulse of Thy love.
    Take my feet and let them be
    Swift and beautiful for Thee.
  3. Take my voice and let me sing,
    Always, only for my King.
    Take my lips and let them be
    Filled with messages from Thee.
  4. Take my silver and my gold,
    Not a mite would I withhold.
    Take my intellect and use
    Every pow’r as Thou shalt choose.
  5. Take my will and make it Thine,
    It shall be no longer mine.
    Take my heart, it is Thine own,
    It shall be Thy royal throne.
  6. Take my love, my Lord, I pour
    At Thy feet its treasure store.
    Take myself and I will be
    Ever, only, all for Thee.

This is a hymn of total surrender, a hymn of consecration, a hymn for the Calebs of today

Lionel
Ref 1: Alan Redpath. Victorious Christian Living, Fleming H. Revel, Baker Book House Company 1955. 
Ref 2: Harry Blamires. The Christian Mind, SPCK, 1963 
Ref 3: Robert Solomon. Growing Old Gracefully, Following Jesus to the End, Discovery House, 2019