Today's promise: God is our security
Where is your desire?
Whom have I in heaven
but you? I desire you more than anything on earth.
Psalm 73:25 NLT
Heart's desire
In The Lion, the
Witch, and the Wardrobe when the Beavers inform the children that Aslan is
on the move, the children feel a strange stirring in their hearts. Peter in
particular says he's "longing" to meet this Aslan.…he doesn't say
he's curious; he says he's longing, and that carries a very different meaning….
To long for something
means you've had it in your mind for a while, the way you fix your heart on
getting that iPod for Christmas…. Longing carries with it the concept of
desire.
Yearning Desire. It's a theme that weaves throughout the life
and works of C. S. Lewis. In Surprised by Joy, he introduces the concept
of longing as the signature quest of his childhood and young adulthood.
I t wasn't until Lewis
converted to Christianity that he eventually realized what he'd been longing
for: God. Not the Norse gods of the pagan world, not even the gods or spirits
of fantasy worlds, but the God of the Bible — a real, living Being in whom we
can have life forever.
With our own friends,
part of our role is to help them understand that their longing comes from an
inborn desire to know the King of the universe. And, like the Beavers with
Peter, we are to tell our friends about the King — that his return is imminent,
that he is on the move even now.
We're all longing to
meet the true King. Will you recognize his name when you hear it? Will you help
others do the same?
adapted from Walking Through the Wardrobe by Sarah
Arthur (Tyndale) pp 77-83
Content is derived
from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation and other publications of Tyndale
Publishing House
No comments:
Post a Comment