Psalm 42:8 NIV
By day the Lord directs his love, at night his song is
with me— a prayer to the God of my life.
Things are bad, but they shall not always be so. Though
affairs are now in an evil plight, they may not always be so. After the storm
there will come a calm, and the prospect of this supported him when deep called
unto deep.
In his book Soul Searching, Christian Smith summarized
perceptions about God that are prevalent in the church and in contemporary
culture. He said that most young evangelicals believed in what could best be
described as "moral, therapeutic deism" (we could also call this
viewpoint "the Santa Claus god").
Moral implies that God wants us to be nice. He rewards
the good and withholds from the naughty.
Therapeutic means that God just wants us to be happy.
Deism means that God is distant and not involved in our
daily lives. God may get involved occasionally, but on the whole, God functions
like an idea not a personal being actively present in our world.
According to Smith, this is the version of God that's
prevalent in our culture and in our churches. Often without realizing it, every
culture quietly molds and shapes our views of God. But we can't grow in our
relationship with God when we insist on relating to God as we think he should
be. It's the same way in our human relationships: if I demand that you just
meet my needs and conform to my assumptions about you, you will probably feel
cheapened and manipulated.
That's why our surrender to God-as-he-is, as revealed in
the Bible, is so important. Otherwise, we will have a god of our own
imaginations—and, embarrassingly, our American god is an obese, jolly toymaker
who works one day a year.
Have you surrendered to God or are you talking on life’s
battles yourself?
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