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Choices,
Choices
(Minute Meditation - December 2005)
Your
life is the sum
result of all the choices you make...If you can control the process of
choosing, you can take control of all aspects of your life (Bob Bennett,
US Senator)
We know that we cannot
control all aspects of our life because we are stuck with the body we
inherit, the physical world we inhabit and the vagaries of the events
that swirl around us. But we can take control by choosing how we react
to the circumstances we face. Every day when we wake up, we get to choose
what kind of a day we want to have. Some people wake up “on
the wrong side of the bed,” and everyone around them soon can
see that their choice is to be miserable. Others decide to wake up happy
and share their joy with all they meet. We can choose to repeat the words
of the Psalmist as we wake up when he said, “This is the day
which the LORD hath made; we will rejoice and be glad in it,” or
we can moan, “another day older and deeper in debt.”
There are some people
who actually seem to believe that misery is next to godliness and the
more miserable they become the more godly they are. Now it is true that
all have sinned and come short of the glory of God and that we have inherited
a body that is so prone to sin that Paul lamented, “O wretched
man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death?”
However, we also know that “God so loved the world, that he
gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not
perish, but have everlasting life.” God has made it plain that
He would have His children to be happy in a godly way. Paul tells us,
“Rejoice in the Lord always.” Even in a time of calamity,
the prophet Habakkuk declared, “yet will I rejoice in the Lord,
I will joy in the God of my salvation.”
We need to count our
blessings and rejoice in the Lord. In the Psalms we read, “Happy
is he that has the God of Jacob for his help, whose hope is in the LORD
his God,” and “Happy is that people, whose God is
the LORD.” If we truly worship our God, we should be happy.
All around us, we find people whose god is money and the good life and
whose choices in life all center on getting more and having fun. Paul
comments, “You cannot fool God, so don’t make a fool of
yourself! You will harvest what you plant. If you follow your selfish
desires, you will harvest destruction, but if you follow the Spirit, you
will harvest eternal life.” We should be thankful that we are
different from those self-centered godless people around us, and we need
to make sure that we really are different.
Moses warned the children
of Israel as he drew near to the end of his life. He said: “I
call heaven and earth to record this day against you, that I have set
before you life and death, blessing and cursing. Therefore choose life,
that both you and your offspring may live, by loving the Lord your God,
by obeying his voice, and by cleaving unto him: for he is your life, and
the length of your days.” Joshua gave the people of his day
a similar charge, and they answered, “The LORD our God we will
serve, and his voice we will obey.” Our answer should be the
same as theirs. They said the right words but they did not long remember
them, for soon we read that every man was doing that which was right in
his own eyes.
Real happiness can be
ours right now by choosing to serve the Lord and rejoicing in the hope
that He has given us. It’s our choice. Neither God, nor Moses nor
Joshua, forced others to make the right choice, although they certainly
encouraged them to do so. We can choose to perish with the wicked, or
we can make the right choice and serve the Lord our God with all our heart.
If we do this, then God will be for us and who then can be against us?
We cannot control many
of the things we have to deal with in our lives, but we can choose our
attitude and what we do about them. As the senator commented, our life
is summed up by these choices. All down through the ages mankind has been
given this type of free choice. In the garden of Eden man and woman faced
their first moral decision, and we know they made the wrong choice. True
happiness comes from courageously making the right choices. Let us wake
up every morning deciding to serve and obey our God and rejoicing that
we have made the right choice. Then we will be among those who share the
joy of “our mouth filled with laughter, and our tongue with
singing: then we can say to all the heathen around us, The LORD hath done
great things for us. The LORD hath done great things for us; whereof we
are glad.”
Robert J. Lloyd
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