{Perhaps you need this chastising word as much as I do today.}
Christ came to earth to show us the Father, He modeled perfection for us, He gave everything and paved the way for His children to follow in doing the same. Christ is the example and our goal as His kids should be to be like Daddy. It’s so innate in us to do this that we can all conjure pictures of either ourselves or our children walking around in mom or dad’s big shoes. Even as kids we are drawn to follow the example set for us.
If Christ’s example could be put into a picture, I’d say it would be a waterfall. It’s powerful and pure, majestic and influential, beautiful and serene. It changes the environment around it, the sound resonates in your ears, it’s beautiful and attracting and yet the water stings and scourges all who dare draw near. That’s the model.
How many people aim for that influence, that power, that purity, that constancy?
We settle instead for being drippy faucets.
Christ models a waterfall and we settle for a drip of water in a targeted place released at a strategically acceptable time.
I’m fascinated with the Galatians, and so many others of there time actually. Their problem was sin and I grant that, but the sin they committed in wanting-or feeling as though they had- to do more intrigues me. They wanted to do MORE than was asked. They wanted to do it for all the wrong reasons, apparently, but they wanted to give God more not less than was being asked. I don’t see a ton of MORE when LESS seems such an acceptable option.
I went to the mob museum in Las Vegas recently. They have three kinds of tickets. You can do regular admission which just lets you walk around and look. Then they have a premium level that lets you go in the investigation room. And then there’s the prime that lets you do it all, including the gun range. Many places are like this. You can just get your foot in the door or you can come in with guns blazing.
Heaven might not be an exception.
Perhaps a drippy faucet sort of life will get you in the door. But it certainly isn’t what Christ said follow Him into. Maybe the basic admission ticket is ‘cheaper’ but the experience it gives you is just as dumbed down as the cost. Maybe the Father will look at our drippy attempts and say, “Yeah, the bar was set pretty high. Good try though!” And maybe He won’t. Maybe the example has been set and we should hold it as our target. Maybe bargain basement living isn’t what He showed us and it certainly isn’t what He died to give us.
C.S. Lewis was right, we are such trifling things going about after our temperal pleasures, unaware that they are mere mud pies in the slums. A feast at the seashore awaits us.
No one likes a drippy faucet, be the waterfall.