What has God put on your heart to do? by John Paul Jackson
http://www.streamsministries.com/
Is
there something you’ve been considering doing lately? Do you have a
thought rolling around in your head that maybe you should be paying more
attention to? What has God put on your heart to do?
You are
probably familiar with Jesus’ metaphor of new wine and new wineskins
(Matthew 9:17). The general explanation is that when God is doing
something new, we need to be open to it. Many of us rightly equate this
metaphor to moves of God that seem large and obvious, such as churchwide
or citywide revival. But it can also apply to our lives on a more
individual, everyday scale.
Some of us have been Christians for
so long that we have become rather set in our ways. Perhaps we’ve even
adopted a type of spiritual atrophy and aren’t doing anything other than
what we have done in the past. However, throughout Scripture, the
people of God who are known for their great faith had to bend with the
Holy Spirit. They had to leave behind their normal schedules and typical
behavior in order to follow the plan of God for their lives. They
accepted the “new wine” when it was presented to them, and they were
open to the often radical change it had on their plans and life goals.
New
wine — the new thing God is doing — requires new wineskins: people who
are willing to be soft and pliable in God’s hands. They change shape as
God pours into them, and they listen when He speaks.
What is God
asking you to do that may require a bit of bending on your part? What
have you been considering doing that maybe you should just go ahead and
do? Is it getting up earlier to spend time with Him? Is it exercising
regularly? Is it being kind to someone? Is it writing the book you’ve
been thinking about writing or applying for a different job? Perhaps
this recurring thought you’ve been having is something you should listen
to.
Paul wrote in 1 Corinthians 2:10, “God has revealed them to
us through His Spirit. For the Spirit searches all things, yes, the deep
things of God.” The Holy Spirit is the Great Communicator who searches
the very deepest parts of God and then reveals them to us. The Spirit of
the Living God dwells in, empowers, prepares and equips us so that we
can get where we need to go and do what God has called us to do — so we
reach the purpose for which He created us. Our next step could be as
simple as paying attention to the idea that keeps coming up, the thought
that keeps returning to us.
What is God telling your heart to
do? Are you doing it? Whatever it is, it is sure to be a grand
adventure, and it is sure to produce change.
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