Whoever does God's will is my brother and sister... [Mark 3:34]
“Isn’t it crazy how we’re
all in God’s will but we’re going all over the place?”
Picnic talk at Rowan Oak,
Sunday April 29. It is crazy. So crazy I’m still not really certain
what to do about it, even though at last the time has just about come...
This year has been better
than I could ever express. I’m not
sure why the Lord chose to bless me, and bless my friends, with community and with
life so much greater than we deserve, but for some reason He did, and so we
have sought all year long to live a life worthy of what we have been
given. Over the course of the
year that has looked like a lot of different things; in a nutshell, it has
meant prayer, encouragement, service, milkshakes, camping, breakfast, disc golf
time for the boys, coffee shop time for the girls, Sots, Muffin Club, and
more. It has meant spending
intentional time with others, reaching out to them and seeking to show them
what Christ has done for us and what Christ wants to do for them. It has also meant spending intentional
time with each other, encouraging each other, rebuking each other, laughing
with each other, and loving each other as only brothers and sisters can.
And now, at long last, it seems the year is up and that it is time to go. To go
all of the places we have always talked about going. To do all of the things the Lord has prepared for us to
do. When I say go, I mean go. For a couple of us, go means stay –
stay in Oxford, finish school, continue to hold down the fort and look after
those we are leaving behind. For
the rest of us, go means go, quite literally. To Georgia, Kentucky, Texas and Jackson, to South Africa, to
the Middle East, and even to places yet to be revealed. Some of us go to
what seems like our dream job, and some of us go to Ninevah. But however we feel or whatever we
fear, we go. We go in peace, and
we go boldly, because it is the Lord’s will for our lives, and because it is
why we were brought together in the first place.
The last few days together
have been so sweet, and continue to be sweet. This weekend we attempted camping one last time, only to be
ousted by mosquitoes and chiggers in the middle of the night. But with a grove of cypress trees, a
full moon, and a beautiful sunset, how could we not be reminded that everything
is all right? How could we doubt
that God has orchestrated all of this as part of his perfect plan? Just like all we have seen this year so far. Just like always.
It’s hard to process this
stuff, to think about change and about saying goodbye, to deal with finals and
packing and the weight that all of it is.
Or, at least, it’s hard when we focus on it. But when we focus on Christ – when we fix our eyes on the
eternal perspective, on running to win the prize – we realize that it is actually
quite easy to go and to go boldly. After all, we’re actually not going away for all that long. Yes, it’s inconvenient to not be able to hang out at the
Brick House all together every single day for the rest of our lives. But one day soon we will be together
again, for eternity, doing what we all love best – worshipping at the
feet of Jesus, together, forever. And that
day is sooner than we think.
Then Jonathan said to
David, “Go in peace, for we have sworn friendship with each other in the name
of the Lord, saying, ‘The Lord is witness between you and me, and between your
descendants and my descendants forever.” [1 Samuel 20:42]
Go forth.
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