Amos 8:1-12
Colossians 1:15-28
Luke 10:38-42
Putting God first: easier said than
done. Putting God first in our lives is
difficult and challenging because we are busy people with so many distractions
and influences vying for our attention.
The loudest, the boldest, the urgent ones tend to dominate our decisions.
There was a woman who bought a
parrot to keep her company. She took him
home, but returned the bird to the store the next day.
“This bird doesn’t talk,” she told the owner.
“Does
he have a mirror in his cage?” asked the owner.
“Parrots love mirrors. They see
themselves in the mirror and start up a conversation.”
The woman bought a mirror and left. The next day, she returned. The bird still wasn’t talking.
“How about a ladder? Parrots love walking up and down a ladder. A happy parrot is more likely to talk.”
The woman bought a ladder and left. Sure enough, she was back the next day; the
bird still wasn’t talking.
“Does you parrot have a swing? If not, that’s the problem. He’ll relax and talk up a storm.”
The woman reluctantly bought a swing and
left. When she walked into the store the
next day, her countenance had changed. She
exclaimed, “My parrot is dead.”
The pet store owner was shocked! “I’m so sorry. Tell me, did he ever say a word?” he asked.
“Yes, right before he died,” the woman
replied. “He said, ‘Don’t they sell any
food at that pet store?”
It is so easy for us, even with our best
intentions, to get our priorities mixed up and out of order.
The prophet Amos is speaking to the
people of Israel during a time of great peace and prosperity. However, the prosperity is only for a few
wealthy people at the expense of the many because they have put their own needs
and interests ahead of God. God speaks
through Amos a divine judgment to the people of Israel and Judah. God addresses them as those who “trample on
the needy” and “ruin the poor of the land”.
They are the ones who anxiously await the end of the Sabbath so they can
get back to selling their goods, particularly wheat, and ripping off their customers. And God describes their business practices as
immoral. They desire to deceive others
by charging a high price for a small amount or size of goods. To do so they “rig” their balances to deceive
their customers. In essence, the
Israelites seek their own profit ahead of seeking God, his righteousness and
justice.
The Lord promises to bring these
deceivers to justice by turning their “feasts into mourning” and their “songs
into lamentation”. There will be a
famine on the land, but not a famine from bread or thirst from water, but a
spiritual famine from hearing the word of God.
These immoral, self-centered deceivers “shall fall and never rise
again.” They will be lost wandering
seeking the Lord’s instruction and guidance but they will not find it.
These deceivers have turned away
from God. They have broken the covenant replacing
their relationship with God with their own wants, desires, interests, and
well-being. Whenever we place a higher
priority on pursuing our own wants and desires than on pursuing God, we are
immoral. This is not right and we need
to do something about it.
Mary and Martha are two sisters living
in the quiet town of Bethany a few miles east of Jerusalem. Jesus is looking for a quiet place to rest,
to get away from the crowds of people, to visit with friends. Mary and Martha are as much the same as they
are different. Martha is a dynamo of
activity, a type A personality. She’s a
doer. She was brought up to shower
guests in her home with extravagant hospitality. This meant cleaning up, giving the guests the
most comfortable seat in the home, straightening the furniture, picking up
things off the floor, and preparing a meal in a timely fashion. On the other hand, Mary is less concerned
with these details and demonstrates hospitality in a different way; a way that
is less hectic and more present in the moment.
Mary sits with Jesus and listens to him intently.
We know what happens next. Martha is not happy with Mary. She sees her “just sitting there” as laziness
and an unwillingness to be helpful and hospitable. Martha is resentful of her sister who is, in
her eyes, not doing her part. But you
see, what we have here is clash in priorities.
Yes, they are both seeking to be hospitable to their guest. Yes, they both care a great deal about their
guest’s comfort. But Jesus says, “there
is need of only one thing” right now and Mary has chosen it. In essence what Jesus is saying to Martha is
this: thank you for your hard work and your hospitality and your kindness toward
me. I appreciate it. But I need a different kind of hospitality
and kindness from you right now like what Mary is doing. I need you, Martha, to be fully present here
with me right now. All of you; come and
sit and be present with me. I want to be
your top priority. And he wants to be
our number one priority, too.
When I look at the world around us,
it appears that we are going nowhere fast.
We are in a hurry to get things done, these “priorities” of ours, that
we rush and rush around until our lives are no longer joyful. Our minds are filled with “to do lists” of
people to call, things to buy, and events to attend. And in the rat race of life it is very easy
for us to get off track putting our work, our play, our families, our friends,
our own wants and desires in the driver’s seat of our lives rather than
God.
I’ve heard it said time and time
again that most middle-class Americans tend to worship their work, to work at
their play, and to play at their worship of God.
How can we change this? How can you and I be agents of change not
only in our own lives but in the world around us? How can we put God first in our lives?
First, we must be fully committed
to God in Christ Jesus. As our train
journeys down the track of life, you and I are not driving this thing; we are
not in the locomotive at the controls moving this train along. If we are fully committed to God in Christ,
we have given the controls over to Him.
We submit ourselves completely to God.
God in Christ is our number one priority before everything else. And God directs us in the way we need to
go. Jesus in the gospel stories tells a
parable about a rich young ruler who asked Jesus what he must do to inherit
eternal life. He has kept the Law of
Moses since he was a young boy and achieved great personal success. But when Jesus says to him, “Sell all your
possessions, give the money to the poor and then come and follow me”, the rich
young ruler went away sad because he was unwilling and unable to give up his
power and wealth. The top priority of
the rich young ruler is his wealth and power rather than submission to
God. Putting God first enables us to put
our wealth, power and influence in proper perspective.
Second, we must be fully
committed to one another in Christ as a community of believers and as children
of God.
I believe we are all familiar with the Titanic and what happened to this
ship. Catering to the rich and famous,
this luxury liner was advertised as unsinkable. On Titanic’s fateful
night, many passengers were unable to enter a lifeboat because of the selfish,
privileged passengers who felt no concern for anyone but themselves. The
first-class passengers feared that added weight in the lifeboats would
jeopardize their chance for survival. As a result, many of the ship’s
lifeboats, which were made to hold up to 60 people, left the ship with only 15
people aboard.
Although
there were enough lifeboats to save hundreds more, people were left stranded on
the sinking liner.
We need to be committed to one
another in Christ if we are going to be obedient disciples of Christ. This means we do not leave anybody
behind. We do not keep certain people
out of our community. We do not live the
Christian faith on our own. We need God
in Christ and we need one another; for
encouragement, Christian love, strength and more. We need one another so we can be “a royal
priesthood, a holy nation, God’s own people” to the world around us “in order
that we may proclaim the mighty acts of him who called us out of darkness into
his marvelous light.” (I Peter 2:9)
This leads to my third point: we
must be committed to the work of Christ in the world. God in Christ is at work all around us. Sometimes it’s hard to see. So we must be the hands and feet of Christ in
our neighborhoods, our workplaces, our activities and in our common daily
interactions with others. We’ve got a
lot to share about Christ: “he’s the image of the invisible God, the firstborn
of all creation; for in him all things in heaven and on earth were created,
things visible and invisible,…all things have been created through him and for
him.” (Colossians 1:15-16) In one sense
this is very easy because the story of Jesus is the most amazing story ever
told. But it’s also so hard because it feels
as if we are runnin’ and gunnin’ through life at high speed and do not have the
time to do the necessary work.
Many years ago a seminary professor had a
class of fifteen students who were preparing for the ministry. At the beginning
of one of his classes, he distributed envelopes to the students with sealed
instructions.
Five students received instructions to
proceed across the campus without delay. The directions read, “You have 15
minutes to reach your destination. You have no time to spare. Don’t loiter or
do anything else, or your grade will be negatively affected.”
The next five students also received
instructions to make their way across the campus, but they were given 45
minutes to do so. “You have plenty of time,” their directions read, “but don’t
be too slow.”
The last five students received instructions
to get to the other side of campus anytime before five o’clock, giving them
about five hours to complete the assignment.
What the students didn’t know was that the
professor had arranged for several drama majors from a nearby university to
position themselves along the path that led across campus. The drama students
were instructed to act as though they were suffering and in great need.
One pretended to be homeless, in need of food
and clothing. Another sat with his head in his hands, crying as if he had just
experienced a terrible tragedy. Still another acted as if he were in desperate
need of medical care.
You can imagine what happened as the seminary
students tried to complete their assignments. None of the students in the first
group stopped to offer any help to the “needy people.” Only two students in the
second group did. But all five students in the third group took time to stop
and help.
We live busy lives. It feels like the world is in some big hurry
but doesn’t know why. Our busyness, if
we allow it, can cloud our judgment so we mix up our priorities, and forget our
commitment to the work of Christ in the world.
Each of us, no matter what, needs to take
time out from the busyness of life. Dive
into God’s Word, get in a small group bible study with other Christians, and
take time to pray, to have routine conversations with God. When we get all mixed up, we need to get our
mind and spirit on the right track.
Over and over again I know this to be true:
when God in Christ is your number one focus, your number one priority, God puts
everyone and everything else in proper perspective.
When we put God first, we get back on the
right track. When we put God first,
we’re headed in the right direction.
When we put God first, we commit ourselves to Him, we commit ourselves to
one another, we commit ourselves to the work of Christ in the world and our
train is bound for a glorious and blessed destination. Amen.
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