Happy New Year!!
It’s that time of the year when
we are called to stop and take stock of where we are and if it is
truly where we want to be. The TV news shows are full of help for
those of us who annually resolve to eat better and exercise more.
But I’m not so sure there is help out there for those of you who
might be resolving to take your commitment to working out your
discipleship to Jesus Christ more seriously this year. As the new
officers were installed this month, we all promised, again, “to be
Christ’s faithful disciple, obeying his word and showing his love.”
Just how did you plan to do that?
The pressures of our modern world have reduced the obligation most
of us feel to fulfill many of the rituals that would have been the
hallmark of a Christian life just a generation or two ago. Families
rarely manage to sit down together for meals anymore, let alone
setting aside time for family prayer. Not many of you seem to be
telling Bible stories to your children. Not many of us begin every
day by reading the Bible. Hardly anyone quotes scripture as a part
of normal, daily conversation. Hardly any of us can manage to tithe
any more. Not many of us are even faithful about making church
attendance a priority for each and every week. I’m really sorry to
mention this, but that is not merely a good suggestion. The
Commandment says, “Remember that Sabbath day and keep it holy!”
(Exodus 20:8). One day in seven, all day. It’s good for you. It’s
good for your family. It’s good for everyone around you.
The rituals that used to help us recognize the sacredness of life
and notice the presence of God in the everyday events around us have
been relegated to holidays only, or have been completely abandoned.
We worship on Sundays, when it is convenient. We pray at
Thanksgiving, but not at other meals. We give to the needy at
Christmas, but not out of every pay check. We care about justice,
but we don’t have time to do anything to support a cause. We talk
about forgiveness, but rarely offer it.
So, what kind of rituals would be possible for you and your family?
What would it take to remind you every day that you belong to the
Lord Jesus first and foremost; and that you intend to follow Christ
as a priority this year?
May I suggest that the first thing is to add prayer to your morning
routine every day? It’s easy to just avoid thinking about spiritual
issues during the week; to believe it’s more important to get the
news or the stock quotes before you get to work. Stop! Make a new
priority. If you need a prompt, find one of those devotional books
and read a page before you get started every morning. Find a book
that touches you and keep it next to the coffee pot. It will put
your relationship to God right up there with brushing your teeth as
an absolute requirement before you can face the day. If whatever
you have been using doesn’t do that for you, find something else.
Ask me for some suggestions. You have to do it every day until it
becomes a habit. If you discover that you have forgotten one
morning, stop and do it right then. Five minutes will remind you of
your good intentions for that day—and for the year. Five minutes
can fill your consciousness with the love of God that will last all
day. It might even prompt you to take up some of those other
rituals. That would be good for you, too…..
-
Diane
Leesburg Presbyterian Church
207 W. Market Street; Leesburg, VA 20176
office 703-777-4163 | fax 703-777-4666
office@lpcva.org
| www.lpcva.org
