Guest Post
by Rhonda Rhea
excerpt from Chapter 14 of:
How Many Lightbulbs Does It Take to Change a Person?
I admit it, I’m a cruise fan. I love everything about it.
Especially the food. A cruise and overeating go together like a hand in
glove. Well more accurately, they go together like a size ten hand in a
size two glove. All the gourmet food you can eat, for crying out loud!
I guess I was just asking for a trip back to maternity pants. I now
refer to myself as “17 years post-partum.” The staff on the ship said
the average person gains seven to ten pounds on a seven-day cruise. But
then, I’ve always considered myself an overachiever.
On prime rib night, my husband and I were walking out of the dining
room and, even though he was about to let his belt out a notch, Richie
said he was thinking of ordering yet another prime rib. Another one! I
figured that could cost him at least another two belt notches. I told
him I thought that would be a mistake.
Get it? Prime rib? “Mis-steak”?
Anytime we’re going to overdo, though, it’s good to make sure we’re
“overdoing” in all the right areas. First Thessalonians 4:1 talks
about living right to please God and then it says, “Now we ask you and
urge you in the Lord Jesus to do this more and more.” To do and to
overdo. It’s an encouragement to keep growing. Not so much growing in
the “bring on the elastic waistbands” kind of growth. But growing in
maturity.
We grow as we seek to stay in the light, dwelling in the presence
of the Lord, making sure our lives are for Him and all about Him. Our
growth is not an option. It’s a command. Verse 7 in that same passage in
1 Thessalonians says, “For God did not call us to be impure, but to
live a holy life. Therefore, anyone who rejects this instruction does
not reject a human being but God, the very God who gives you his Holy
Spirit.”
Rejecting His instruction? Rejecting the Father Himself? Mistake of the highest order.
Growing in Him and dwelling in His presence results in a life in
which growing “a notch or two” spiritually is a regular happening. The
good kind of growth. And seeking that consistency in growth diligently.
There’s a lot at stake. Sometimes also a lot at steak.
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