A Pound
Of The Eternal
David
E. Parks
One
of the most compelling quotes I have ever read comes from a book by Charles
Swindoll, Improving Your Serve: The Art of Unselfish Living.
Out of the hundreds of books that I have read over the decades, I know of
no quote that has frequently returned to my memory to challenge my thoughts and
deeds than the following quote that Swindoll Credits to Wilbur Rees.
What
a challenging statement! It reminds
me of an adage frequently set forth by the late Batsell Barrett Baxter.
He often warned his young students, "Many Christians have just
enough religion to be miserable. Far
too many people have missed the joy of Christianity because they have settled
for, "a pound of the eternal in a paper sack." In their efforts to
settle for "$3 worth of God" they have been disappointed to discover
that halfhearted service to God brings not "the warmth of the womb"
but "just enough religion to be miserable." It
was never God's purpose to establish a masochistic religion of misery. Jesus
said, "I have come that they
may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly" (John 10:10).
Most Bible scholars agree Jesus here spoke of both spiritual and temporal
life. The
reason we challenge people to put Christ first in their lives (mat. 6:33) is
because we want people to share in all that our Lord has prepared for them now
and in eternity.
Even if there was no Hell (and there is) no one should pass up an opportunity to "seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness."
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