Archive for November, 2008
Hebrews 2:1-3
“Therefore we must pay much closer attention to what we have heard, lest we drift away from it. For since the message declared by angles proved to be reliable and every transgression or disobedience received a just retribution, how shall we escape if we neglect such a great salvation?”
These are verses that I am compelled to meditate upon every single time I read them. For no matter where I might be in my walk with the Lord, I need to take heed to these words. For if ever I fail to pay close attention to all that I have heard concerning Jesus Christ, I am in danger of falling away. Let him who stands firm, take heed lest he fail. More specifically, let him who stands firm, take heed to the word concerning Jesus Christ, lest he fall.
Notice that the concern of the writer of Hebrews is not a blatant turning away from the faith. It is not our waking up one day and rejecting all we have heard concerning Christ in one fell sweep. No. It is drifting that is the danger. Or more specifically, drifting through neglect that is the danger. Turning from Christ usually does not happen in a moment. Indeed, even if it seems to happen in a moment, that moment is just the culmination of consistent neglect…consistent drifting.
The danger in the Christian life is a the danger of drifting. The danger of coasting. Cruising. Going with the flow. A sort of relaxed mentality that refuses to fight for life. A ‘chill’ mentality that fosters a false security and fails to pay consistent and persistent close attention to all we have heard concerning the Word of Life.
The truth concerning Jesus Christ is so great, so glorious, so awesome that it is deserving of our consistent and persistent meditation. If it is boring to us any day, that is not because the truth itself is boring, but because we have a problem. And we fail to realize the importance of keeping our hearts hot and humble. The words above are plain: if we do not pay consistent close attention to all we have heard concerning Christ, there is a very good chance we will fall away. Consistent neglect inevitably precedes persistent unbelief. Drifting hardens millions more than any one single attack. Our greatest danger is our own tendency to cruise.
And lest we think that a great deal of religious activity guards us from cruising, we are wise to recognize that we can cruise even amidst much religious activity. Practicing the spiritual disciplines guarantees nothing, though such consistent practice is vital. For we must practice the disciplines with a certain desperation. A certain recognized need. A certain realization that we need to keep our hearts hot and humble today. That we need the Lord. That we need Him to guard us from persistent neglect and drifting.
The warning given to us by the writer of Hebrews should serve to produce in us that sort of humbling realization. And in turn, should stir us to consistently and persistently meditate upon the truths concerning Jesus Christ. If we coast, we die. Therefore, we must take pains to consistently pursue, seek, take heed….for our good and the Lord of God.
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