Day Three
”…BUT THINE.”

Today’s Scripture Reading

Now the boy Samuel was serving the LORD under Eli. The LORD’s word was rare at that time, and visions weren’t widely known. One day Eli, whose eyes had grown so weak he was unable to see, was lying down in his room. God’s lamp hadn’t gone out yet, and Samuel was lying down in the LORD’s temple, where God’s chest was.

The LORD called to Samuel. “I’m here,” he said.

Samuel hurried to Eli and said, “I’m here. You called me?”

“I didn’t call you,” Eli replied. “Go lie down.” So he did.

Again the LORD called Samuel, so Samuel got up, went to Eli, and said, “I’m here. You called me?”

“I didn’t call, my son,” Eli replied. “Go and lie down.”

(Now Samuel didn’t yet know the LORD, and the LORD’s word hadn’t yet been revealed to him.) 

A third time the LORD called Samuel. He got up, went to Eli, and said, “I’m here. You called me?” 

Then Eli realized that it was the LORD who was calling the boy. So Eli said to Samuel, “Go and lie down. If he calls you, say, ‘Speak, LORD. Your servant is listening.’” So Samuel went and lay down where he’d been.

Then the LORD came and stood there, calling just as before, “Samuel, Samuel!”

Samuel said, “Speak. Your servant is listening.”

The LORD said to Samuel, “I am about to do something in Israel that will make the ears of all who hear it tingle! On that day, I will bring to pass against Eli everything I said about his household—every last bit of it! I told him that I would punish his family forever because of the wrongdoing he knew about—how his sons were cursing God, but he wouldn’t stop them. Because of that I swore about Eli’s household that his family’s wrongdoing will never be reconciled by sacrifice or by offering.”

Samuel lay there until morning, then opened the doors of the LORD’s house. Samuel was afraid to tell the vision to 

Eli. But Eli called Samuel, saying: “Samuel, my son!”

“I’m here,” Samuel said.

“What did he say to you?” Eli asked. “Don’t hide anything from me. May God deal harshly with you and worse still if you hide from me a single word from everything he said to you.” So Samuel told him everything and hid nothing from him.

“He is the LORD,” Eli said. “He will do as he pleases.”

So Samuel grew up, and the LORD was with him, not allowing any of his words to fail.

1 Samuel 3:1-19

 

Reflection

In the previous two days, we’ve been motivated to reflect and take action on who we are and what it means to be no longer our own. Subsequently, let’s say that we are ready to fully surrender ourselves to God and God’s good, restoring work in the world. To whom and what, then, are we actually surrendering? If we are genuinely ready and willing to confront our own personal interests and desires and do the daily soul work required to make the effort of surrendering realized, then as we put down ourselves, what exactly are we picking up or taking on?

When we lay down our own interests and pick up God’s will for the world, we are picking up God’s mission. God’s mission is God’s loving action of restoring the world toward its intended wholeness, as we described in the preceding daily reflection. It is important for me to be clear that my intentional use of the words toward and wholeness is in an effort to make sure that I am not projecting the idea of going back to the way the world was in Eden. Instead, we are moving forward toward, or in the direction of, the way the world should be. This means that God desires for our world to be made whole, as it was at the time of Creation, and that is where God is taking us. God’s will is that the world would be made whole. God’s way of making that a reality, a peace-filled, harmonious world, is through the life, death, burial, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus. God’s work to make the world whole is done through the universal church living out the practices of Jesus, as empowered and guided by the Holy Spirit.

It might be said that God the Father sends God the Son, God the Son sends God the Spirit, and God the Spirit sends the church into the world. Perhaps this is the shortest way to understand and articulate the meta-narrative of the Bible. God is a missionary God, a sending God, who calls the Church, local and global, to participate with God in the mission and then sends the Church to accomplish the work. I believe that acceptance of this mission or to realize that “I am no longer my own, but Thine” requires faithful participation in God’s mission to grow toward deep levels of intimacy, vulnerability, and dependency.

To admit that we belong to God (or to say, “but thine”) is to declare God as Abba Father. This means that we have a closeness or togetherness, a deep familiarity with God. In the New Testament, Jesus refers to God as “Abba” in Mark 14:36 while praying in the garden of Gethsemane hours before his death. Abba is an Aramaic term meaning “father” that denotes the special intimacy of a father-son relationship. Intimacy means total life-sharing. Intimacy is a closeness or oneness either emotionally, physically, or socially that requires at least two key factors. These two factors are proximity and time. Proximity is nearness to another, and time is, of course, the instances in which we share life with God.

Vulnerability is opening up our lives in such a way as to expose our true self before God and others. To claim, “but thine” is, therefore, to invite God and God’s will into our lives, knowing that we are people in need of God’s redemption. Said differently, to pray, “but thine,” is to admit the need for a redeemer and then living daily knowing that God’s gracious gift of God’s Son, Jesus, as the Lord and Savior of the world, is where we find abundant life. When we live vulnerable Christian lives, we live knowing that we are opening ourselves up to what we’ve discovered we need most—redemption. By being vulnerable in this way, and linking to God’s mission, we are also putting ourselves in a position that could create inconvenience or even harder, more difficult positions of pain and suffering for the sake of the world. This is why, I believe, so many people struggle with intimacy with God, because it requires us to be vulnerable. And, in being vulnerable, completely or wholly vulnerable, we’d have to welcome the possibility of unwelcome and unwanted situations and circumstances in our lives.

 

When we live vulnerable Christian lives, we live knowing that we are opening ourselves up to what we’ve discovered we need most— redemption.

 

Finally, as participants with God in God’s mission, we strive for a deep level of dependency upon God. Through intimacy and vulnerability, we choose to persistently place our lives in God’s hands, trusting God for our every need—spiritually, emotionally, relationally, financially, and so forth. To depend on God is to live with a bias of hope that God is who God says God is. To live with dependence on God is to trust the mission of God. To live with dependence is to trust that the will, way, and work of God is true and active. Because of a commitment to those beliefs, it produces within us a confident expectation that in our work, no matter how overwhelming or daunting it may be, God’s will for a whole world will prevail and all things will one day be made new.

 

Today’s Challenge:

PROXIMITY AND TIME

Intimacy in any relationship requires proximity and time. Set your alarm on your phone, watch, or other clock at the top of each hour from 9:00 a.m. through 9:00 p.m. At the top of each hour, as the alarm reminds you, spend two minutes talking with God, reading a verse, listening, writing a prayer, or another activity. At the end of the day, take five minutes to journal your experience.

 

Personal Reflection

•On a scale of 1–10, 10 being no room for improvement, how fully surrendered am I to doing God’s good work in the world?

•Do I spend daily quality time with God, and do I readily admit that I am grateful for the gift of redemption?

 

Group Discussion

•How would you describe God’s will?

•In what ways is God a missionary God?

•Where do you find your “substance” for life?

•What does it mean to depend on God?

•What would you say is the main idea of this part of the prayer?

 

Departing Prayer

Guide us into holiness as we seek to draw near to you, share our lives with you, and learn to more deeply depend on you for all of our needs. Amen.

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