I spoke Sunday at Gresham Bible Church, a recently-formed fellowship with lots of “former-kids” in their mid-twenties. It was Father’s Day, and my daughter Angela introduced me. Her kind words brought tears to my eyes. (No matter who says what about my books or my life, I always care most what my wife and daughters think, because next to God they know best who I really am.)
As I spoke, I looked out at these people thinking how thirty years ago Nanci and I were in the brand new Good Shepherd Community Church (in Boring, Oregon, believe it or not—the local ministerial group was called The Boring Pastors’ Fellowship.) Our first service was May 1, 1977. I was a twenty-two year old pastor, who didn’t know beans.
Thirty years later, I’ve still got a lot more to learn, but I’ve got a little more to offer, some of it learned the hard way. (Have you had the experience of spending so many years being the young guy, that you’re sometimes shocked to look around the room and realize you’re the oldest? Okay, I turn 53 next week, so I’m not a fossil, but you get the idea. :) )
So anyway, I offered some fatherly advice to these twenty-somethings, including Paul’s five word purpose statement from Philippians 3, “I want to know Christ.” Then I shared more fatherly advice from the aged John who wrote in the final sentence of his first letter, “Little children, keep yourself from idols.”
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Last month Nanci and I attended a thirty year reunion of our old church college group from Powell Valley Covenant Church, less than a mile from where we live. About forty of us came. We sang the old songs. And I mean old. See those colorful song sheets in the picture?
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Some marriages had died too, a couple had gone through mental breakdowns, others had financial meltdowns. Some had grown children on drugs and in jail, some had cancer and other illnesses. (I’ve got one of my own—insulin dependent diabetes, a thorn in the flesh that is God’s gracious gift to me).
But it wasn’t a depressing evening – it was exactly the opposite. Here we were, laughing and crying and repeatedly saying “God has been faithful.” One woman who’d lost a child was struggling with depression. She almost didn’t come, but that night was therapy for her. We lingered late, and sounds of crying were buried under sounds of laughter. I thought of the promise of Jesus: “Blessed are you who mourn, for you will laugh” (Luke 6:21).
When we sang the biblical songs, instead of being disillusioned because they hadn’t proven true, we were encouraged because they were truer than we’d known back then. God had indeed been our refuge and our strength, a very present help in the time of trouble. He alone is worthy of the full weight of our trust.
It was exhilarating to look around and realize that by God’s grace, a number of us in the room had experienced what Eugene Peterson called, in his book title, A Long Obedience in the Same Direction. We left that night, encouraged to finish well. Of course, death is not a hole but a doorway, and finishing well here will start us well in the life that will go on forever in the next world. What will it mean to hear our Savior and Master and Best Friend say to us, “Well done, my good and faithful servant. Enter into Your Master’s Joy”?
So I challenged those young people at church on Sunday: Understand how quickly your life will pass. And if God gives you another thirty years here, live them in such a way so that when you receive an invitation to your church’s 30-year reunion, you will want to come instead of stay away.
Nanci and I thank God that we don’t just love Jesus as much as we used to, we love Him more. That is to His credit, and we’re deeply grateful. He’s what makes it so exciting and so worthwhile, and He’s the one who empowers us to walk “a long obedience in the same direction.”
More than ever, I want to know Christ.
How about you?
This article originally appeared on Randy Alcorn’s personal blog, June 19, 2007. Visit the blog at http://www.randyalcorn.blogspot.com to read Randy’s latest thoughts on the Christian life, discipleship, books, family, and more.