
- Canna in Late Afternoon
“Sanctification is not my idea of what I want God to do for me; sanctification is God’s idea of what He wants to do for me, and He has to get me into the attitude of mind and spirit where at any cost I will let Him sanctify me wholly.” (Oswald Chambers, My Utmost for His Highest, p. 227)
These words spoke to me today in a quite powerful manner. I may think I need patience, so I ask God for patience. He knows I really need to re-prioritize my life, so He allows the difficulties and frustrations to continue, and gives me no extra patience. He does that so that I will re-evaluate my life and priorities.
I may think I need physical healing, or relief from any sort of “thorn in the flesh”. He may know that I need to value His grace more than I need removal of the thorn, so he tells St. Paul: “My grace is sufficient for you…” (2 Corinthians 12).
I may want God to work in one way but His desire may be that I go a better direction. Jesus describes the work of God in John 6:29, “Jesus answered, ‘The work of God is this: to believe in the one he has sent.’”
Ultimately, God’s desire is that we believe in Jesus and receive His gift of life and salvation. There are many ways in which that may be worked out. And once we’re there; once we’re in the faith, He still works in us to bring us back to Jesus, to help us trust more and more in Him, to sustain us in our life of faith, and to honor him for His work in us (even faith itself is God’s gift!).
This canna gathered the sun’s rays in the late afternoon and did what God called it to do: display His glory. As we seek God’s work in our lives and ask Him to form in us that which is pleasing to Him, our prayers will delight in calling out to God: “Do Your work in me! Thy will be done!” This is no cop out; this is faith in its deepest and most profound mode: seeking to have God’s will and work done in and through us. Sometimes that may mean patiently waiting for the late afternoon sun or the early morning dew. Sometimes it may mean working diligently in His kingdom. Always it means knowing and doing the true work of God – not just our version of spiritual progress, according to our human will.
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