Some time ago, I asked the women who were attending a weekend conference where I was speaking, to write on a 3×5 card why they had come, and what it was they were hoping God would do in their lives through the weekend. Where does God find you as we start this weekend? I asked.
Later, as I read the responses to my question, I was amazed at how many of them sounded alike. Here is a sampling of what those women expressed:
I feel Im out of control sometimes with so many pressures.
I face too much stress and responsibility.
I feel like Im torn in all directions. I want God to show me how to manage my different hats of teacher, mother, wife, and daughter successfully, and still have time for church work and me.
I need to stop worrying about everything. I try not to and I know I shouldnt, but my worries that I conjure up even disturb my sleep and dreams.
Ive given myself up to service for about twenty-four months, and I feel a need to slow myself down and renew myself, but life gets real hectic. With a new baby, I need to find the Lords peace and restphysically and emotionally.
I often get busy and find my day gone without having done the things I most wanted to do.
I am a single person by divorce, and I really am tired.
Ive left a whirlwind at home, and need a renewed spirit to face all that these coming weeks will hold.
I want to slow down. I feel as if Im on a speeding treadmill, and if I try to jump off I will stumble and fall. I need help with my frazzled, frenzied state.
My busyness has robbed me of my joy.
Do you find yourself relating to any of these feelings? I find these kinds of responses are increasingly common among the people I meet. Why do we live such hectic, harried lives? Is this what God intended for us? Does He understand? And can we actually get off that speeding treadmill without hurting ourselves (and others) in the process?
Busy Days The first chapter of the Gospel of Mark gives us a glimpse into a day in the life of the Lord Jesus. In some respects, this particular day was not unlike many of the days that you and I experience. We pick up the account in verse 21:
They went to Capernaum; and when the Sabbath came, Jesus went into the synagogue and began to teach. The people were amazed at his teaching, because he taught them as one who had authority, not as the teachers of the law.Mark 1:21-22 niv If youve ever taught a Sunday school class, led a small group, or taught a Bible study, you know that you dont just get up before a group and teach the Word of God with power and effectiveness, apart from a lot of time spent in preparationnot just preparation of the notes and the material, but preparation of your heart and life.
My friends can tell you that whenever I am preparing to speak, I go through intense labor pains. I agonize to determine what it is that the Lord wants me to teach; I wrestle with the passages involved, seeking to understand what the Scripture really means; I labor to put the material together in a form that is understandable and meaningful to the listener.
Throughout the process, I ask the Holy Spirit to search my own heart, and to show me where I dont measure up to the truth I am about to proclaim. Before opening my mouth to speak, I spend time in prayer, pleading with God for a fresh anointing of His Spirit on my life and my lips, and interceding for those who will hear the message.
Then, while Im actually teaching, there is more energy expendedphysically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually. I am intensely focused, never letting up from my goalfor the truth to penetrate every heart and for every individual to say yes to God about any issue He is addressing in their life.
When I have finished speaking, the battle is still not overthat is when the enemy often seeks to discourage me with feelings of inadequacy or to tempt me with seeking the praise of men for my ministry.
So when I read that Jesus began this particular day by teaching in the synagogue, I know this was not just a casual effort on His part. The people listened attentively to Him because they could tell this was not your normal, run-of-the-mill Sabbath message. Unlike the preachers they were accustomed to hearing, Jesus spoke with authority and power. We know that in order for this to be possible, He had spent concentrated time with His heavenly Father in preparation. As He ministered, He was being expended on behalf of others.
Confronting Evil This was just the beginning of Jesus dayHis work was not nearly over. Before He even had a chance to finish His message, there was an interruption in the service. Lets continue reading in Mark 1:
Just then a man in their synagogue who was possessed by an evil spirit cried out, What do you want with us, Jesus of Nazareth? Have you come to destroy us? I know who you arethe Holy One of God! Be quiet! said Jesus sternly. Come out of him! The evil spirit shook the man violently and came out of him with a shriek. The people were all so amazed that they asked each other, What is this? A new teachingand with authority! He even gives orders to evil spirits and they obey Him.Mark 1:23-27 Here we see Jesus engaged in a battle between heaven and hell. Obviously, this was not some casual, relaxed encounter with the enemy. This was all-out warfare.
Now, I have never exorcized a demon. And in the course of an average day, you and I are not likely to have audible or visible encounters with demons. But Gods Word teaches that we are in the midst of a battle against principalities and powersthat at this very moment there is a cosmic warfare being waged between heaven and hell. And sometimes, God sends us right into the frontlines of that battle. Many of the people we encounter and deal with on a daily basis are in the midst of an intense spiritual battle for their soul, and sometimes we get caught in the crossfire.
In the course of being a mate, a parent, a friend, an employee, you will find yourself in the midst of difficult, strenuous, demanding situations, where you have to be alert to the schemes of Satan and skilled in using the sword of the Spirit to fight off his attacks. There is a natural drain that is a part of being Gods servant in these situations. Jesus experienced those moments of intense confrontation with the powers of darkness.
As a result of this encounter with the demonized man, the Scripture tells us that news about him spread quickly over the whole region of Galilee (v. 28). Try to imagine how that must have complicated Jesus life. All of a sudden, everyone wanted Him to come speak at their synagogue or banquet, everyone wanted to interview Him for their publication, everyone wanted Him to heal their sick and cast out their demons. Later in this passage we learn that the time finally came when Jesus couldnt even stay in the cities, but had to find quiet, remote places where the crowds couldnt find Him, in order to get time alone with His Father.
Perhaps you have had the experience of ministering to someone in need- lending a listening ear to a discouraged friend, helping out in your childs Sunday school department, preparing a meal for a family in a crisis, ministering to a friends troubled teenager, offering biblical counsel to a couple with a shaky marriage. Then, the word spreads that you are available to help people in needand all of a sudden, your phone is ringing off the hook with people wanting you to help.
Everybody Needs Me! Well, the service at the synagogue is finally over, and we feel a sense of relief when we read the next verse: As soon as they left the synagogue, they went with James and John to the home of Simon and Andrew (v. 29).
Whew! Jesus has spent hours giving out and expending Himself for others. Finally He has a chance to get away with His friends, away from all the needy people. He gets to go home, kick up His feet, open up a good book, and relax- maybe even take a nap. Right? Wrong!
Read on: Simons mother-in-law was in bed with a fever, and they told Jesus about her (v. 30). Jesus is finally out of the public eye, back in the safe haven of a friends home, and even there, someone needs Him.
Do you ever feel that there is no time, no place where you can totally escape the demands of other people? If its not the people at work, its your mate; if its not your mate, its your children; if its not your children, its the neighbors children; if its not someone elses children, its your in-laws; if its not your in-laws, its . . . .
But as we would expect, the serving heart of Jesus comes out and He makes Himself available to meet the need: So he went to her, took her hand and helped her up. The fever left her and she began to wait on them (v. 31).
Finally, Jesus can close the door and settle in for a nice quiet evening alone with his friends. . . . Martha, go see whos knocking at the door!
That evening after sunset the people brought to Jesus all the sick and demon-possessed. The whole town gathered at the door. Mark 1:32-33 Remember, this is still the same dayHe started early that morning, teaching, casting out demons, and healing the sick, and now, the whole city is lined up at His door wanting help.
Do you ever feel like the whole town is gathered at your door? Maybe, as a mother, its your bathroom door, and youre just trying to get three minutes alone without having to answer any questionsbut somebodys knocking on the door, the doorbell is ringing, the phone is ringing, the oven timer is buzzing, your three children seem like thirty-three, you feel like half the world is sick, and everybody needs youall at the same time. You panic: Theres just not enough of me to go around!
And Jesus healed many who had various diseases. He also drove out many demons. Mark 1:34 How Did He Do It? You wonder, How did He do it? How did Jesus keep meeting the needs of so many people, without falling apart Himself?
We know Jesus was God. But He was also a manHe got tired, He got hungry, He knew what it was to have crowds pressing around Him all the time. But He kept right on letting the crowds into His life. He kept on teaching, healing, confronting the powers of helland never a cross or impatient word.
He never seemed hurried or harried or overwhelmed with all there was to do in a day. Why not? How did He handle all the stress, strain, and responsibility without losing it?
I believe verse 35 gives us the keynot only to Jesus life, but also to your life and mine, whatever our specific responsibilities and circumstances may be. That verse begins, Very early in the morning . . . .
I dont know about youbut when Ive had a long, draining day like the one we just read about, I know exactly what I want to do very early the next morning. Nothingexcept sleep! Now, theres nothing wrong with sleeping when our bodies need it. But Jesus knew there was something He needed that next morning, even more desperately than His body needed sleep. He had poured Himself out for countless needy individuals, and His spirit needed to be replenished. He knew it would never happen once the crowd woke up, so what did He do?
Very early in the morning, while it was still dark, Jesus got up. . . . He got up! The Scripture says that Jesus was tempted in every point as we are; so I have no doubt that Jesus was tempted to sleep in. But He made a choice to say no to His body and yes to His Father. He got up. Then He left the house and went off to a solitary place, where He prayed (v. 35).
Why was this morning tryst with His Father so crucial to Jesus earthly ministry among us?
Jesus knew that any power or ability He had to minister to others was due to the fact that He was one with the Father. He knew it was essential for Him to stay connected to His Father, for that was His Source of life, of joy, of power, of peace, of fruitfulness. He had no other purpose for being on this earth than to do the will of His Father. So He had no higher priority than to abide in intimate, unbroken fellowship with His Father, so that He might fulfill His Fathers will.
For Jesus, time alone with God was not an option. It was not something He tacked on to an overcrowded schedule. It was His lifeline to the Father. It was not something He could do without. It was the highest priority of His life -more important than being with His disciples, more important than preaching the gospel, more important than responding to the demands and needs of the crowds, more important than anything else.
The Gospel of Luke tells us that Jesus often withdrew to lonely places and prayed (Luke 5:16). This was the pattern of His life. This is where He got His marching orders for the day. This is where He discovered the will of God for His life. This is where He got renewed and restored when virtue had gone out of Him as He ministered to the crowds. This is where He gained the resources to do battle against Satanand win! This is where He stepped back from the corruption, clutter, and clamor of life on this earth, and was given the ability to see the world from Gods point of view. This is where He received grace to love the un-lovable and power to do the impossible.
And this is precisely where you and I so often miss out on all that God has for us. Unlike Jesus, we attempt to live life in our own energy. We think we can keep giving out without getting replenished. Then, wearied and weakened by the demands of life and ministry, we become impatient and annoyed with the very ones God has sent us to serve. Rather than exhibiting a gracious, calm, joyous spirit, we become uptight, frazzled, frenzied men and women, resenting, rather than welcoming, the people and opportunities that God brings into our lives.
Is it really possible for us to manifest the same spirit as Jesus did when facing pressure? That all depends on whether we are willing make the same choice He made, to adopt His number one priority as the number one priority of our lives:
Very early in the morning, while it was still dark, Jesus got up, left the house, and went off to a solitary place, where He prayed . Mark 1:35 _________________ Michelle
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