Strawberries and Religious Works: Three Ways Works Deceive Us

Charm is deceitful and beauty is vain, but the (person) who fears the Lord is to be praised. Proverbs 31:30
 
By: Carol McClain @carol_mcclain
I sliced into a strawberry. The red fruit was large and perfectly formed. It lay in a container with other berries identical to it. My mouth watered with the promise of the sweetness of summers past.
Those berries had been small. My daughter, Sarah, and I would crawl along a friend’s field and pick. The juice stained our fingers (and our mouths–we never deceived Louise, the owner of the field, that the berries we weighed were the only ones we took). Not able to wait until we washed the fruit, we gobbled the irregularly shaped strawberries with bits of sand still clinging to them.
This morning I dug into my huge berry-laden bowl of cereal. And the promise of the outward appearance deceived me. Strawberries had gone the way of tomatoes and become beautiful, tempting cardboard.
That’s us and our works.
Too often, I’d been deceived by the promise of ministry. I wanted to work for God and the bigger the better.
Little did I know how skewed my perception was.
Sitting on the vine soaking in the sunshine of God’s Being, being rained on by His majesty and His perfect ways is what God wants of us.
Priscilla Shirer in Discerning the Voice of God says, “Often we seek to know God’s direction more than we seek to know God. We bypass the relationship because we would rather have answers about us” (67).

Your works are deceiving you if:

  1. You want the BIG gifts–pastorate, missionary, teacher because of the glory they bring to you. Too many Christians are impressed by these gifts. I met a woman, typical of many Christians, who, when she learned my husband was a pastor, turned her whole attention to me. Then she discovered he’d retired. She no longer would look my way because a retired pastor held no glory. Too many want the works so they can boast.
  2. You believe God will only accept you if you work.  In April 24th’s blog, we explored how works are a natural outflow of love, not a way to earn it.
  3. They interfere with sitting down and knowing God. I can cook, clean, and gift my husband, but if I don’t sit in his presence and know who he is, my marriage isn’t going to make it. I do the above because I know him and love him. I don’t do it to earn his affection or respect.
Works, too often, are about us, not about our relationship.

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