21 December 2014

Window Shoppers

As Christmas draws near, there is no shortage of people bustling through the shops.  I suspect a vast majority of people are only at the shops because they have an express purpose to buys food or gifts they need before Christmas.  For some the shops is a time to socialise, eat, window shop, and enjoy the air conditioning, but that has no appeal for me at all.  Perhaps I show my age in that I am glad to wake up early and sacrifice a little sleep to do my shopping away from the crowds.  It is hard for me to imagine there are some people who will go to the shops during the busiest times of day and days of the year to enjoy a coffee, people watch, or window shop.

I remember talking to a woman at church years ago who freely admitted without apology that she brought her family to church because they didn't have air conditioning at home.  I found this admission startling.  It opened my eyes to understand there is a variety of reasons people come to church, even as there are different purposes for people spending hours at the shops.  At church this Sunday I asked the question:  "Why do you come to church?"  Do you go to church primarily to receive or to give?  Unless we attend church with the express purpose of giving to others balanced with receiving from God and others in the Body as well, it's likely we will accomplish neither.

If people go to the church and the shops for the air conditioning, perhaps people window shop at church too.  A window shopper is active to go to the shops, find a parking space, and walk around.  But the window shopper is not there to buy anything.  Perhaps short on money and without any commitment to spend, the window shopper is content with merely seeing new items on display or what is on special.  They want to taste free samples, but they have no intent to buy the products.  Their knowledge grows of new devices and products, as does their fantastic wish-lists.  The truth is, the window shopper displays a poverty of new possessions or gifts, exhibiting a fruitless use of time.  The window shopper, because he observes but does not buy, does not leave the shops with a item for personal use or a gift for others.

There is nothing wrong with window shopping, but there is a serious issue when a Christian takes this approach to their church fellowship.  There is a potential many who attend church are more curious about gaining knowledge or seeing what is on offer than committing to follow Jesus Christ at any cost.  They are very interested in learning about spiritual gifts or hearing someone speak in tongues with an interpretation or a experiencing healing.  But interest or curiosity does not mean that there is any desire or warmth of heart towards being baptised with the Holy Spirit or using spiritual gifts for the edification of the church and the benefit of others.  They merely attend for new knowledge or experiences, social interaction, a coffee, maybe even some air conditioning.  Friends, shops do not exist to supply you with knowledge leading to covetousness, and God did not establish the church to appease your curiosity.  The church exists to glorify Jesus Christ, make disciples, and edify the Body of Christ.  It is all about complete commitment to inner transformation, not merely the transfer of information.

Following Jesus results in being changed - not a fantasy that we might change.  Even as you must be willing to pay the price listed on an item to legally take it home with you, so we must be willing to meet God's conditions supplied according to His grace.  It is the servant who shows himself faithful and obedient to whom God gives greater responsibility, not the one who only turns up when the master is around.  Those who approach Bible study, spiritual gifts, or their role in the Body of Christ like browsing window shoppers who need no assistance - "No need for help, I'm only looking" - deny the power of the Holy Spirit and the edification of others God has supplied in the local church to supply strength, encourage, and accountability.

Commit to spend and be spent for God, dear Christian.  A window shopper is at best a half-hearted shopper, one who is content with longing when he ought to commit to buying and start saving.  Even when we have wandered from the LORD and feared full commitment of our life to Him, He will gladly receive us when we return to Him with our whole hearts.  Deuteronomy 4:29-31 says, "But from there you will seek the LORD your God, and you will find Him if you seek Him with all your heart and with all your soul. 30 When you are in distress, and all these things come upon you in the latter days, when you turn to the LORD your God and obey His voice 31 (for the LORD your God is a merciful God), He will not forsake you nor destroy you, nor forget the covenant of your fathers which He swore to them."  Don't be content to know God is a merciful God, but receive of His mercies which endure forever.  Obedience is often God's requirement before we can receive His mercy and goodness.  Make a full commitment today to obtain God's will at any price, and you will receive the blessing from the LORD.

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