Over the past week my family and I have moved into a new house down the road. Our prayers to own a house in Sydney have been answered by our gracious and generous God who has fulfilled His promise to establish us in Australia. Like Joshua affirmed, not one word has failed from God's promises to His people and we are thankful and grateful for His faithful provision.
The days this week ran together as we rose early and stayed up late packing, moving, arranging, and organising in the new house and cleaning the house we vacated. My thoughts have been as scattered as the books, boxes, and furniture around the house and the chaotic mess around me. I have been easily distracted by jobs unfinished and I forgot as soon as I remembered. A couple of maxims have been confirmed during this move, and one of these is it is better to be done than perfect. Striving for perfection from the onset leads to analysis paralysis or sets up an impossible standard to meet. Better to be satisfied with your best effort given the circumstances rather than giving up or procrastinating and accomplishing nothing.
As we moved furniture and boxes into the new house, I learned new doesn't mean perfect. One might assume a new house is free from defects or flaws but this is an unrealistic expectation. We have found several flaws in the design and workmanship the professional builders ignored or missed, and this should be expected because no one is perfect. Our second day of living in the house I dug tools out of boxes to fix a fitting on our rainwater tank that had been dripping for months. The inspector we hired wrote reports of defects and commented on the poor quality of aspects of construction and thankfully none of them are serious.
The concept of new not being perfect reminds me of our lives after we come to Jesus in faith. After being born again the Holy Spirit regenerates us through the Gospel and makes us new creations. Not one person who is made new is instantly made perfect. As long as we live in these bodies we will fall short of perfection. We retain deeply flawed in our ways of thinking and feelings can lead us to stray from Christ. Moving into a new house means carrying a lot of your old stuff (and junk!) from the old house into the new one, and we can bring sinful habits into the new relationship we have with God. We are wise to make the most of the new start God gives us initially (and every day) to keep our minds and hearts clean of rubbish and filth.
Praise the LORD for the opportunity for relationship God extends by grace to all. Knowing Him is better than a new house which will grow old, fade, gather dust, and require expensive maintenance. Even now Jesus is preparing a place for us to live together with Him forever, and as suitable as this new house is I am really looking forward to moving day with Him.
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