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Faith Life

Obedience Over the Long Haul

I do not pray for success, I ask for faithfulness. ~Mother Teresa

path of obedience

The title of the book has stuck with me far longer than its content. A Long Obedience in the Same Direction, by Eugene Peterson, has winked at me from the bookshelves on more than one discouraging occasion.

The phrase is a quote from Friedrich Nietzschewho understood at least this about life: Faith is not an easy sprint to a stone’s-throw finish line.

The ideal of a quick, never questioning obedience leaves little wiggle room for human frailty. Who of us has not quit? Who can really go the distance with undoubting certainty and a never-failing “yes”? Not me. Too many times to count I have

  • stopped praying long before the answer came,
  • emphatically answered “no” when it was clear what God was asking,
  • given up on people, on my self, on the world.

A Parable of Obedience

Tucked among Jesus’ urgent last appeals to his wayward people is a parable of two sons. The father asks each son to work in the vineyard for the day. One answers, “I will not!” but later changes his mind and obeys. The other immediately responds, “Sure, Dad,” but never does go. Jesus asks, “Which of the two did the will of the father?”

Our response to the inspiration of the moment; or whether or not we felt like obeying his voice, is not what matters in the end.  Years, or decades later, the proof of obedience will be obvious: Did we do what he asked us to do?

Not many of us will be remembered as heroic sprinters, most of us will limp much of the way. But may we all be remembered for the tight grip we had on the one obedient Son who can get us across the line.

Matthew 21:28-32, Philippians 1:6

What have you learned about the marathon of faith?

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2 replies on “Obedience Over the Long Haul”

Thank you, Janet,
How nurturing in grace is this! Do I do what He asked us to do? …to come boldly to the throne of grace to find help in time of need and to find renewed confidence that He (not I ) will complete the work He began in me.

GRACE REIGNS (not to be twarted by little me). I do not need to despair when I see my incompleteness….my splotchiness, but run to receive grace, both because I sorely need it and that’s what He asked me to do!

The July 28 entry in Chamber’s My Utmost for His Highest is soul nurturing “God’s purpose is for me to depend on Him and His power now . His purpose is the process itself. It is the process, not the outcome that is glorifying to God. What we call preparation God sees as the goal itself. When God enables us to realize that moment by moment obedience is His goal, then each moment as it comes is precious.”

How encouraging when my process seems as slow as a glacier to know the power (the gracious power) behind the glacier! Mary

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