All You Need for Another Year 1222
Marshall Segal
As the sun rises on another year, where do you want to be found more
faithful twelve months from now — in your diet and exercise, or in the
patterns of your marriage and relationships, or in personal
evangelism, or in productivity at work, or in communion with God? The
beginning of a year is as good a time as any to audit our hearts for
our hidden places of faithlessness. What sinful impulses have we
neglected, excused, or even harbored? What might God finally prune
away — or bring to life?
The apostle Paul warns us with a promise, “Whoever sows sparingly will
also reap sparingly, and whoever sows bountifully will also reap
bountifully” (2 Corinthians 9:6). A farmer who sows a few seeds will
reap a small crop, but one who sows much will have a great harvest.
How we sow (and for whom) will determine — in real, significant,
meaningful ways — what we reap. If last year left us emotionally
unstable, financially distressed, physically weak and unhealthy,
relationally disconnected, and feeling farther away from God, we are
likely reaping what we have sown. And if we sow the same this year, we
will likely feel similarly a year from now. Or worse.
But if we sow bountifully, we will reap differently. And our God loves
to fill (and refill) the cups of those who eagerly pursue him, and
gladly pour themselves out for others.
How Will You Sow?
When Paul wrote about sowing and reaping, he was writing about
financial generosity (2 Corinthians 9:7), but not only that — “in
every good work,” he says (2 Corinthians 9:8). So, as we turn the page
to another year, we would do well to consider how well we will sow —
our money, yes, but also our time, our energy, our attention. We can
determine now, with our hands open before God, who or what will get
the most and best of what God has given us. Most of us sow sparingly
because we sow thoughtlessly and prayerlessly. No farmer sows
bountifully by accident, and few Christians sow sparingly with serious
intentionality.
“Most of us sow sparingly because we sow thoughtlessly and
prayerlessly.”
Why do we sow sparingly? We sow sparingly because we forget or ignore
what we will reap (or not). We settle for the comfort and convenience
of drifting despite how much it might cost us. We trade fullness of
joy and pleasures forevermore for fractions of joy and moments of
pleasure.
When we cannot see beyond the horizon of our short life, we learn to
live day to day as if there’s nothing there. We neglect the profound
and invincible wisdom in Jesus’s counsel,
Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust
destroy and where thieves break in and steal, but lay up for
yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys
and where thieves do not break in and steal. (Matthew 6:19–20)
We sow sparingly because we forget what we will reap, or we sow
sparingly because we fear that God will provide sparingly. We hoard
whatever seed he gives — time, money, energy — because we’re afraid we
won’t have enough for ourselves. But Paul has a word to speak to all
our new year’s fears: “God is able to make all grace abound to you, so
that having all sufficiency in all things at all times, you may abound
in every good work” (2 Corinthians 9:6–8).
All You Need
You may not feel sufficient for what God has called you to do. Likely,
as you look back over the last year, you feel freshly insufficient for
your marriage, family, ministry, and other callings. That’s good. God
does not call us to feel or be sufficient. We should feel insufficient
for the Christian life (2 Corinthians 2:16). If we are genuinely able,
it is because God is able. “God is able to make all grace abound to
you, so that having all sufficiency . . . ” (2 Corinthians 9:8).
Ability and sufficiency that matter come, in every way, from above.
Apart from grace, we do not have the energy we need in parenting, or
the wisdom we need for our schedule, or the faith to give beyond
what’s comfortable, or the perseverance to steward our bodies well, or
the patience for trials, or the love we need in marriage. But God owns
the cattle on a thousand hills, and wields the strength of a thousand
armies, and knows billions and billions of stars by name — and he
lives in us, and for us, by his Spirit.
In All Things
God, and God alone, will be your sufficiency — in everything. “God is
able to make all grace abound to you, so that having all sufficiency
in all things. . . .” (2 Corinthians 9:8). God will not overlook or
forsake any area in your life — not your marriage, not your work, not
your home, not your health. Wherever he provides, he provides in full,
according to his wise plan. His grace covers every dark and needy
corner in our hearts.
“We should feel insufficient for the Christian life.”
None of us sows well everywhere all the time. In God’s wise,
sovereign, and loving plan, we can’t. All of us need to sow better
somewhere. And we are probably prone to presume on God’s provision in
areas where we are stronger, and to subtly assume he won’t provide
more in areas where we are weaker. By faith, we resolve against both.
We will ask God to provide in every area — where we are stronger or
more gifted and where we are still weak — because God promises to
provide in all things.
We live, work, love, and grow under the banner “My God will supply
every need of yours according to his riches in glory in Christ Jesus”
(Philippians 4:19).
At All Times
God will give you everything you need in every area of life at every
moment over the next year (and for endless years). “God is able to
make all grace abound to you, so that having all sufficiency in all
things at all times” (2 Corinthians 9:8). Our God is an always God. He
will be there providing on the mountaintops of success or progress; he
will be there providing in the valleys of disappointment and failure;
and he will be there providing on the rough and often punishing roads
of our ministry to others.
If we are his, no hour will be overlooked. Over every minute of every
day, he says to us in Christ,
Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God; I
will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my
righteous right hand. (Isaiah 41:10)
At all times. No interruptions, mistakes, or oversights. Just
relentless, continuous, providing, fatherly love. Fear not, for the
one who rules the universe and writes all of history will strengthen
you, guide you, and protect you as you walk through this life. If we
could see and feel the extent and constancy of his care, we would
laugh at how fearful we can be. The clouds of uncertainty hanging over
our future would begin to look less like devastating storms and more
like much needed rain.
For All Good Work
The last all is the most subtle, at least in our English Bibles, but
it is just as important and relevant for a new year: “God is able to
make all grace abound to you, so that having all sufficiency in all
things at all times, you may abound in every [literally, all] good
work” (2 Corinthians 9:8). Every ounce of God’s provision to you will
come laced with opportunity for you — to serve yourself or to turn, in
love, and serve others. God always means for the grace he gives us to
work through us for someone else’s good.
While many of us need to hear that God will provide again — all
sufficiency, in all things, at all times — just as many need to be
reminded that he has laid good works before each of us. “We are his
workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God
prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them” (Ephesians 2:10).
God himself has prepared work for us to do this year, places for us,
in particular, to sow, sowing that will often cost us more than we
planned to give.
Will we walk in the love he has prepared for us? Let’s pray now, at
the end of another year, for the sufficiency — all we need, in all
things, at all times — to sow faithfully in the next.
|