Monday, September 20, 2021

What was the last thing?

The subject of personal responsibility no doubt conjures up in your thinking thoughts that the hammer is about to fall on someone. I’m agreeing with you if that’s you're thinking because that is normally the situation. A failed follow through, a slacked response to an urgent situation or a totally disregard of a concern now has consequences of which we are about to be held fully responsible. I would like to direct the thought of personal responsibility toward myself and to the fact that I have publicly announced that I believe in Jesus Christ and I believe He is the Son of God. This confession is not just a word statement but it is also an action statement where my words and action are working in conjunction with each other in a positive manner for the cause. Often personal responsibility is held accountable in professional office settings, in meetings of leadership with businesses and organizations and even in the public view as things relate to legal court proceedings. I have heard some individuals assume their personal responsibility for words, actions, situations and such with the attitude that it relates only to them, and them alone. Their decisions don’t have any impact on others. This attitude is often heard in an expression like “this is my business and it doesn’t have anything to do with you.” John Donne was an English poet and he coined the phrase “No Man is an Island”. The meaning is quite simply, we are all connected, even if we chose not to be. For Christians and for our personal responsibilities as followers of Jesus, our responsibility is to Jesus Christ as His disciple. This relationship is built on accountability, conversation, words and actions. Jesus before He was crucified at Golgotha, that is the place of the skull, He had gone to a garden to pray. Along with Him were some of His disciples. He instructed them to stay at one spot while He went a little further ahead of them so He could have a conversation in private with His Heavenly Father. After a time of talking (praying) Jesus went back to where He had left the disciples. To His dismay they were all sleeping. Maybe it had been the longness of the day, or even that of the entire week. No doubt because of all that had been taking place, sleeping opportunities had been limited. Maybe the disciples missed the importance to Jesus when He had asked them to sit and pray. Well, I should just write it wasn’t a “maybe” it was a “they did” miss completely the importance of His request. Of course Jesus left them as they were with a reminder for them to pray and in the end, Jesus left them to the decision of their own, to sleep while He continued with His personal responsibility. For Jesus He knew that the Cross was before Him and soon He would be put to death. My question about personal responsibility for us who confess Jesus as our Lord and Savior is this. What was the last thing that Jesus asked you to do? In writing I don’t exactly have the ability to pause in such a way as to allow plenty of time for self-reflection, personal thinking and even a time of meditating, but oh how I wish you would ponder the question, what was the last thing Jesus asked you to do? It could be you don’t want to consider this question because you already know the answer. Could be you are not interested in thinking back to that moment in which you know you clearly heard God’s voice and made a personal decision not to respond in a manner He had requested? Whatever creates the pause in answering this question I’m asking you to explore. We as Christians have a personal responsibility to Jesus and we have a personal relationship too, even though it might not be described as that by us. Nevertheless the relationship and responsibility remains even if we act or deny its existence. The disciple missed the importance of that hour of prayer in the garden with Jesus. They missed the opportunity to be a leaning post for Jesus as He contemplated the days He faced that were before Him. They missed the opportunity to be there for one another. Yes, we can all pray alone, but the encouragement others receive from praying with others is a moment shared that is rarely ever forgotten by those individual participating. You and I, by not being personally responsible, are missing opportunities to grow our faith, belief and confidence in Jesus and we are impacting others by robbing them of a chance to see faith in action. So…….what was the last thing Jesus asked you to do? Until then

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