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I was playing golf with a pastor and a missionary when the starter asked if a single player could join us to make a foursome. We happily agreed. About 4-5 holes into our game, our guest asked what we did. My pastor friend started out, âIâm a pastor, and this guy is a missionary, andââÂ
Our guest interrupted and blurted out, âYou guys are Christians?! Iâve never had so much fun! I always heard Christians were boring.âÂ
When did it come about that people thought of Christians as boringâor even worse, as sourpusses and killjoys? Sadly, too many Christians have helped cement this idea in peopleâs minds. I think this is largely because those Christians are misinformed and frustrated. This frustration, I believe, comes from the mistaken idea that Christians are supposed to squelch any urges or cravings that we have. Â
But check out this Q&A from the Westminster Catechismâ
Q: What is the chief end of man?Â
A: To glorify God and to enjoy Him forever.Â
Glorifying God is supposed to result in enjoymentâenjoying both Godâs presence and the life He has given us. We are created to crave the fuel of His Spirit that satisfies and energizes us.Â
Just as your car would at best under-perform if you attempted to run it with anything else but gasoline, so our lives will under-perform and feel like drudgery if we are trying to fuel our cravings with anything other than God.Â
The dictionary defines âcravingâ as a great or eager desire, or a yearning. But I believe the Bible defines God-honoring craving as the longing for an intimate relationship with God that is implanted by God Himself.Â
The people of Judah had gone astray from God and were trying to satisfy their urges with foreign gods and pagan idolatry. When King Asa called these backsliders back to God, hereâs how he did itâ
[Asa] commanded Judah to seek the Lord, the God of their fathersâto inquire of and for Him and crave Him as a vital necessityâand to obey the law and the commandment. (2 Chronicles 14:4 AMP)Â
Contrast this with the temporary cravings of earthâ
But those who crave to be rich fall into temptation and a snare and into many foolish, useless, godless, and hurtful desires⌠(1 Timothy 6:9 AMP)Â
This world is fading away, along with everything that people crave. But anyone who does what pleases God will live forever (1 John 2:17 NLT).Â
Nowhere are godly cravings and earthly cravings better contrasted than in James 4:1-6.Â
In this passage, the Greek word for desires (v. 1) and pleasures (v. 3) is hedone. This is where we get our English word âhedonism.â There is nothing wrong with pleasureâfor God Himself takes pleasureâbut itâs what pleasures we are craving that can make them ungodly. James rightly points out that the wrong hedonism is a craving to fulfill âyour desires,â âyour pleasures,â and to desire âfriendship with the worldâ (v. 1, 3, 4)
Jesus talked about worldly cravingsâusing the same word hedoneâwhen He said, âThe seed that fell among thorns stands for those who hear, but as they go on their way they are choked by lifeâs worries, riches and pleasures [hedone], and they do not matureâ (Luke 8:14).Â
Notice the same thing in Isaiah 58:2 where God declares that people âseem eagerâ to delight in God, but itâs only a show for them to satisfy fleshly cravings. John Piper noted, âGod means they are delighting in their business and not in the beauty of their God. He does not rebuke their hedonism. He rebukes the weakness of it. They have settled for secular interests and thus honor them above the Lord.âÂ
Instead, notice the fulfilled cravings when we seek God: âIf you keep your feet from breaking the Sabbath and from doing as you please on My holy day, if you call the Sabbath a delight and the Lordâs holy day honorable, and if you honor it by not going your own way and not doing as you please or speaking idle words, then you will find your joy in the Lord, and I will cause you to ride in triumph on the heights of the land and to feast on the inheritance of your father Jacob. For the mouth of the Lord has spokenâ (Isaiah 58:13-14).Â
I like that reminder that âthe mouth of the Lord has spoken.â The origin of the word craving is the Old Norse word krefja, which means to lay claim on something because of a promise. God has promised, and so we can claim it.Â
James assures us that the spirit God implanted in us envies intensely (James 4:5). We were made to crave Godâs presence, we were made to find ultimate satisfaction in His presence, we were made to find eternal delight in knowing Him more intimately!Â
The proud person says, âGod, I know what I want. Give it to me.â The humble person says, âGod, I know Your presence is the only thing that will satisfy me. Give it to me.âÂ
The craving in our spirit can be redirected from earthly yearnings to God-honoring yearnings by yielding to the Holy Spirit. I would humbly suggest that our prayer should be something like thisâ
âFather, grant that my cravings are for Your name to be hallowed, Your kingdom to be made visible, and Your will to be done. Let the enjoyment I have in Your presence shine out of me in a way that invites others to be dissatisfied with their earthly cravings and find their ultimate satisfaction in a personal relationship with You through Jesus Christ. Holy Spirit, continue to refine and redirect all of my cravings away from earthly things to eternal pleasures. In Jesusâ name I pray, Amen.âÂ
If you would like to follow along with all of the messages in this series called Craving, you can find all of the sermons by clicking here.Â
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September 12, 2022 at 6:30 am
[…] Created To Crave God […]
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