Be strong and very courageous. Be careful to obey all the law my servant
Moses gave you; do not turn from it to the right or to the left, that you may
be successful wherever you go. - Joshua 1:7
In sports, there is a term known as
"in the zone." It is a description of a person executing his skills
so well that total concentration is taking place, and the athlete is performing
flawlessly. It is a wonderful feeling. Performance seems effortless because it
comes so easily. For the tennis player, it is hitting every shot right where he
wants. For the baseball pitcher, it is throwing to a strike zone that seems big
as a house. For the golfer, the fairways are wide, and the hole is big.
Everything is flowing just right.
Os Hillman said, "I grew up playing competitive golf.
I turned pro out of college for a few years, but later God led me away from
playing professionally. When I played competitively, I knew when I was in the
zone and when I wasn't. A few years ago, I played in my club championship. It
was the opening round, and I was in the zone. I recall the difference was that
my mental attitude was focused on executing the swing I wanted to make with
little regard to the outcome. I could visualize the swing so well; it was like
a movie picture in my mind. Very little thought was given to the outcome of the
shot. I knew that if I could make the right swing, the outcome would take care
of itself. That day I shot four under par 68. I went on to win the golf
tournament. I have had few such days of being "in the zone."
Obedience in the Christian life is
being in the zone. When we live a life of obedience, we begin to experience the
reality of God like never before. Wisdom grows in our life. Meaning and purpose
are accelerated. In the early Church, the Hebrews gained wisdom through
obedience. Later, the Greeks were characterized as gaining wisdom through
reason and analysis. Today, we live in a very Greek-influenced Church. Many
Christians determine if they will obey based on whether the outcome will be
beneficial to them. Imagine if the early Church had adopted this philosophy. No
walls would have fallen down at Jericho. No Red Sea would have parted. No one
would have been healed. No coins would have been found in the mouth of a fish.
Reason and analysis would not have led to making the obedient decision. Trust
and obey. Leave the outcome to God.
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