Although you have hidden these things from the wise and the learned you have revealed them to the childlike. (Matthew 11:25)
Think about the incredible advancements in technology that
have come about in the past century. Computers that once took up entire
rooms now fit on your desktop. People once doomed to die from horrible
diseases now go on to live for many happy and healthy years. Airplanes
and high-speed trains have made the globe much smaller. And yet the same
problems that have dogged us for centuries—poverty, war, crime,
abuse—are still around. Why can’t all this incredible knowledge help us
tackle these issues?
The problem is that technology cannot reveal
the most important truth of all: that we are children of God. Those whom
Jesus calls “the wise and the learned”—the ones who rely only on
brainpower—can’t quite understand this (Matthew 11:25). They can surmise
that there is a God, but only God can reveal himself to us. We just
have to be “childlike” and ask him to show us!
What does it mean
to be childlike? It means acknowledging that we were created to have an
ongoing relationship with God—a relationship of love, trust, and
dependence. It means believing that God is committed to us as a father
is to his children. It means keeping ourselves open to the promptings
that God sends to us.
Here is one way that you can work on being
more childlike in your day—even as you go about your very grown-up life.
Make it a point to take some time to slow down. It’s easy to fill our
days with activities, chores, and obligations and miss out on our
relationship with God. Of course, there is much that we have to do each
day, but it’s also vital that we not become consumed by it.
So
spend time just enjoying God’s presence. Sit outside and absorb the sun,
thanking your Father for the gift of its warmth. Or close your eyes,
and imagine yourself taking a leisurely walk with Jesus. Put aside all
the “grown-up” thoughts for just this time, and simply enjoy the Lord.
Be like a child, and see what your Father reveals to you.
“Father, thank you for calling me your child! Help me to know you not just as the Almighty, but as Abba, my Dad.”
from wau.org
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