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Prerequisites For Purposeful Living Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 6, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: The Christian, of course, is committed to a life of growing quality. Jesus came that we might have life abundant, and both Old and New Testaments make it clear that the believer is to advance in wisdom and in favor with God and man.
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A woman in a contemporary play is complaining about her hollow
living, and she says to another, "Don't you get the feeling that this is a
broken world, something like a watch? The parts are all there, and it
looks all right, but the main spring is broken and it no longer has
meaning. Life looks right, but it's meaning is missing. It's main
spring is gone." Many modern people feel like her that meaning is
missing. The result is all kinds of wild and ridiculous ways to recover
meaning, or at least to establish some goal.
In another play called Catch 22 one of the characters named
Dunbar makes long life his goal and the only purpose for which he
lives. His goal leads him to unbelievable nonsense. He is depressed
because time goes so fast, and since his goal is longer life he goes to
any length to make life seem longer. He notices that when he does
things that he dislikes the time drags, and so he figured if he fills his
days with tasks that he dislikes and even despises, life will seem so
much longer. Without a doubt, he is right. And unpleasant life would
seem longer, but to sacrifice all quality for the sake of mere quantity is
certainly eligible for the label of folly.
The Christian, of course, is committed to a life of growing quality.
Jesus came that we might have life abundant, and both Old and New
Testaments make it clear that the believer is to advance in wisdom
and in favor with God and man. Solomon has already made it clear
that the fear of the Lord is the beginning, or principle part, of
knowledge, but now in chapter 2 he gives us a list of prerequisites,
which are necessary to gain this key factor, which makes the believer's
life meaningful and purposeful. Notice that in verse 5 he says, "Then
you will understand the fear of the Lord and find the knowledge of
God." What is that? It is what comes after one has fulfilled the
conditions described in the first four verses. If we fulfill these
purposeful living is guaranteed. The firsts prerequisite is that we
must be-
I. RECEPTIVE.
This, of course, is the first requirement in gaining the benefits of any
teaching or philosophy of life. Even God's own children do not
benefit by His abundant provisions if they do not receive them. Notice
that the father recognizes that he cannot compel his son to receive his
words. He can only seek to convince him of the value in doing so, and
of the folly of not doing so. Receptivity is totally the responsibility of
the individual. You can talk about giving your child an education, but
this is not really accurate. All anyone can do is make an education
available. Only the child can make it actual by being receptive to that
which is made available.
Knowledge and wisdom, like Christ, can stand at the door and
knock, but they only gain entrance when we open the door and receive
them. The Gospel was available to the Auca Indians through the 5
missionaries who flew to them, but they were unreceptive, and the
result was death for the missionaries and continued darkness for
them. It was only when they became receptive that they were
redeemed. We see that from the very beginning of one's encounter
with God, to the highest degree of fellowship and sanctification,
receptivity is a basic requirement. Solomon says, "Son, if you will
receive my words, you can reject them or ignore them, but if you are
receptive you will fulfill the first prerequisite for purposeful living."
The second is to be
II. RETENTIVE.
If you store up my commands, or as the RSV has it, "..treasure
up my commandments." This is just another way of saying the same
thing as was said in the first clause, but it carries with it the thought of
retaining what is received. Store up is stronger than receive.
Solomon goes from the general to the particular, and his second clause
strengthens the first and fills up the weakness of the first if it is left
alone. The Bible is not wordy and does not just repeat the same idea
in another way for no good reason. This added emphasis is necessary,
for it has to be recognized that it is possible to be receptive and still let
what has been received be lost.
It can go in one ear and out the other. A sieve and a sponge are
both receptive, but only the sponge is retentive. If what we receive is
not retained for application when it is needed, you are no longer off
than those who have never been taught. It is possible to pass a test by