I think that "new" is one of the most important
words in the Bible. “New” is the name of God’s solution to all the world’s longing,
hurt, and brokenness.
The Lord’s people cannot keep up their end of the covenant,
so God makes a new covenant. (Jer 31:31; Luke 22:20)
The people don’t have it within themselves to be faithful to
the Lord, so the Lord gives them new hearts and a new Spirit. (Eze 36:26-27)
Creation is not as it was meant to be—it’s infected with
death, decay, suffering, and scarcity—so God will make a new heaven and a new
earth. (Isa 65:17; Rev 21:1-4)
We are not the people we were created to be—we’re
infected, with greed, rage, jealousy, lust, and self-absorption—so God makes us
new creations in Christ. (2 Cor 5:17)
Isaiah 43:19 sums it all up nicely, when the Lord tells
aching and weary people: “See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs
up; do you not perceive it? I am making a way in the wilderness and streams in
the wasteland.” In the wilderness, where you’ve felt so lost and hopeless, I am
making a way. In the wasteland, where you feared you’d waste away yourselves, I
am pouring out streams. I see your situation, your struggles, and your needs,
and I’m doing a new thing for you.
We believe in a God who makes things new (Rev 21:5). God
sees the cracks in our lives, sees the jagged edges in this world, sees our
frailty and pain and desperation, and, like at creation in Genesis, God takes
it in God’s hands, forms it and molds it like the dust of the ground, and
breathes new life into it.
At the beginning of January, we’re always thinking about change
and fresh starts. “New year, new you,” right? I got an email Monday from a
gym offering me a discount on membership, so I can get started on a new
lifestyle. There’s not a thing wrong with that – I probably should exercise
more – but I hope our horizons this new year, our goals and expectations for
transformation, go beyond physical health to include our spiritual
wellbeing.
Praying more, or praying better.
Studying and learning scripture more deeply.
Finding new avenues of service.
Beginning the long-avoided work of forgiveness or reconciliation.
Wherever you’re at today, whoever you are right
now, God can make you new. God can bring the change you’re longing for—that’s what
God does.
What new thing are you hoping to see in your life or in the world around you this year?
And how could you be a part of the change you want to see?
This past Sunday I had the rare pleasure of sitting in a
church service instead of leading one, and the pastor opened with a New Years prayer
that I want to leave you with:
Creative God, you make all things new in heaven and on earth.
We come to you in a new year with new desires and old fears,
new
decisions and old controversies,
new
dreams and old weaknesses.
Because you are a God of hope,
we
know that you create all the possibilities of the future.
Because you are a God of love,
we
know that you accept all the mistakes of the past.
Because you are the God of our faith,
we enter your gates with thanksgiving and
praise,
we come into your presence with gladness and
a joyful noise,
and we serve and bless you. Amen.
1 comment:
As always, this hits home. Praying for a godly new year for us all.
Post a Comment