There’s a great quote from St. Augustine, an influential Christian bishop from the 300s-400s, that says,
Do not shrug daily sins aside because they are small; fear
them, rather, because they are many… How tiny are grains of sand! Put too much
sand into a boat, it sinks. How tiny are drops of rain! They fill rivers and
wash away houses, don't they? So don't just shrug these sins aside.
When I look at this or that “small” sin, it may not seem too
alarming. Okay, so I voiced that criticism that I should have kept to myself. I
ignored that phone call that I should have taken. (I’m sure I’ll call them
back!) I fueled my resentment by reading that news article, even though I knew
it would only make me mad. It happens. God will forgive me. What’s the big
deal?
The big deal is that my day is filled with those
small sins. How long before all of those rain drops swell into a flood that
does serious, lasting damage?
When I saw that quotation, it reminded me of some other
words, from Catherine Sanderson, a writer and professor of psychology: “You
gotta sweat the small stuff.” Sanderson’s point was that tiny, seemingly
insignificant decisions and acts lead you somewhere. They set a trajectory
that, once you get a little farther along, may not seem so tiny or
insignificant. That affair began with an “innocent” conversation at work. That
rift in the friendship began with the choice to bring last week’s argument back
up. If you want to avoid trouble and hurt down the road, you’ve gotta sweat the
small stuff.
And maybe that’s why Jesus said in Luke 9:23 that “Whoever
wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily
and follow me.”
Taking up your cross daily means sweating the small stuff.
It means refusing to shrug off those tiny sins. Jesus isn’t calling his
followers to carry a literal cross like his and go to their deaths—not usually,
at least—but to carry a cross of daily self-denial, of setting aside my
preferences, my feelings, and my desires, for the sake of loving God and loving
my neighbors. In that classroom full of hyper kids. In your car at the
intersection. In front of a sink full of dirty dishes at home. All day long
you have opportunities to either shrug off a tiny sin and do what you
want, or to take up your cross and go where Jesus is leading.
And whether I am a faithful disciple of Christ today probably
isn’t going to depend on how I respond to some earth-shaking temptation or
obstacle. It’ll depend on the choices I make in all of those small moments. It’ll
depend on whether I pay attention to and get intentional about the small stuff.
Listen to this devotional below (read by Stuffy-Nosed Nance!):
1 comment:
Oh! Man! You hit me right between the eyes..🤓THANK YOU‼️🙏
RE
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