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Something to spend..

Something to spend...

Terry Dashner (www.ffcba.com)

As a young boy growing up in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma I looked forward every year with great anticipation, I might add, to the annual Rooster Day event. Rooster Day was a weekend event in May that provided a carnival and parade with wafting aromas of greasy burgers frying at every other food booth on main street.

Rooster Day still takes place here in May of every year. And although the carnival and parade is much larger than what I experienced as a boy, every child's desire to attend it is still the same. But for most, like me, in order to spend the day having fun, one must bring some money to spend. (I mowed a lot of lawns for $2.00 a yard to get enough money to spend at Rooster Day.)

In order to have fun at Rooster Day, one must have something to spend. Do you realize that God wants us to enjoy life through spending it? That's right. God gave us life to spend and not to keep. Listen again to this verse. Mark 8:36 reads, "Whoever seeks to save his life shall lose it; and whoever loses his life for my sake and for the sake of the gospel shall save it" (William Barclay, The Daily Study Bible Series Revised Edition The Gospel of Mark, Westminster Press, 1975, p. 203).

History is full of examples of men, who by throwing away their lives, gained life eternal. Late in the fourth century, there was in the East a monk called Telemachus. He had determined to leave the world and to live all alone in prayer and meditation and fasting, and so to save his soul. In his lonely life he sought nothing but contact with God. But somehow he felt there was something wrong. One day as he rose from his knees, it suddenly dawned upon him that his life was based, not on a self-less, but on a selfish love of God. It came to him that if he was to serve God he must serve men, that the desert was no place for a Christian to live, that the cities were full of sin and therefore full of need.

Telemachus found his way to the [Roman] arena. There were eighty-thousand people there. The chariot races were ending; and there was a tenseness in the crowd as the gladiators prepared to fight. Into the arena they came with their greeting. 'Hail, Caesar! We who are about to die salute you!' The fight was on and Telemachus was appalled. Men for whom Christ had died were killing each other to amuse an allegedly Christian populace. He leapt the barrier. He was in between the gladiators, and for a moment they stopped. 'Let the games go on,' roared the crowd. They pushed the old man aside; he was still in his hermit's robes. Again he came between them. The crowd began to hurl stones at him; they urged the gladiators to kill him and get him out of the way. The commander of the games gave an order; a gladiator's sword rose and flashed; and Telemachus lay dead.

Suddenly the crowd were silent. They were suddenly shocked that a holy man should have been killed in such a way. Suddenly there was a mass realization of what this killing really was. The games ended abruptly that day--and they never began again. Telemachus, by dying, had ended them. As Gibbon said of him, 'His death was more useful to mankind than his life.' By losing his life he had done more than ever he could have done by husbanding it out in lonely devotion in the desert (Ibid., pp. 204-205).

Keep the faith. Stay the course. Jesus gave us His life so that we might have life to give away.

Pastor T



About the author:

www.ffcba.com

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