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he other day some one asked me if I had a sweet tooth. I didn’t even have to think about my
answer. “Let me put it this way,” I said. “Give me a five-pound bag of sugar and a spoon and I’m happy!” I’m not exaggerating! The guy who said, “Life’s short, eat dessert first” has my full support and
admiration. You’ve just got to respect
someone who has his priorities in the correct order! One of my life goals is to sashay into a
restaurant and order a cheesecake and a fork. That’s right, not a slice of
cheesecake but the whole thing! I’m
just waiting for the right occasion!
My favorite
dessert, hands down, is banana pudding.
My mom will be happy to share that dirty little secret with you. Whenever I’m home I bargain with her, telling
her that I’ll buy the ingredients if she will make the banana pudding. The result is always the same; she buys the
ingredients and makes the pudding! I
just love this arrangement!
The ingredients
for this delicacy are not difficult to find. However, in order to make a
perfect banana pudding, the bananas have to be ripe. As a small boy, I remember going to the
grocery store with my mother. She always
looked for bananas that were almost black because they made the best
desserts. I couldn’t understand
this. Bananas were supposed to be
yellow, not black! All the books I’d
ever read said so. But black, or very
dark, bananas were what she bought because they had the best flavor! And since mom always made perfect banana
puddings, I didn’t argue!
The Apostle Paul
addresses this idea of ripeness or maturity in his letter to the
Ephesians. Paul knew that in order for
God’s work to move forward with the best results, he needed and required spiritually
mature workers.
Ephesians 4:12-13
follows a list of the different duties God assigns to some of his children. Although there are different jobs, there is
only one goal and that goal is training the members of Christ’s body ending in
spiritual maturity. In this passage
Paul writes, “to prepare God's people for
works of service, so that the body of Christ may be built up until we all reach
unity in the faith and in the knowledge of the Son of God and become mature,
attaining to the whole measure of the fullness of Christ.” The role of teachers, and pastors, prophets,
apostles and evangelist is to prepare God’s people for works of service. The result is that the body of Christ will be
unified and mature. We are to be of one
mind and one spirit, understanding and doing the work of God in the world
around us.
Notice Paul’s
words in the last portion of this passage.
In order to experience the entire fullness of Jesus Christ we must be
spiritually mature. This means that our
desires become God’s desires, that our ambitions take a back seat to his will,
that we see everything coming from his hand, and that we wait with patience
until he is ready to use us for his purposes.
R
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emember, in order
to make a good banana pudding, you’ve got to have ripe bananas. Green bananas are too bitter, yellow bananas
are better but still lack fullness of flavor, but black bananas, those that are
completely mature, make a perfect pudding every time. What is the condition of your soul
today? If God were making a banana pudding,
would you be chosen to add flavor and body?
Have you weathered life’s storms and difficulties, bending your will and
your life to his purpose? Are you ripe for the picking?
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