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owntown Fort Worth is a wonderful
place to visit. There are all types of
shops, numerous restaurants, wonderful bookstores, great places to get a cup of
coffee, a superb performance hall, and good movie theaters where you can catch
the latest flick. Yes, it is a wonderful
place, provided you can find a parking space!
This is especially true in the evenings and on the weekends when the
entire population, it seems, pours into the downtown area to enjoy all it has
to offer.
On more than one occasion I have
ventured downtown and found myself in a battle to find an empty space to park
my car. The lots are either full or I
find myself confronted with ever-present and all-to-familiar information sign,
“No Parking!” One Saturday afternoon, I
decided to spend some time looking through the various shops downtown. I got in my car and took the fifteen-minute
drive into the city. But there was no
where to park! All the lots were full, all
the spaces were taken, and there literally was no available space to be seen.
After several minutes of circling the
city, after putting several miles on my car, and after wearing down the tread
on my tires, I gave up in desperation and decided to return home to bandage my
wounds. I was frustrated and angry. Everywhere I looked I saw a “No Parking” sign
so I just kept driving until I returned home!
Have you ever been there? Have
you ever been frustrated by a traffic sign? To top it all off, someone had written me a
nice letter requesting that I pay my phone bill! What a day!
All I wanted was a parking space, not a headache!
But after I returned home and
cooled down a little bit, I realized there was actually a blessing in my little
afternoon adventure. Had I found a
parking space downtown, I would have been tempted to stroll into the shops, get
some coffee, buy a book, or see movie and spend more money than I had
anticipated. Then I would have been
hard-pressed to pay the phone bill which was more of a priority than a cup of
coffee. Now, please don’t get me wrong.
I can afford a cup of coffee and my phone bill, the question here is one of
priority.
The Apostle Paul understood the
idea of not parking in the Christian life.
He knew that following hard after Jesus and walking with God is the
single most important priority of life.
Parking spaces, Paul knew, sometimes lead to trouble. They get us off the road; they stop our
forward progress for a while, and allow our minds to wonder through all the
shops life has to offer. When we are in
the shops, it is easy for us to get our priorities skewed and out of balance.
In his letter to the Philippians,
Paul writes, “forgetting what lies behind and
reaching forward to what lies ahead, I press on toward the goal for the prize
of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 3:13b-14). This is the great secret of the Christian life—forward
motion! Notice that Paul admonishes his
readers to keep pressing on toward the goal.
The one focus, the one goal, the one aim of our lives must be Jesus
Christ who alone can supply all our needs and satisfy our souls.
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ut in modern terms, Paul would be
telling his readers to take notice of the “No Parking” signs and to keep moving
forward. The world offers many things
but these things can never fulfill us in the way God does. Browsing among the world’s shops, drinking from
its fountains, and walking idly along can lead us to confuse our priorities and
to get our eyes off of Christ! However,
if we keep our eyes on him, if we keep moving forward, we will find that our
priorities are in the right place, that our needs are met, and our souls will
be satisfied. Are you looking for a parking place today? Pay attention to those “No Parking”
signs! They just might be blessings in
disguise!
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