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ave you ever felt that something
was missing from your life? I mean, you
have all the pieces, or so you think, but they just don't all seem to fit
together; something is missing. When I
was younger, my brother and I began collecting jigsaw puzzles. Every week we would get our allowance and we
would go to the local variety store and purchase puzzles. Although there were several varieties and
difficulty levels from which to choose, we decided to collect puzzles with only
100 pieces. We would buy the puzzles,
get on our bikes, dash home, and immediately begin putting them together. Our mom, who loves puzzles, would sometimes
help us, especially when we got into a confusing area of a puzzle. She taught us to separate the border pieces
and to assemble them first and from there, to construct the body of the puzzle.
We had hours of fun and gained a
real sense of accomplishment from working those pieces until a completed puzzle
emerged. Once completed, we would start
working other puzzles from our collection.
I remember one day, I was assembling one of the puzzles when I noticed
one piece was missing. I looked under
the table, around on the floor, and under the furniture. Nowhere was that piece to be found. I searched in the other puzzles as well with
the same result, no missing piece to be found.
The puzzle was 99% complete, but that one space troubled me. I wanted to finish it, to complete the
puzzle, to make it what it was supposed to be.
Instead, all I could see was the space left by the missing piece. The entire puzzle suffered because one piece
was missing. It was no use trying to
pretend the puzzle was complete without it, the evidence of that one missing
piece was blatantly obvious.
Jesus must have enjoyed puzzles
because today's scripture lesson addresses the idea of the missing piece. The story of the Rich Young Ruler provides a
wonderful example of what God wants to do in each of our lives. This young man had come to Jesus desiring to
know what he had to do to have eternal life.
Jesus told him to keep the law and the young man stated he had kept it
since his youth. Jesus did not dispute
his claim but answered him in the following manner. In Mark
10:21 we find these words, "Then Jesus, looking at him, loved him, and
said to him, “One thing you lack: Go your way, sell whatever you have and give
to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; and come, take up the cross,
and follow Me.”
Jesus concentrated on that one
missing piece in this young man's life.
He wasn't interested in the rest of the puzzle. He didn't concentrate on what this young man
owned or on his accomplishments. He
wasn't concerned with his knowledge, his status, or his ambitions. The only thing Jesus focused on was the one
area lacking in this man's life. Jesus
saw this young man from a different perspective. He noticed the part of him that was missing;
the part that kept him from being what he was meant to be. In love, Jesus addressed the one thing that
would satisfy this man's longing to be whole, complete, and satisfied. Unfortunately, since he was very wealthy,
this young man refused to follow Jesus' advice.
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oday, Jesus still works like this! He looks at your life and sees the one thing
you lack. Perhaps your faith is not what
it should be. Perhaps you are struggling
with trusting God completely, or you might be wrestling with what the future
holds for you. All of these issues leave
a void in your life, a missing piece.
You, like the Rich Young Ruler, search and search, but you can never
find the piece that fits. Then Jesus
comes, looks at you in love, and says "One thing you lack!" The hard
part is acknowledging he is right. The
exciting part is that if Jesus locates the missing piece, he, and only he,
knows how to fill it. So, what piece of
the puzzle are you missing today?
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