J
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ohn
Black always had a shovel in his hand. I
never knew a time when John wasn’t covered in red dirt and clay. John worked for my grandfather and for my
father digging graves whenever one was needed.
At that time, graves were dug by hand.
It was a grueling job but one that John performed to perfection, always
ready with his shovel to dig a hole six feet deep in order to return someone to
the ground from which they came.
As
a young boy, I would sometimes ride with my dad to the cemetery where John and
his partner, Parnell, were digging graves.
It always amazed me the amount of dirt these two men piled up as they
dug deeper and deeper into the earth. I
begged my dad to let me go with John to help him. I was convinced my help would speed up the
process and render John a great service.
Finally,
one day, my dad gave me permission to go with John. I jumped into the truck between him and Parnell,
and we headed off to dig a grave. I was
so excited because I knew we’d be done in an hour or so and then I could come
home and brag to all my friends that I had helped John Black dig a grave in
record time. Boy, was I mistaken,
misled, and completely off target!
When
we got to the cemetery, it didn’t take me long to figure out that this would
take some time; that it was much more difficult than my little eight-year-old
mind had dreamed. Dirt is heavy and
there is a lot of it to remove in order to create a six-foot pit that is
rectangular in shape. After three
shovels full, I was spent, ready to throw in the towel, looking for my dad to
come and rescue me from the sun, the dirt, and the work. John and Parnell, however, continued to dig,
going deeper and deeper into the ground.
They stopped only occasionally for a drink of water and a breather and
then it was back to work.
All
the while, John gave me a hard time about the three shovels full of dirt I had
moved. He said he didn’t know how he would
have managed if I hadn’t been there to help him. John always liked to joke and he loved giving
me a hard time. This is one of the
reasons I liked John but I really liked him because he knew how to dig and he
didn’t stop until he was finished!
What
a picture of the Christian life this is.
Far too often, we stop digging for the deep things of God because it
requires time and effort. We are content
to remain near the surface, believing that a little bit of effort moves a lot
of dirt. We want the blessings God has to offer us but we don’t want to dig for
them. After moving three small shovels
full of spiritual dirt, we are ready to quit, hoping God will bless us in the
same manner as if we had removed six feet of it. Guess what, it just doesn’t happen that
way. In order to learn and experience
the deep things of our God, we must dig and dig deep.
Jeremiah 29:13 reminds us of this
great truth, “You will seek me and find
me when you seek me with all your heart.”
This is one of the great promises of the Scriptures but it carries with
it one condition. This was given to the
people of Israel
as a promise that God would bring them out of exile and would once again be
their God. But the people had to seek
the Lord, and they had to seek Him with all their hearts. You can’t find something unless you are
looking for it and looking for something means not resting until you find
it. This is what God wanted Jeremiah to
communicate to the people. When they
made the search for God the most important thing in their lives, when they
refused to stop after just three shovels full and continue to the very end,
then and only then would they experience the true rapture of finding the Lord.
T
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he
same is true with us today. We must seek
the Lord with all our heart, not just some of it. We cannot afford to put the shovel down after
we have removed a small amount of dirt.
We must stick to the task, digging deeper and deeper until we plumb the
great truths and promises God has for all those who seek after him. It always amazed me—and still does—that John
spent hours digging a hole in which to place a dead person. How
much more should we delve into God’s word to find the eternal truths that give
us life? Are you digging deep today?
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