T
|
he problem with basements is that they become the
repositories for all the things we no longer use but don’t have the heart to
discard. Does this sound familiar to any
of you? How many of you out there have
waded through the sea of endless boxes and containers in your basements looking
for something you just had to have? How
many of you vowed never to “junk up” your basements only to break that promise
within a week after making it? How many
of you have stored items in your basement, fully intending to throw them out
within a couple of days and then never seeming to get around to that task?
Of course, there is another side to this story. There are those times when you find a hidden
treasure buried in your basement. You
might be looking for something else when you come across one of your long-lost
possessions that you had totally forgotten about. When you find it, you forget your original
reason for visiting the basement and focus all your attention on your new-found
treasure. It might be a piece of
clothing, an old toy, a card, or a piece of jewelry discarded many years
ago. However, when you locate it,
wonderful memories flood your mind and a sense of excitement and happiness fills
your heart.
I remember having such an experience in the fall of
1990. My brother and I purchased an old
office building in town and we spent 18 months renovating it. Finally, the day came for us to move from our
parents’ home over to our house. We were
only four or five blocks away from them but it seemed to be much further. After moving the essential items and
installing them in our new home, we had to address the matter of the
basement. It took several trips but
finally, we moved all our important stuff from mom and dad’s and stored it in
our own basement.
One afternoon, I was in the basement looking for something
when I spied a small, black ring box. I
picked it up and recognized it as the box that held my college ring when it
arrived. I hadn’t seen that box in years
and never thought it would end up in my basement. When I opened it, however, I received a
wonderful surprise. There, inside that box, was my high school class ring. Several years earlier, I had misplaced that
ring and had given up all hope of finding it.
Now, there it was, in beautiful condition, looking just like it did the
last time I saw it.
I put the ring on my finger, dropped the box, ran upstairs,
and made several phone calls. I called
my mom, I called my grandmother, I called one of my aunts, and I even called my
dad at work to tell him I had found my ring.
They probably thought I had lost my mind, but I was so happy and I
wanted everyone to know I found that ring.
I was so ecstatic and I wanted to share that exuberance with everyone
around me. Although it was just a ring,
it was very important and precious to me.
Finding it again was one of the most wonderful things in the world.
Jesus told several stories that stressed the happiness that
accompanies finding something that was lost.
However, Jesus’ stories weren’t concerned with material things. Instead, they were concerned men’s souls and
the happiness that accompanies someone accepting Jesus Christ as their personal
savior. Three of these stories can be
found in Luke 15 and involve the parables of
the lost sheep, the lost coins, and the lost son.
It is the second parable, the parable of the lost coins that
is the focus of our attention today. The
story is very short and matter-of-fact but its implication and truth have
far-reaching ramifications for us today.
The story is recorded in Luke 15:8-9, "Or suppose a woman has ten silver coins and loses one. Does she
not light a lamp, sweep the house and search carefully until she finds it? And when she finds it, she calls her friends
and neighbors together and says, `Rejoice with me; I have found my lost coin.”
Please take notice of that last line in the verse. Jesus said the woman called her friends and
neighbors and invites them to a celebration all because she found her lost
coin. She was happy and she wanted those around her, her family and friends, to
share in her happiness. Her excitement and joy was such that she couldn’t
contain it and she shared it with those around her. This is the same thing that happens when
someone accepts Jesus as the savior and the Lord of their lives. Just after this passage of scripture, Jesus
says that there is more excitement over one soul who is saved than over all
those who do not need to repent. The
angels in Heaven shout and are happy that another one of God’s children has
been found and has come home. They just
can’t keep quiet about it.
I remember that day in my basement like it was
yesterday. That ring is now sitting on
my dresser as a constant reminder of how wonderful it is to find the things
that were lost and to restore them to their proper place. This is exactly God’s perspective when
someone accepts Jesus and is saved from their sins. God fills Heaven with shouting, and laughter,
and joy because another one has found the way home. God knows what it’s like to find something
that has been lost for many years. He felt
the same about me when I accepted Jesus and He felt the same about you when you
became a Christian. The portals of
Heaven rang with the laughter of angels as you accepted Jesus.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please share your thoughts and comments about today's Tidbit with us.