O
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ne day, just after lunch, I stepped out on the west porch of
the men’s dorm at Southwestern Seminary and watched a group of squirrels
searching for nuts. They scampered about
the yard, feverishly digging, searching for nuts, or anything else that
resembled food. They took no notice of
me or the fact that it was raining; the only thing on their agenda was locating
and picking up nuts. Their dedication to
this task was total and was evidenced by the way they conducted their
search.
Each squirrel ran along the ground with its nose working
overtime. When they came upon a
promising spot, they began feverishly digging, concentrating on the task at
hand. Suddenly, they stopped, pulled an
object from the ground, and examined it thoroughly. If they found a nut, they would scamper off
and hide it, then they would return and begin the search over again. However, if the object they removed was
inedible, they tossed it aside and started the process all over again. Occasionally, they would sit up on their hind
legs, shake the rainwater from their fur, shoot me an inquisitive glance, and
resume their endless and tireless search for nuts.
As I watched them, I suddenly became enthralled with their
dedication to this task. Here, on a
soggy afternoon, in conditions that were anything but favorable, these
squirrels methodically and assiduously continued their search for food. The conditions outside and the presence of
strangers did not deter them from the task at hand. Instead, they gave their full concentration
to one single goal, finding pecans.
This, I believe, is the kind of dedication the prophet
Jeremiah was speaking of in his writing.
Jeremiah 29:13 conveys a promise that
God speaks to His people. The Hebrew
people have been held captive in Babylon
and now the time for their return has come.
However, God doesn’t want them to be free only in the physical sense;
instead, He wants them to experience the freedom that comes only in a loving
and personal relationship with Him.
Notice His words in this passage of scripture, “You will seek me and find me when you seek me
with all your heart.”
This short statement contains both a promise and a condition. First, God promises that He can be
found. This does not mean God hides from
us, playing a game of hide-and-seek. He
is not running from us, daring us to discover His hideout. No!
God wants us to enter into a personal relationship with Him, to come to
a deeper and more extensive knowledge than we have ever had. However, for us to do this requires a
decisive effort on our part.
This leads to the second portion of the statement, that of the
condition. Notice that finding God
requires two things on our part. First, we have to want to find God. We don’t search for things unless we want to
find them, unless we miss them, and unless we know that we are incomplete without
them. When these are the conditions
behind our search, we look frantically, refusing to give up until we find what
we are looking for. Second, the search
must be complete. God wants nothing less
than our whole person. He will not be
satisfied until He is the sole reason for our search. Searching for God in this manner means that
nothing deters us from this goal. We pay
no attention to the conditions around us nor are we concerned with the presence
or the opinions of others. Nothing is to
detract us from finding God.
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