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hen I was sixteen years old, my parents allowed me to get a
job and earn my own money. For the first
time, I could buy something I wanted with my own money and it was very
exciting. However, it also proved to be
very challenging because I had to decide between what I could afford and what I
couldn't. Furthermore, I had to evaluate
all my purchases in terms of needs or wants.
It is so easy to spend someone else's money; but when you go to spend
your own, you become very cautious and your approach to owning things takes on
a different perspective.
Like most sixteen-year-olds, I had a desire for a car. Most of my friends had one and, using teenage
logic, that justified my having one as well.
My mom and dad got me a car, but told me I would be paying for it. It was the smartest thing they ever did for
me, although at the time I didn't always agree with this idea. Car ownership was fun so long as I could make
the payments and have everything I wanted.
However, when I wanted to purchase something and couldn't because I had
a payment due, the car became more of a burden than a joy. My parents were giving me a good lesson in
the reality of life, that you can't have everything you want, and that the
privilege of ownership comes with a price.
But it was also a good lesson about having my needs met. Just before school started, mom and I went
shopping at a local store. I needed
clothes in the worst way for school.
Problem was, I couldn't afford to buy them due to the fact my car
payment was due for the month. My job at
the local hospital provided me enough cash to pay for the car and the gas to
run it. There was very little left over
for entertainment or purchasing necessary items, like clothes. So, mom and I went shopping, although I had
absolutely no idea how I was going to pay for them.
At the store, we picked out several shirts, pants, a new
belt, and a new pair of shoes. As we
approached the counter, my mind was filled with questions, well just one
question, "How would I pay for it?"
When we got to the register, the clerk ran the total and mom opened her
checkbook, wrote a check, and looked at me and said, "Let's go!" I remember standing there in disbelief. Mom had never intended for me to buy my
clothes, she just needed me there to try them on. It was always her intent to
buy the clothes for me. She never meant
for me to worry about having clothes nor did she mean for me to be concerned
with paying for them. As a parent,
providing clothes for me was her and dad's responsibility and when the time
came to buy them, she wrote the check, she had me covered.
This is the great truth the Apostle Paul was expressing in Philippians 4:19. The members of the church at Philippi sent Paul a gift, perhaps money or provisions he
needed. Paul accepted the gift with
gratitude and used their expression of love as an illustration of a great
spiritual truth. Paul writes, "But my God
shall supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus." The
Philippians had met a real need in Paul's life.
Perhaps he was concerned about money for his journey. It is possible he needed food and
clothing. Whatever the precise need, the
gift from the church at Philippi adequately
addressed it.
Paul realized that God uses various situations and people to
meet our needs. Paul also knew that we
are never able to meet our own needs. We
are spiritually poor, lacking the funding to adequately provide for
ourselves. We consistently fall short of
the mark and we find ourselves in constant need. This is where God meets us. He knows our needs, even before we do (Matthew 6:8), and he stands ready to meet them. God never expects us to "pay" him
for meeting our needs. As our parent,
God is responsible for providing for our necessities, and he takes that
responsibility seriously. The death of
Jesus is proof of God meeting the ultimate need. We cannot provide our own salvation. We can never work enough, never attend enough
church meetings, never give enough food to needy families, never spend enough
money on the new church building, never pray enough, never visit the sick
enough, etc. We simply don't have the
necessary funds to cover the cost of salvation.
But God does!! He opens his
checkbook, he takes out his pen, he writes the check, and says to us,
"I've got you covered, let's go home."
Today as you spend time with God, thank him for
meeting your needs. God's promise is
that he will meet all our needs, and he means all of them. What we need to do is distinguish between our
needs and our wants, which is something we find so very difficult to do. God is not responsible for our wants; but he
is responsible for our needs and he takes that responsibility seriously. The infinite riches he has in Jesus Christ
are more than adequate to provide for any need you have today. Please don't worry about having your needs
met today. God understands, he is aware,
and he will provide. Hey, he's got you covered!
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