Posts Tagged: focusing on God

“What Gets Your Attention Gets You”

“Be careful, in doing battle with this guy, that you don’t become just like him.” (Advice from my exceedingly wise father-in-law, when I was a young pastor. A man in the church I served was stirring up a lot of dust.)

“Turn your eyes upon Jesus. Look full in his wonderful face. And the things of earth will grow strangely dim in the light of his glory and grace.” (Words from a wise old hymn)

The first four verses of Psalm 36 focus on the wicked person. It is not a pretty picture. But then, in verses 5-9, the psalmist makes a dramatic pivot. Suddenly, he is no longer focusing on the wicked person. No! Instead, he is focused on the sweet goodness of God.

“Psa. 36:5        Your steadfast love, O LORD, extends to the heavens,

                        your faithfulness to the clouds.

6          Your righteousness is like the mountains of God;

                        your judgments are like the great deep;

                        man and beast you save, O LORD.

Psa. 36:7         How precious is your steadfast love, O God!

                        The children of mankind take refuge in the shadow of your wings.

8          They feast on the abundance of your house,

                        and you give them drink from the river of your delights.

9          For with you is the fountain of life;

                        in your light do we see light.” (Psalm 36: 5-9, English Standard Version)

Someone has said that whatever gets your attention gets you! This could suggest that if we focus on wicked people too much, we become the slaves of those wicked people. Perhaps we also become, in some measure at least, like those wicked people. The possibility is that we become like whatever or whomever we look at for a long time. If this is true—and I suspect that it is—we need to be very careful about our focus. Yes, we need to recognize and admit the wickedness of the wicked. Perhaps we have areas of our lives where we are wicked and don’t really want to change. That needs to be taken seriously.

However, we shouldn’t camp out with wicked people, even when those people is me! We need to move on. The psalmist eventually gets his eyes off the wicked and instead decides to focus on God. And what sort of God does the man see?

Well, for one thing, the psalmist speaks of a God who is loving. Now I hear someone say, “Wait a minute! This is the Old Testament! Isn’t the God of the Old Testament a God of wrath, while the New Testament God is a God of love?”

I would say that I hate to break the news to you, but the truth is that I’m glad to break the news to you: God’s love is all over the pages of the Old Testament. Yes, there is also a lot of violence and wrath, but there is a lot of love too. It all depends on where you look.

Notice that the love of the LORD reaches the heavens. God’s love is high, like the heavens, overarching the world. God’s love is high above the wicked, high above the righteous, high above everyone and everything.

And then, there is God’s faithfulness. It reaches to the clouds. I am writing this meditation on a cloudy day. It is a wonderfully encouraging thing to think on a penetrating, dreary day—the first day of winter—that God’s faithfulness, God’s consistency, reaches so high. It is a wonderful thing that God is loving, but if God’s love is not consistent, such “love” wouldn’t do us much good. We need a God who sticks with us.

And that is the sort of loving and consistent God that we do, in fact, have.

“Don’t Look Back!”

“But Lot’s wife, behind him, looked back, and she became a pillar of salt.”

(Genesis 19:26 The Holy Bible, English Standard Version)

https://accordance.bible/link/read/ESVS#Gen._19:26.

“Remember Lot’s wife.”  (Luke 17:32, my translation.  Jesus is warning his disciples about the difficulties in their future, and Jesus is encouraging them to persevere.)

Leon Morris comments as follows on Luke 17:32:

Lot’s wife came as close to deliverance without achieving it as was possible. She was brought right out of the doomed city and set on the way to safety. But she looked back and lingered, evidently in longing for the delights she was leaving behind. In the process she was caught up in the destruction that overtook Sodom and she perished with the city (Gen. 19:26).[1]

I have always thought along these lines.  Lot’s wife was looking back because of her longing for “the good times” in the past.  Perhaps that was indeed her motivation.  (Looking back is often called “nostalgia.”  Perhaps we should label it instead “sin” or “stupidity” or something else?)

However, this interpretation of Mrs. Lot’s motivation ignores one crucial aspect of the original story contained in Genesis 19, as well as one crucial aspect of Jesus’ words themselves.  We are not told, either in Genesis 19 or in Luke 17:32, Lot’s wife’s motivation.  Imputing motives is not wise, when we are doing so in our everyday, contemporary lives.  Perhaps it is not a good idea in our biblical interpretation either.

Furthermore, in Genesis 19:17, when the angel warned Lot, his wife, and their daughters not to look back, the angel did not speak of motivation.  The command is very specific: Don’t look back! No proviso about motivation at all!

So, maybe Lot’s wife looked back with regret for the time she had spent there.  Or perhaps she was looking back with contempt toward the cities and their inhabitants.

Now, Lot’s wife speaks to me, because she speaks of me.  I have struggled with nostalgia (and also with regret) since I was just a boy.  The problem hasn’t gotten better with time.

So, what is wrong with looking back?  Not a thing!  Except that it prevents me from focusing on God and on the things that I need to be doing right now.  Then there is the fact that an angel in the Old Testament, and Jesus in the New, who say, “Don’t look back!” and “Remember Lot’s wife!”

Don Henley has a song called “The Boys of Summer.”  (Listen to a more contemplative version of the song, as part of a Howard Stern Show at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hoxEcD4PCco, accessed 01-02-2020.)  In this song, Henley says, “Don’t look back!  You can never look back.”

Maybe you can look back.  Certainly, I can.  The question is should you—should I—look back?  I could, but I think I’ll make a different decision. This year I am choosing to look forward, upward, and at . . ., and not so much back!


[1]Leon Morris, Luke: An Introduction and Commentary, TNTC 3; IVP/Accordance electronic ed. (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1988), 278.

https://accordance.bible/link/read/Tyndale_Commentary#44639
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