6/4/12 A recent Pinterest You-Tube showed 5+ minutes of 60
lip-syncing friends and dancers helping a young man propose to his girlfriend
in a BIG way. It was showy, sweet and entertaining. It’s gotten lots of hits.
But….the real question for the young couple would be, “After the “hype” of the
proposal, The BIG wedding and honeymoon to follow, what path will your marriage
take?”
The “Big” productions will be over and the
marriage will settle down to the ordinary, the mundane, the “day-to-day-ness of
loving another person.” (Mead p, 17) Will they continue to be there for each
other---listening, caring and “doing well by doing good” for their spouse? I suspect they
will be wanting an “abiding in the trenches” kind of intimate love, not the
You-Tube love song version that the entire world has seen.
Similarly, new Christians can ask themselves
the same questions. Accepting Jesus as Savior, becoming the “bride of Christ”
and receiving God’s grace can be a “heady” experience. But….as the years pass and
the “hoopla” and exhilaration wane, it will take discipline and commitment to
still be spending time in His Presence, being alone with Him, listening to Him,
obeying His commands and loving Him well.
If not, the “slide away” can begin, excuses can take over and fellowship
with the Beloved One loses its intensity. But God….will remind them of their
faithlessness just as he did in the time of the prophets as He spoke to His
people through Ezekiel.
31 My people come to you, as they usually do, and sit before you to hear your words, but they do not put them into practice. Their mouths speak of love, but their hearts are greedy for unjust gain. 32 Indeed, to them you are nothing more than one who sings love songs with a beautiful voice and plays an instrument well, for they hear your words but do not put them into practice. (Ezekiel 33:31-32)
What does a Christian gather from meditating on
this? God wants us, not our words, or our bits and pieces of time thrown His
way to appease our guilty consciences. He wants undivided devotion that He
might remain our first Love.
Nevertheless I have somewhat against thee,
because thou hast left thy first
love. (Revelation 2:4)
As Carol Mead so
eloquently expressed in Practically Holy,
God doesn’t care about BIG events, “God wants to speak of our Beloved”…….that
we might not forget our First Love!