10 Questions for a New Year…

Author and professor Don Whitney has created a fine list of TEN QUESTIONS to consider at the start of a new year. He writes (emphasis added):

The beginning of a new year is an ideal time to stop, look up, and get our bearings. To that end, here are some questions to ask prayerfully in the presence of God.

The value of many of these questions is not in their profundity, but in the simple fact that they bring an issue or commitment into focus. For example, just by articulating which person you most want to encourage this year is more likely to help you remember to encourage that person than if you hadn’t considered the question.

• What’s one thing you could do this year to increase your enjoyment of God?

• What’s the most humanly impossible thing you will ask God to do this year?

• What’s the single most important thing you could do to improve the quality of your family life this year?

• In which spiritual discipline do you most want to make progress this year, and what will you do about it?

• What is the single biggest time-waster in your life, and what will you do about it this year? (!)

• What is the most helpful new way you could strengthen your church?

• For whose salvation will you pray most fervently this year?

• What’s the most important way you will, by God’s grace, try to make this year different from last year?

• What one thing could you do to improve your prayer life this year?

• What single thing that you plan to do this year will matter most in ten years? In eternity?

I suggest you jot down your answers on paper (writing greatly aids thinking, and adds a little gravity to your answers). Then take up the list and pray over it in the days ahead — or, better yet, share it with a brother and pray with him about it…

Have a Happy & blessed New Year!
pdb

Powerful, post-Christmas pondering

I hope you have 3 minutes to read something profound — which perfectly fits this present post-Christmas “downtime”…

Hopeful Post-Christmas Melancholy
(Author: Jon Bloom, at DesiringGod.org blog)

Each year Christmas night finds members of my family feeling some melancholy. After weeks of anticipation, the Christmas celebrations have flashed by us and are suddenly gone. And we’re left standing, watching the Christmas taillights and music fade into the night.

But it’s possible that this moment of melancholy may be the best teaching moment of the whole season. Because as long as the beautiful gifts remain unopened around the tree and the events are still ahead of us, they can appear to be the hope we are waiting for. But when the tree is empty and events are past, we realize we are longing for a lasting hope.

So last night, as Pam and I tucked our kids into bed, we talked about a few things with them:

Gifts and events can’t fill the soul. God gives us such things to enjoy. They are expressions of his generosity as well as ours, but gifts and celebrations themselves are not designed to satisfy. They’re designed to point us to the Giver. Gifts are like sunbeams. We are not meant to love sunbeams but the Sun.

Putting our hope in gifts will leave us empty. Many people live their lives looking for the right sunbeam to make them happy. But if we depend on anything in the world to satisfy our soul’s deepest desire, it will eventually leave us with that post-Christmas soul-ache. We will ask, “Is that all?” because we know deep down that’s not all there is. We are designed to treasure a Person, not his things.

It is more blessed to give than receive. What kind of happiness this Christmas felt richer, getting the presents that you wanted or making someone else happy with something that you gave to them? Receiving is a blessing, but Jesus is right—giving is a greater blessing. A greedy soul lives in a small, lonely world. A generous soul lives in a wide world of love.

It’s just like God to let the glitter and flash of the celebrations (even in his honor) to pass and then to come to us in the quiet, even melancholic void they leave. Because often that’s when we are most likely to understand the hope he intends for us to have at Christmas.

Amen. pdb