‘For all creation is waiting eagerly for
that future day when God will reveal who his children really are’ (Rom.
8:19, NLT).
In this final post on the series, The Manifestation of the
Children of God, my prayer is that we have learnt useful lessons
concerning our place in the Scripture. When the Bible refers to us as the
"Salt of the earth" and the "Light of the world" (Matthew 5:13-16), that is because those are the transforming elements of the God-nature which the world needs and highly expectant too. Let's examine those things that may inhibit our desire to manifest the nature of God.
Hindrances to our manifesting the God-nature
1) Negative Peer
pressure. Undue peer pressure is an
enemy to watch out for. The pressure to conform to the dictates of our peers can be excruciating, whether positive or negative. When positive, its power can sway toward good behaviour, wisdom in
speech, decency, and moral character. When negative, it can lead to poor
conduct, attitude and behaviour. Unfortunately, it is the bad aspect that
carries more weight in the lives of our young ones. For resisting negative peer
pressure can lead to ostracism, ridicule, and victimization. Most teenagers are
not prepared to suffer such at all.
Negative peer pressure distorts vision and re-orders priorities. If you
must manifest the God-nature and be what God wants you to be, you must overcome
this pressure. Negative peer pressure makes a particular individual/trend your
standard instead of Jesus Christ/word of God. Those who yield to such may never
achieve their God-given goal or destiny because they will have no goal of their
own.
Negative peer pressure puts material things above spiritual things. Those
who yield to such cannot set their affections on heavenly things. Such people
will be carnally minded. Negative peer pressure is all about “measuring up” and
making people see that you are conformed. The one who yields to such can never
please God.
The scripture says, “Do not
be deceived: evil company corrupts good habits” (1 Cor. 15:33). Negative peer pressure is a hindrance to the
manifestation of the God-nature.
2)
Stealing. To
steal is to take what does not belong to you, without the express permission of
the owner. Young people steal for reasons ranging from extreme deprivation to
career criminality. To manifest the God-nature is to heed the divine
instruction, “You shall not steal” (Ex. 20:15).
Stealing is an unacceptable behaviour before God and man. That is why
we have all sorts of laws against stealing which is regarded as a criminal
offence. Stealing has a ripple effect – it brings public odium, not only on
the perpetrator but on the whole community (Josh. 7:1-7) and causes a lot of destruction.
Ephesians
4:28, “Anyone who has been stealing must steal no longer,
but must work, doing something useful with their own hands, that they may have something to share
with those in need”.
3)
Lying. A
lie is also referred to as ‘dishonest
speech’, falsehood, etc. The goal of telling lies is to present the matter
in an opposite manner with the intention of pleasing the hearer and receiving a
reward (Prov. 26:19-28).
In Acts 5:1-10, Ananias and his wife, Sapphira,
lied to the apostles concerning their pledge – they died instantly. The
Almighty God hates it when we tell lies (Prov.
6:17b) and warns us to desist from false witnessing (Ex. 20:16, Prov. 12:17). We cannot manifest the God-nature in a
temple of untruth.
4)
Immorality.
Immorality is considered to be any behaviour or conduct that is unacceptable in
the society and inimical to the wellbeing of the community. We tend to focus on
the sexual aspect of immorality but in truth, immorality covers wickedness,
corruption, dishonesty, iniquity, depravity, debauchery, wastage, cultism, etc.
Immorality has permeated society with so much ferocity and impunity that our
young ones have become victims as well as willing advocates. Immorality does
not glorify God because it is sin (1 John 3:1-10) and everything we do must glorify our Father (1 Corinthians 10:31).
Conclusion
The world is
looking forward to the evolution of the children of God – the ones who will
come and change the world for good, from the homes, schools, governments, and
the church. A
tough expectation, no doubt, but ‘the journey of a thousand miles begins with
just one step’.
Our walk with God should be a
marathon, not a dash. In a marathon, you get to regulate your run, to ponder
over your winning strategy, to appreciate the scenery and the people
encouraging and cheering your effort. You receive plenty of help on the way.
The run is well publicised
and participants are registered and given jerseys and identification tags;
local authorities provide security, traffic controllers, and medical personnel
with accompanying ambulance; fellow runners are willing to help their
colleagues along their way. This is the way our spiritual lives should evolve.
First, we indicate our
willingness to let go our former lives and register in the Jesus-Club. Then we
receive the ministry of the Holy Spirit to help us along the way. On the
journey, we get to confront our weaknesses and to overcome them through the
help of the Holy Spirit and fellow brethren. We have a host of angels at our
beck and call to fight the many ‘oppositions’ (family, friends, and foes) and
the opportunity to be an inspiration to others.
This is slightly different in
a dash – a 100m or 200m race. As soon as the ‘gun’ is shot, every participant
engages in such supersonic speed, heading to the finish line. It’s so fast that
there is no time to take note of anything around or bear in mind the next
runner. All the attention, energy, devotion, and goal is dedicated to winning
the race at all cost…nothing else matters.
So, while the spiritual
marathoner 'walks' with a 'growth' attitude - to get close to God, to
frequently 'prepare' himself fit for the Master's use, and to support fellow
men; the 'sprint' man runs, not with the consideration of others but to win
selfishly. He reads the Scripture - not with the goal of gaining anything from
it or to share with others but to 'fulfill all righteousness'. He pays his
tithes - not because he believes that he should contribute to the physical
needs of the church but 'to keep the devourer away'.
The
world awaits the appearance of the loving, kind, committed, trustworthy,
sincere, decent, upright, noble, pleasant, skillful, useful, and well-behaved children
of God. Are you one of them?
Prayer Bible Verse: Joel
2:28, “And afterward, I will pour out
my Spirit on all people. Your
sons and daughters will prophesy, your old men will dream dreams, your young
men will see visions”.