I have been reading about one of the great persons of this past century – Dr. Albert Schweitzer, Christian Pastor and Theologian, world-renowned musician, Doctor of Medicine and Nobel Peace Prize Winner. He serves as a great inspiration to me as I think about how God calls us into mission in every experience of our lives. This past month has been a kaleidoscope of experiences: Holy Week culminating in a beautiful celebration of Easter, a week-long mission trip to Mississippi where we helped two families return to their homes more than three years after Hurricane Katrina, a fantastic Revival in our church that helped bring about spiritual renewal and healing, and our book club in which we read “Out of My Life and Thought: the
Autobiography of Albert Schweitzer.” Although Dr. Schweitzer was an established Pastor, scholar and musician, at age 30 he gave all that up to follow God’s call into Gabon, Africa to treat the poor who had no way of receiving medical attention. I found it ironic that many of his friends found it unsettling in their minds that he should forsake his life of comfort and prestige for a life of servanthood. One of my favorite passages that Schweitzer wrote explains his calling to a life of Christian mission, “I live my life in God . . . [therefore] the idea that men should ever be favored by being free from the responsibilities of self-sacrifice . . . is foreign to the ethic of reverence for life. It requires that we should all live as men for men. Therefore, search and see if there is not some place where you may invest your humanity. As long ago as my student days, it struck me as incomprehensible that I should be allowed to live such a happy life while I saw so many people around me wrestling with care and suffering. Out of the depths of my feeling of happiness, there gradually grew up within me an understanding of the saying of Jesus that we must not treat our lives as being for ourselves alone. As the years have passed, I’ve found the truth lay hidden for me in Jesus' saying: ‘Whosoever shall save his life shall lose it, and whosoever shall lose his life for My sake and the Gospel shall save it.’”
Following the command of Christ and with the guidance of Dr. Schweitzer, I implore you to search in your life for ways to invest your gifts, time and resources for God and other people. For in the end, as another noted theologian Randy Travis says, “It's not what you take when you leave this world behind you, It's what you leave behind you when you go . . . (Three Wooden Crosses)” Selah.
In Christ,
Steve
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
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