I hate to admit it, but my family is hooked on a reality show. For weeks my wife and kids plan their week so they can be perched on the couch, eating dessert, watching overweight people work and sweat and worry, attempting to become The Biggest Loser. And I must also confess that, try as I might, I can't help but get sucked in whenever I'm home on Tuesday nights.
I suppose part of the attraction is that these are real people, battling real temptations, and expriencing real transformation. I would suggest that such drama is what God wired us for: God made us so that we're intrigued by the battle against temptation and thrilled to see authentic transformation. Even so, it's still just television. It's not reality.
What's real? According to the Bible this life is just a mist that will soon evaporate. Our souls, however, are eternal. We, in our true essence, will last forever. That's reality. And all of us, as real people, are facing real temptations every day that will affect "forever." As real people we all long for real transformation that will last forever. So why don't we talk about it more? Why don't we talk about eternal realities more?
I stumbled on a couple of articles this week that speak to this subject. I'd love to hear your perspective. Check out the following two articles and then check back for more in a post later this week:
"The Naked Truth about the Lie Running around the Church"
"Beginning a Conversation about Christ"
I suppose part of the attraction is that these are real people, battling real temptations, and expriencing real transformation. I would suggest that such drama is what God wired us for: God made us so that we're intrigued by the battle against temptation and thrilled to see authentic transformation. Even so, it's still just television. It's not reality.
What's real? According to the Bible this life is just a mist that will soon evaporate. Our souls, however, are eternal. We, in our true essence, will last forever. That's reality. And all of us, as real people, are facing real temptations every day that will affect "forever." As real people we all long for real transformation that will last forever. So why don't we talk about it more? Why don't we talk about eternal realities more?
I stumbled on a couple of articles this week that speak to this subject. I'd love to hear your perspective. Check out the following two articles and then check back for more in a post later this week:
"The Naked Truth about the Lie Running around the Church"
"Beginning a Conversation about Christ"
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