Tuesday, June 30, 2015

I Shall Not Want

Some of the greatest troubles we have in life is because we attach ourselves to things and people that at first seem desirable, but that gain too much control over us.  In Special Sermons for Special Days, Dr. George Sweeting wrote:  


"Several years ago our family visited Niagara Falls. It was spring, and ice was rushing down the river. As I viewed the large blocks of ice flowing toward the falls, I could see that there were carcasses of dead fish embedded in the ice. Gulls by the score were riding down the river feeding on the fish. As they came to the brink of the falls, their wings would go out, and they would escape from the falls.
"I watched one gull which seemed to delay and wondered when it would leave. It was engrossed in the carcass of a fish, and when it finally came to the brink of the falls, out went its powerful wings. The bird flapped and flapped and even lifed the ice out of the water, and I thought it would escape. But it had delayed too long so that its claws had frozen into the ice. The weight of the ice was too great, and the gull plunged into the abyss."
The finest attractions of this world become deadly when we become overly attached to them.
(http://www.sermonillustrations.com/a-z/a/attachment.htm.  June 30, 2015.)

As he wrote Psalm 23, King David reflected on much simpler days, when he had been a shepherd.  He remembered the perfect care with which shepherds tends the sheep.  Those under a shepherd's care don't need to worry about whether they will have everything they need.  They lack nothing.  Their food and water are provided for them by one who knows the territory better than they do.  In times of storm, shelter is provided.  If a sheep went astray, the shepherd would seek it out and bring it back to the flock.  Sheep lived a contented life, never worrying and never wanting, because they were well-tended.

Yet for some reason we human beings forget that we are also well-tended.  God knows our need even better than we do.  He will feed and clothe and shelter us.  He will put people in our lives who give us just the right kind of love and support that we need.  

If we let Him, our Shepherd will help us determine those things in our lives that we actually don't need.  We attach ourselves to too many things and people that weigh us down.  Like gulls that get stuck in the ice, we fall to our demise because of our over-attachment.  Better to let go, to fly over those things in life that will pull us down, rather than lingering and letting them destroy us.

Today, I invite you to meditate on one sentence - Psalm 23:1.  Spend a few minutes, simply sitting with your eyes closed, breathing deeply, and repeating this verse.  Then, switch translations and do the same thing.  Spend fifteen or twenty minutes just repeating this verse.  Remember that God provides everything you need, and that wanting what you can't have or don't need simply brings over-attachment and discontent to your heart.  Allow the Good Shepherd to give you His contentment and peace.


The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want.  (KJV)
 The LORD is my shepherd; I have all that I need. (NLT) 
The LORD is my shepherd, I lack nothing. (NIV)
The LORD is my shepherd. I am never in need.  (GOD'S WORD Translation)


Or, if you'd like to use the Ecumenical Prayer Beads, here's a meditation:

Cross - The Lord's Prayer

Invitatory - Psalm 23:1-6

Cruciform - "The Lord is my Shepherd."

Weeks - "I shall not want."

Benedictory - Psalm 23:1-6

Cross - The Lord's Prayer