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After the first day of summer camp, we were all encouraged to write our parents a letter telling them about camp. Apparently, my letter was quite descriptive of the abhorrent and despicable conditions in which I had found myself – having nothing in common with the other campers, musty cabins, suffocating heat and humidity that made little girls drip with sweat, contaminated swimming pool, gag-inducing food, moldy community showers where we showered in our bathing suits, counselors that were too young to “counsel” – along with the tidbit that my three cabinmates and I packed all our clothes in a huge laundry bag, hung it on hook, and took turns all night swinging the bag back in forth in front of our cabin door to keep us safe from perverted prowlers that we heard roamed the camp.
Upon receipt of my letter, my parents hurriedly drove to the camp to rescue me from the pit – only to find that I had acclimated beautifully to camp life, was having a blast, and wasn’t even thrilled to see them! They went back home, and only much later did I learn they had come to rescue me.
Contrast my little girl whiney letter with the beautiful, joyful, and encouraging letter that Paul wrote to the Philippians. And he certainly had reason to whine. For one thing, he still had that pesky thorn in the flesh that he had prayed numerous times for God to relieve. For another thing, he was in his fourth year as a prisoner in Rome. Although he was allowed visitors and was free to preach the gospel to his captors, he was not free to come and go as he pleased, nor allowed to engage with people in the marketplace, nor permitted to embark on another missionary voyage.
And yet… we discover that the theme (and tone) of Paul’s letter to the Philippians is JOY!! We’ll find that joy and contentment are attributes of a mature believer – attributes not related to circumstances, but attributes that flow out of a close relationship with Jesus Christ – the Creator of joy!
Despite his circumstances, Paul found joy-producing confidence when he fixed his attention on reasons to be thankful. And, most importantly, he found joy-producing confidence when he kept his focus on
Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith
(Hebrews 12:2).
Are you apt to be a discontented whiner – bewailing the horrid circumstances of life? Or are you a mature or maturing believer determined to be an ambassador of joy to a world that needs an infusion of the love of Christ? What kind of letter are you writing with your life? It’s your choice.
By Judy Shrout
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