Learning to Live Well

change.jpgWednesdays are very long days.  I leave for work that morning and don’t get home until late that evening.  Yesterday included a usual leadership meeting at 5:15 and then a meal in our community center building.  After the meal, I taught an adult Bible class.  I have always enjoyed teaching on Wednesday evenings.  There is an informality and energy that is very stimulating.

 

This week, I have also been stimulated and encouraged by my reading.  I started Phillip Yancey’s new book entitled Prayer and had difficulty putting it down.  (Seriously!)  I encourage you to consider reading it.  Yesterday, I read the October issue of Richard Foster’s Perspective.  He shares "A Dream…and a Hope."  You can read the entire article here.   

Foster begins the article by saying: I dream of a day when spiritual formation
has so saturated all who follow hard after
Jesus that they become known to all as experts
in how to live well…

 

  • How to love a spouse well.
  • How to raise children well.
  • How to study well.
  • How to face adversity well.
  • How to run businesses and financial institutions well.
  • How to form community life well.
  • How to reach out to those on the margins well.
  • How to die well.

The above list caught my attention.  In fact, after reading the entire article, I read through this list again several times.  Why is this list attractive to me?  Because I want to live well.  I do not want to just exist.  Nor, do I want to settle.  So, there are some questions I want to keep before me:

 

  • How does Jesus want me to love my spouse?
  • How does Jesus want me to raise my children?
  • How does Jesus want me to study?
  • How does Jesus want me to face the adversity in my life?
  • How does Jesus want me to behave as a business person?
  • How does Jesus want me to function so that real community exists where I am?
  • How does Jesus want me to relate to those on the margins?
  • How does Jesus want me to handle my death?

Maybe this sounds overly simplistic.  I don’t think so.  In fact, for me as a Christian, these questions are critical.  It is far too easy to continue bad habits and laziness or to just settle for living as those around me seem to be living.  Yet, I believe that, in the end, to not seriously grapple with these questions is my loss.  Anyway, this is what I am praying about today.