How will you be remembered? If your body, ravaged and debilitated, gave up your spirit, would there be anything that remains of your efforts on earth? Could you be accurately portrayed by simple observation of your fruit? How many would stand at your memorial service and attribute their spiritual condition to the time and effort you poured into them? Have you laid a spiritual foundation for ministry that will endure long after your body fades away? Will history reflect your private prayer?
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Last week in church my son, Kyle, was sitting next to me during worship. He was using a twisted paper clip to pick out pebbles from the tread of his shoe, and the Holy Spirit quickly reminded me of this book. I paused and looked around to see the spiritual posture of those surrounding me. Who was hungry? Who was bored? What was the spiritual climate of the service?
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One row behind me stood a young blond-haired woman with both hands stretched out like she was grasping desperately for a life preserver, a river of mascara streaming down both cheeks. Something told me she had business to deal with God.
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Looking back to Kyle, with the paper clip now lodged in his mouth, it occurred to me how many lives have been left fallow while others make the most of every moment. You can be sure the next time I see this young lady, I’ll encourage her to continue pursuing God.
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I came to the realization that, in the end, when we look back over our lives, whatever we behold is completely of our own making. Finding your purpose and getting involved isn’t enough. Getting involved and even giving it all you’ve got isn’t enough. We have to realize the history with which we’ve been entrusted. So many still need to hear the good news, both during and after our lifetime. Our generation cannot be held responsible for what past generations have accomplished or neglected, but we will be held accountable with what we do today and in the generations to come.
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This is why Jesus was so bent on pounding the “reproduction gene†into the lives of His people. He knew how critical it would be for every believer to leave a legacy long after they’re gone. In His great discourse about being on the vine (John 15), Jesus shared some of His most intimate thoughts regarding life’s purpose and the importance of using your purpose to extend His kingdom through the lives of others. He said, “You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you so that you might go and bear fruit—fruit that will last†(John 15:16, TNIV). The entire chapter addresses the point that Christians are called to be fruitful, to find our purpose and fulfill it. Jesus made it clear that a tree (your life) is meant to be fruitful, bearing good fruit. In addition, He warned His disciples that non-fruit-bearing trees would be cut off. But His final point was that we should bear fruit “that will last.†It is vital that we understand that whatever Jesus invests into us, we are meant to pass on to others.
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Make it your aim today to make your life count for something. Find someone, and pour yourself into them. You won’t be disappointed.