Monday, May 22, 2006

Indiscriminate Cost

I bought a dress the other day, and was so enamored of the print and the fit that I didn't even check the price tag before signing the receipt. Not the most prudent choice, and in fact, quite contradictory to the warning found in Luke 14:28 --

"'For which one of you, when he wants to build a tower, does not first sit down and calculate the cost to see if he has enough money to complete it?'"

Being a disciple means 'counting the cost;' looking with enough foresight to understand that diligent obedience will require sacrifice. Yet I think that is where many of us stop. We are all to conscious of the costliness of actually doing what we've been convicted to carry out, and we 'shrink back.'

Perhaps my attitude with the dress wasn't the wisest, but there's a delightfully carefree nature to that mind-set as well... because it sees the final outcome, and doesn't hesitate. Were we to live that way spiritually, how much less would we sit confounded, pondering our options, and instead simply embark on what God has called us to do.

I've recently been inspired by a dear friend who has stood firm in what she's known the Lord's leading to be, and has obeyed - at potentially great cost. The price paid is not relevant; her purpose is to be faithful to the One who's called her. Without being deterred by the price tag.

For obedience cries out that, no matter what we may pay, "our ambition [is] to be pleasing to Him" (2 Corinthians 5:9). And somewhere in that freedom, when we're removed from counting the potential risks and enabled to touch on the joy of being aligned with Him, we find that even what we pay is multiplied back to us through His sustaining us in the path which pleases Him.

Obedience transcends the losses endured, because it knows a higher accountability than to comfort or convenience. We do not move under the constraints of the ramifications, but under the command of the One who never counted faithfulness to us too high a sacrifice to make; the One whose very Life is evidence: the determining factor is never the cost.


1 Comments:

Blogger Chris said...

He asks for obedience rather than sacrifice. Could it be that through our obedience that our sacrifice is enough? hmm... an i being redundant or am I repeating myself.
:)

5:55 PM  

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