Summer
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Summer: A Foretaste of Heaven
Revelation 22:1-5
Online Sermon:
http://www.mckeesfamily.com/?page_id=3567
Summertime is a glorious time of “fruit, warmth, light,
rest, play, wonder, festival, joy, reunion, and holidays” (113). It
is a time to walk on the beach and let the hot sand run through
your toes, a time to lie on a hammock and soak in the sun’s rays,
a time to fish, hunt, and go on long walks enjoying nature in all
its soothing sounds and beauty! While in winter it is easy to only
see darkness as one’s closest friend, summer flips that, God and
others draw intimately near, light and life around us, and night
and mourning flee
away” (113). In the
beauty of summer,
it is often easier to
get close to God.
King David said,
“the
heavens
declare the glory of
God; the skies
proclaim the works
of His hands. Day after day they pour fourth speech; night after
night they reveal knowledge. They have no speech; they use no
words; no sound is heard from them. Yet their voice goes into
all the earth, their words to the end of the world” (Psalms 19:14). Not only is God’s glory easier to see from nature in summer
but also fruits of drawing near to Him can be seen easier as well.
“Most of the seasons of our hearts demand something from us,
some sacrifice, some labor, some deep wrenching adjustment.
But summer just wants to give and give. The only demand is
that we surrender to it, bask in it” (113). And yet while summer
is often marked by effortless fruit it also comes with the warnings
to not loose our first love, to not be overcome by nostalgia or
become so infatuated in summer’s beauty and ease that one
becomes dehydrated, and the word of God becomes secondary
to worldly pleasures.
Warnings of Summertime
In the heat of the summer with all its effortless and
pleasurable sights, smells, tastes, and fruit it is easy to forget the
hard work of pruning of winter and planting in the spring. It was
the Good Shepherd who
carried you over the thresholds
of
anguish,
pain,
and
loneliness so intense that
darkness became your closest
friend. God did not pick you
up and mend your brokenness
in the bad times merely to have
you ignore Him in the good
times. James says we only
become
“mature
and
complete, not lacking in
anything” when we “persevere
in the faith” (James 1:2-4) which does not finish with the trial
but extends into every part of our lives forever! With its hot
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summer days and abundance of fruit it is easy to stand upon the
mountain tops of blessings and forget the lessons of our trials in
the valleys. On the Island of Patmos Apostle John was instructed
to write the following to the angel of the church of Ephesus:
though they worked hard and persevered great hardships in
Jesus’ name, “yet this I hold against you, you have forsaken the
love you had at the first. Consider how far you have fallen!
Repent and to the things you did at first” (Revelation 2:1-7)! Life
in all seasons is meant to be lived with God at the center of all of
one’s thoughts, words, and deeds! While it is easier to see our
dependence on God in the winter’s fierce storms, this does not
negate the truth that like the children of Israel in the book of
judges we tend to fall the hardest when on the highest
mountaintops of blessings!
Having been freed from the crushing effects
of winter, summer is the perfect time to
reflect on His goodness and to surrender
one’s goals and dreams to kingdom goals as
one basks in the mercy of His bounty to one
saved by grace through faith (Ephesians 2:8).
Summertime is also the time when Christians most battle
the feelings of nostalgia. In all its beauty and effortless pleasure,
summertime can become a burden. “If we don’t fathom that
summer’s beauty is a rumor of heaven, we’ll make fetish of the
rumor and miss what it’s pointing too” (119). The Bible is clear
that this world is not our home (Hebrews 13:14-16) and as such
the eternity God has placed in our hearts (Ecclesiastes 3:11) is to
keep us looking forward to the place the Lord went to prepare
for us as described in Revelation 22:1-5.
Then the angel showed me the river of the
water of life, as clear as crystal, flowing from
the throne of God and of the Lamb down the
middle of the great street of the city. On each
side of the river stood the tree of life, bearing
twelve crops of fruit, yielding its fruit every
month. And the leaves of the tree are for the
healing of the nations. No longer will there
be any curse. The throne of God and of the
Lamb will be in the city, and His servants will
serve Him. They will see His face, and His
name will be on their foreheads. There will
be no more night. They will not need the light
of a lamp or the light of the sun, for the Lord
God will give them light. And they will reign
for ever and ever.
Imagine going to heaven not only being there with God but also
having His name written on your forehead and the curse of the
garden of Eden fully removed! It is in summer that we are most
in danger of seeing the
splendor and beauty of
the world and foolishly
try to imprint it into our
memories as perfection.
When nostalgia paints the
past as golden then “the
way it was done back
then” becomes the model
of superiority and standard of excellence to strive towards (117).
Songs and church rituals written in the past become icons of
holiness, stifling the Holy Spirit’s voice in the present and the
church’s ability to become all things to all people to win some to
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Christ (1 Corinthians 9:19-23)! Holding the past as an icon of
holiness often leads to sadness and dare, I say bitterness when
one realizes that circumstances by which made it glorious are not
going to ever return!
soil had no root and therefore when the sun came up it got
scorched (Matthew 13:5-6). This is how it is in the summertime.
Our jars of clay are easily broken and need to be constantly
nourished by God.
Summer, then, is a time not to have a “back
there” but “up there” experience (120). It is a
time to be thankful for God’s saving grace and
mercy in the past but more importantly it is an
invitation in faith to change as God asks.
Without a continuous inpouring of the Holy
Spirit through prayer and meditating on
God’s word our roots will be shallow and the
sun of summertime blessings will get us
drunk on worldly pleasures rather than
having utter dependence on He who placed
on the mountaintop in the first place!
Summertime is the perfect time to look forward to living
considering the eternity He has placed in our hearts in the place
the Lord is preparing for His own (John 14:1-4)!
And the final warning of summertime that I want to deal
with is dehydration. How I love to go to the beach and merely
lie in the hot sand and feel the rays of the sun pour onto my body!
I would lie there for hours
if it were not for the
danger of getting dried
out and burnt to a crisp!
Apostle Paul states the
following about our
bodies, “we have this
treasure in jars of clay to
show that the allsurpassing power is from God and not us” (2 Corinthians 2:7).
Left to our own abilities we can do nothing for God but with Him
all things are possible (Matthew 19:26)! In the Parable of the
Sower, it states that the seed that sprang up quickly in shallow
When we get our eyes fixed on this world rather than heaven the
sun of temptations becomes brutal and relentless, constantly
distracting us from the Living waters and source of our very
lives, Jesus! “We can become so accustomed to the bounty of
God that we grow indifferent about seeking His gifts and
stewarding them. The lake brims and is so refreshing we fail to
notice that the river that feeds it has dwindled to a trickle” (136)!
So, to keep from “drying up” in the summertime of God’s
blessings we simply must drink steadily from the fountain of
prayer and meditation on His word!
Summertime Activities
The first activity of summertime is to seek first the
kingdom of God. As born-again believers our identity is already
secured as citizens of heaven (125). For many people summer is
a time of business, not only in “working for a living” but
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especially in relaxing and enjoying the fruits that are plentiful
during this season. If we are not careful, however, our times of
blessings can drown out our time with the Lord! In summer there
is always the temptation to fill our calendars with pleasurable
things such as walks in the park, resting at a beach, going on
exotic vacations, and planning parties with our friends and
family. “Busy” is often described as Being Under Satan’s Yoke
because pleasurable, worldly things distract us from living as if
we were already in our
eternal home!
While
winter in its “enforced
silence and stillness and
waiting”
is
seldom
restful, summertime is the
perfect time to take time
to be holy, be still, know
and submit to God’s
good, pleasing, and
perfect will for our lives
(Romans 12:2). Summer’s calm waters and abundance of
provision makes it fertile ground for developing the spiritual
disciples needed to draw nearer to God that is so desperately
needed in the darker seasons (126). The second activity of
summertime is to not worry but trust God and take whatever path
He wants you to travel on. In winter one must walk by faith and
not by sight and the goodness of God becomes “our creed, true
always, seen or unseen, recited regardless of feelings. In
summer, its our testimony, true because it is obvious, and deeply
felt.
Summer is when we walk in the light – we
can see, at every step, that God is good, and
near, and for me” (128). In the evidence of
such blessings, one is not to worry but have
faith that while taking a leap for the Lord is
often into the unknown and untraveled path it
ought to be rejoiced for His mighty hand will
enable all He asks us to do!
The final activity of summertime I would like to address
is to gather in the first fruits of blessings. In the book of Proverbs
it states, “he who gathers in summer is a prudent son, but he who
sleeps during the harvest is a disgraceful son” (10:5). While fall
is the primary time of the harvest there are crops to be harvested
in the summer as well (136). These crops are called the first
fruits and in the
Old
Testament
they belong solely
to
God!
Summertime in all
its abundance is the
perfect time to
“give ourselves as
a first fruit unto
God” (136). He who has given you “exceedingly more than you
can ask or imagine” (Ephesians 3:20) and proven to you that He
always does good to those who love Him (Romans 8:28), has
every right to ask to for your very best service in His kingdom!
In abundance it is easy to become a spiritual consumer, picky
wasteful, ungrateful, and always coveting more than one has
received! To serve God faithfully in His kingdom requires His
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own to be so thankful of having received His gracious provisions
that it propels the heart to no longer “crave and complain but
instead live in the mode of giving and thanksgiving” (132). To
be good stewards and recipients of God’s grace means feeding
the poor, giving them something to drink and providing clothes
on their backs with the attitude that if we do unto the least in His
kingdom, we have done it unto Christ Himself (Matthew 25:3146).
So, as we count our blessings and name them
one by one may we be thankful and carve out
to the Lord the very best of our time, talents,
money, and efforts to accomplish great things
in His name.
In bringing in the first fruits let us not forget how important it is
to prune out any activities that are not bearing fruit. In summer
it is easy to become so busy doing “what we want to do” that we
forget to make sure God has approved of these activities by
sending us fruit! Not only pray that God would show and give
you the courage to cut out the barren leaves of service but also
for you to see and embrace those spiritual activities that He wants
you to do! Summertime is glorious time of fruit, warmth, light,
rest, play, wonder, festival, joy, reunion, and holidays but best of
all it is the perfect time to reorient one’s service to God in
accordance with His will!
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