When
I started college, I set a number of fairly ambitious goals that I wanted to
achieve during the next four years, and as each year went by, I kept adding to
them. Join a fraternity. Become a fraternity officer. Join the student newspaper.
Be one of the key editors. Be named to the leadership fraternity and Who’s Who.
By
the middle of my senior year, I had achieved every goal I had set. I had run
out of goals, and it still wasn’t enough. And I crashed.
We
chase after everything and anything that promises fulfillment and significance –
achievement, power, money, beauty, approval – the list can get lengthy. Yet
even when we achieve them, they’re never enough. We always crave more.
The
reason is that we’re chasing after all the wrong things. And Pete Wilson,
pastor of Crosspoint Church in Nashville, Tennessee, explains why – in detail –
in Empty
Promises: the Truth About You, Your Desires, and the Lies You’re Believing.
Reading
this book can be like looking in the mirror.
Chapter
by chapter, Wilson considers many of the key things we look to – and devote our
lives and energies to – for meaning and significance. Achievement. Approval.
Power. Money. Religion (yes, religion). Beauty. Personal dreams. Because we are
a people wired to worship, he says, the question isn’t “Do we worship” but
instead “Who of what do we worship.”
Chapter
by chapter, Wilson’s message is convicting. He uses a combination of Biblical
teaching and personal examples to make his points. And his points are piercing.
Had
he stopped with defining the problem, his message would have been satisfactory
but not helpful. But he goes on, in simple, straightforward language, to
discuss what is the only real object of our desires for fulfillment – and how
to live a life of worship.
Even
for those of us who know better, or should know better, Empty Promises is an important reminder of how easy it is to get
caught up in seeking the wrong things, even with the best of intentions.
And
in my case, when I finally understood the futility of what I had been chasing
after, I gave it up, and turned to faith in God. It made all the difference.
This brought to mind the song, "Fill My Cup Lord," which I haven't heard for a number of years. Sounds like an interesting read.
ReplyDeleteWe have a lot in common. Thanks for sharing so personally.
ReplyDeleteAs always, a good write and a good read!
ReplyDeleteit made all the difference...this is a louise kind of post!
ReplyDeleteFaith in God does make all the difference. No futility there : ) Thanks for sharing this. I was just writing about testimonies today. It gave me a big smile. God bless!
ReplyDelete