Episode 1. All We're Meant to Be
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A lot of life is about relationships. But sometimes, people are difficult and we’re busy – we can get to thinking – “Is this whole relationships thing really worth it?” Join Berni Dymet …
A lot of life is about relationships. But sometimes, when people are difficult and we’re busy – we can get to thinking – “Is this whole relationships thing really worth it?”
It’s great to with you for a fresh new week on this program, ‘A Different Perspective’. Over the last three weeks we’ve been sharing some time together to talk about dealing with difficult people, we all have them it’s a fact of life, people are difficult sometimes. They wear different faces and we end up having a siege mentality so learning how to deal with all of that makes a huge difference to our lives.
This week I’d like to look at the other side of that coin, in a series of five programs I’ve called building lasting relationships, let’s face it when it comes right down to it, its our relationships that really add meaning to life. The eternal relationship with God, our husbands and wives and families and friends and colleagues, those relationship with those people, well, that’s what really matters right? So how do we build lasting relationships?
Have a think about your relationships, between husband and wife, with friends, colleagues at work, what are they like? Are they rich and rewarding a source of incredible joy to you, or do have this nagging sense that they should be better? I haven’t got time, I’m too busy I’m too tired, I’m, too something. On a scale from 1 to 10 if you looked at the relationships that you have, the ones that are important to you what’s the richness and satisfaction of your relationships?
The reality in today’s world is that mostly people are very busy, it seems to be an extreme, we’re either really, really busy or life’s really quiet and lonely, there doesn’t seem to be much balance for people in between those two extremes. I heard a story about email on radio the other day that one working day in every ten in offices now involves answering emails. The people are answering their emails at night and on weekends and they’re just so connected they can’t get away.
I read another article in the newspaper, it was about the etiquette of cancelling social engagements because we were too busy or tired or whatever. It’s pretty sad isn’t it? We get conned by the advertising that its all about me and I’m important I’ve got to be busy and I’ve got this to do and that to do and it becomes a cocktail of work and business and selfishness. And relationships, well, they can come down at the bottom can’t they?
Come on, sometimes the relationships that are really important – because relationships take time; they take effort they take energy, we’re so busy doing other things, come on, that relationships end up at the bottom of our list. Let me ask you, compared to when you were younger, how much time do you really spend with people that matter in your life today? I mean just husbands and wives, Jacqui my wife lights up my day but I can get so busy on stuff I end up trading the diamonds for stones.
Let me ask you another question, how rich do you want your relationships to be? Paul the Apostle a couple of thousand years ago has a beautiful about God’s family, one that we can apply right through life. It’s about the church being the body of Christ, hang with me, let me just share some of it with you. He said:
You can easily enough see how this kind of thing works by looking no further than your own body, your body has many parts, limbs and organs and cells but no matter how many parts you can name you’re still one body. (1 Corinthians 12:12)
It’s exactly the same with Christ, by means of His one Spirit we all say goodbye to our partial and piecemeal lives. Which each used to live independently calling our own shots but then we entered into a large and integrated life in which He has the final say in everything. I want you to think about how all this makes you more significant and not less. A body isn’t just a single part blown up into something huge, it’s all the different but similar parts arranged and functioning together.
If foot says look I’m not as elegant as hand embellished with all those rings I guess I don’t belong to the body, would that make it so? Or if ear said I’m not beautiful like the eye, limpid and expressive, I don’t deserve a place on the head, would you want to remove that from your body? If the body was all eye how could it hear? If it was all ear how could it smell? As it is we see that God has carefully placed each part of the body right where he wanted it.
But I also want you to think about how this keeps your significance from getting blow up into self importance, because no matter how significant you are it’s only because of the fact that you’re part of the body. An enormous eye or a gigantic hand wouldn’t be significant it would be a monster, what we have is one body with many parts, each with its proper size and its proper place, no part’s important on its own. Can you imagine the eye telling the hand “get lost, I don’t need you,” or the head telling the foot, “You’re fired, your job’s been fazed out?”
As a matter of fact in practice it works the other way, the lower part the more basic are the more necessary. You can live without an eye but not without a stomach, when it’s a part of your own body you’re concerned with it makes no difference whether the part is visible or closed, higher or lower, you give dignity to it and honour to it just as it is without making comparisons. That’s the way God designed our bodies and it’s a model for understanding our lives together.
Good stuff isn’t it? Beautiful picture, you and I aren’t significant because we’re just good at stuff, we’re significant because we’re part of a group of people, we’re in relationship with other people. Just imagine you can be the best concert violinist, a veritable virtuoso but without an audience, so what? You can be the best hairdresser or butcher or plumber, with no clients so what? And where would the virtuoso violinist be without a hairdresser or a butcher or a plumber?
Come on, God is saying that His church, His family is the body of Christ brought together by His Holy Spirit. But it’s like that in just about every social structure too, we’re meant to be a part of a body; the body of Christ is special because the Holy Spirit’s involved. But look at the family, we’re part of a family we have different roles but we’re together. In work we have different roles but we compliment one another; in sporting teams they have different roles but you need all of the roles.
We’re all different, sometimes very, very different, but unless we are a body, a whole, the thing doesn’t work. We’re not a bunch of solo prima-donna opera singers, we’re a choir, we’re a team and significance is about us taking just the special thing that we are. God made you so specially, significance is taking that and being all that we’re meant to be in the context of a relationships.
Tomorrow we’re going to look a bit more at the fact that we’re all different and that can be tough and it can be annoying sometimes too. But let me tell you it’s an awesome thing that you are different from me, that you can do things that I can’t and I can do things that you can’t. And when we say, look relationships are important to me that’s a starting point, to me it’s so important to understand that I’m different and I’m special and who I am and what I can do is unique and beautiful.
And you’re different and you’re special and who and what you are is unique and different and you know, what you are or what I am doesn’t matter unless we have each other, unless we have other people. And that’s how God planned it, that’s why He has a church, that’s why He has a family, that’s why He adopts us into His home, because He wants us to be in relationship with other people. Rich relationships, significant relationships, become richer and more significant when we value who we are and value who other people are. It’s God’s plan.
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