Of what
consequence is living water when what you want is Coca-Cola?”
At the Feast
of Tabernacles, Jesus stood and cried out, saying: “If anyone thirsts, let him
come to me and drink. He who believes in
me, as the scripture has said, out of his heart will flow rivers of living
water.” (John 7:37-39).
However, no
one seemed to be interested in what Jesus was offering. No one asked him for a drink of this
so-called living water.
Unwanted water
“Clarus,
which water was he talking about?” “He
said living water.” “What kind of water
is that?” “Frankly, Gringory, I don’t
know.” “Is it as good as Coca-cola?”
“Actually, I think he was talking about
spiritual water.”
“What do you do with
spiritual water? Can you serve it to
your friends at a party?” “I doubt
it.” “I don’t think Jerusalem is ready
for that kind of water. Of what
consequence is living water when what you want is Coca-Cola?”
Continue
God says:
“My people have committed two evils: they have forsaken me, the fountain of
living waters, and hewn themselves cisterns- broken cisterns that can hold no
water.” (Jeremiah 2:13).
According to
Jesus, there are two types of water: natural water and living water. Of the two, the prescribed choice is living
water. Jesus says: “Everyone who drinks
of (natural) water shall thirst again; but whoever drinks of the water that I
shall give him shall never thirst; but the water that I shall give him shall
become in him a well of water springing up to eternal life.” (John 4:14). What precisely is Jesus’ living water? It is the Holy Spirit.
Hard choices
Christians
suppose all Christians have the Holy Spirit.
We presume that we receive the Holy Spirit at the point of our
conversion. We declare we are born again
once we answer an altar call.
However,
most of us fail Jesus’ litmus test because we continue to thirst. If we truly have the Holy Spirit, we would
not thirst again.
But what
kind of life would we have if we never thirst again? How then would we be entertained? Surely a person who does not thirst must be
dead. Such a person would no longer be
able to enjoy life.
We want to
be able to thirst, but to have a constant supply of delectable drinks whenever
we want them to satisfy our thirst. We
want to be able to hunger, but to be able to satisfy our hunger readily with
lavish plates of food.
Therefore,
we reconfigure a more palatable construct to Jesus’ statement. We insist we have the Holy Spirit, in spite
of the contradiction whereby we continue to thirst for the vain
glories of this
world.
We really
need to sort out these contradictions with the Lord beforehand. Otherwise, he might mistakenly send us to the
wrong heaven. Who wants to get to heaven
and find out that it does not have the good things of life? Who wants to get to heaven only to discover he
cannot enjoy sex there?
Who wants to go to a Promised Land that does
not have the leeks and cucumbers of Egypt?
Who wants to trundle through life having to eat manna every day instead
of Kentucky fried-chicken? Surely, the
heaven that is truly heavenly is the one where we can have our cake and eat it
too.
Spiritual Life
Let no man
deceive you: the life Jesus offers is the spiritual life. He came that we might have a full and
enriching personal relationship with God.
That is why he gives us God’s Holy Spirit as down-payment.
“But Lord Jesus, we don’t want spiritual
life. We want physical and material
life. We want the life of eating the
best foods and drinking the best drinks.
We want the life of living in the best houses, driving the best cars, and
having the best jobs. We don’t want the
life of carrying our cross and denying our self.”
For the
children of Israel, the route to a Promised Land flowing with milk and honey
turned out to be a wilderness.
There was no pipe-borne water, no television,
and no edikaikong soup. Therefore, they
mumbled and grumbled and wanted to go back to Egypt.
Alas, many
Christians are caught in similar conundrum.
We have been seduced by the “prosperity gospel.” Nevertheless, we are out of pocket;
unemployed, without accommodation or unmarried.
Therefore,
we are also mumbling and grumbling through this wilderness of life; just as the
Israelites did to disastrous effect.
Esau did not
value spiritual life. What is the value
of spiritual life when a man is hungry?
What is the value when he is horny?
Esau did not value his birthright.
But someone else did.
Esau traded
eternal life for a plate of rice. He
traded eternal life for a night of passion.
It was just one sexual fling, but he caught AIDS. It was just one night of illicit sex, but
Bathsheba became pregnant.
But much later, Esau came to appreciate his
birthright. On his father’s deathbed, he
sought it carefully with tears. But,
alas, it was too late.
We die in
sin not because we cannot obtain eternal life, but because we reject it. We don’t want it. It is costly and we don’t want to pay the
price. Jesus says: “any of you who does
not give up everything he has cannot be my disciple.” (Luke14:33).
Forbidden drink
One day, the
Lord said to me: “Femi, I want you to stop drinking Coke and Fanta!” I have never fought the Lord with as much
ferocity as I did on that one. Coke and
Fanta were my favourite drinks in the world.
They were non-alcoholic, non-intoxicating and relatively cheap. Why then should I have to give them up?
“Show me,” I
insisted, “show me in the bible where it says a man should not drink Coke. How is it a sin to drink Coke? Why are you so determined to take everything
away from me?” “What if I told you to
give it up for me?” asked the Lord.
“But why
would you even ask such a thing of me? I
thought you were my friend,” I pleaded.
“I also thought you were my friend,” the Lord replied. “Okay, I will reduce the number of bottles I
drink in a day.”
“No, I want you to give
them up completely.”
Jesus says:
“My Father loves me, because I lay down my life.” (John 10:17). I am ashamed to admit it took me no less than
two years to lay down this aspect of my miserable life.
One day, the
Lord told me to go and pray for a boy who was paraplegic. When I got there, the mother asked me if I
would like to have a drink. I asked for
Fanta Chapman and when I took a sip of it, the drink bit me on the lip.
(Proverbs 23:32).
I know that might sound strange to you, but
there is no other way of describing what happened. I knew immediately that the Holy Spirit was
behind this.
I have not
taken any Coke and Fanta in the last sixteen years, and I will never take Coke
and Fanta again as long as I live.
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