Monday, May 31, 2010

My thoughts of 'Don't Waste Your Life' by John Piper

This book is awesome!

The first place I saw something that really caught my eye was on page 28. This is where John Piper talks about God being glorified and God being enjoyed are the same thing.

He says enjoying God is a way to glorify Him. I guess the reason I noticed this is because I never thought about it that way before. Awesome.

The next thing I noticed is something that I hear repeatedly, but never get tired of it because it is so true.

Page 31-32, Piper tells us that we are created to glorify God. That is where our happiness is. If our happiness is in God, then we are glorifying Him. If we keep that happiness inside our lives, we are not sharing this happiness with others.
John Piper says, “The wasted life is the life without a passion for the supremacy of God in all things for the joy of all people.”
He also says that we waste our lives when we do not glorify God with all our life, not just pieces.
This challenged me. It makes me take a step back and think, ‘am I doing this? Am I glorifying God in all I do?’

Next, I love where John Piper goes. Magnification and Glorifying.
Sometimes glorify means beautify. However, when you beautify something, you try to make it more glorious than it already is. Come on, can you really make God more glorious than He already is? I think not.
So…John Piper says when we mean glorify, we really mean magnify.
Not magnification through a microscope, that makes objects small seem big. No, we want magnification like a telescope! A telescope makes something so majestic, like a star, look like it really is.

Something else that John Piper says in this chapter also struck me.
“If you don’t point people to God for everlasting joy, you don’t love. You waste your life.”
This makes me think more about how I act towards people. Makes me check myself to make sure I am showing God’s love, not just trying to make myself look good.

The next chapter: Boasting only in the Cross-, the Blazing Center of the Glory of God. This is an amazing chapter.
John Piper tells us our main purpose is to exult the cross. The Bible shows us this is what we are supposed to do.
Our life needs to be zeroed in to a single target. That target is the cross of Christ.

Okay, so the fourth chapter John Piper challenges us to magnify Christ no matter what. I think that is something pretty awesome, but also something many people struggle with.
Makes me want to make sure no matter what, even through pain or death, I try to magnify Him.

The next chapter continues this, saying that if we do what we are commanded to do, if we do God’s will for our lives, we will have joy. Piper says, ‘The love of Christ triumphs over all misery.’
This reminds me of Paul. Paul went through so many troubles and so much persecution. What is so amazing though is this, what was he doing, even in prison? This man was still glorifying God. Though chained and beaten, Paul still was glad in Christ. He was happy because he knew he was doing what Christ wanted him to do.

Chapter 6, make others glad in Christ.
This taught me that my goal should be to show other people how glad I am in Christ, but John Piper warns us that we cannot make anyone glad in Christ. I noted this, ‘…we can’t make anyone glad in God. …It is the effect of God’s grace…Joy in God is awakened in the heart when God graciously opens our eyes to see the glory of the Gospel.”
We should work with people, but not make them feel as though they were being forced into knowing Christ.
He also says in this chapter, ‘gladness is not a peripheral religious experience.’ He explains that here:
‘When I speak of gladness in God, therefore, I mean a gladness that has roots in God’s eternal decree, was purchased by the blood of Christ, springs up in the newborn heart because of God’s Spirit, awakens in repentance and faith, constitutes the essence of sanctification and Christ-likeness, and gives rise to a life of love and a passion for redeeming the world after the image of God. Gladness in God is a massive reality planned and purchased and produced by God in the lives of His elect for the glory of His name.’
I thought that was awesome. :)

Chapter seven, living to prove He is more precious than life, challenged me to make sure others see that I value God more than life or possessions, and not just in front of other people either, but also in everyday life. Whew, kinda tough!

In closing, chapters 8 and 9, Piper challenges us repeatedly to live for Christ, to magnify Christ, to help others, no matter where you are.
I do not have to be a missionary to help others or tell them about God’s awesome love. I can do this everywhere I am, wherever God wants my help. At work, school, and at the grocery store, I can show others His glory, His love, His Son, and maybe they will come to know Him.

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