Sunday, July 11, 2010

Trust

Have you ever thought about the importance of trust? On a large scale, and a small scale, trust is one of the most foundational in any relationship, and it is very difficult to form a successful group/society/civilization without trust. Honesty is one of the biggest values that I have, and it has a good basis. Many of us have been burned before (betrayed by a friend, acquaintance, or even salesperson). Most of the time, that causes us to become a little more skeptical the next time. As the saying goes, "Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me." I see our society falling apart right now, and many reasons have to do with a lack of trust of other people (not that this is not rightly-earned skepticism). Yet it is still very sad indeed.

For example, the Bible commands us to give to the poor and needy. I naturally want to meet the need of the grungy man in tattered clothes in downtown Houston asking me for some money. But do I trust him? All of us have heard that right after they give money to that person, he or she goes and buys booze or tobacco to feed their addiction rather than buying clothes or food. I, myself, have offered some food I had with me to a person asking for money for food, and they weren't interested. Thus, our hearts are hardened towards the needy. Likewise, as my dad recalled the story of a van that was stuck in a pothole in Uganda. People around in the market saw the situation and helped lift it up out of the pothole. In America, we would have to call a tow truck. Why? Because anytime we see a car with an issue on the road, we are afraid to stop to help because it could be someone trying to rob us and take advantage of our kindness.

Even our signature every time that we sign a credit card charge receipt isn't really worth anything. It is worth whatever the signer deems his/her signature is worth. You could put a smiley face on the line (and some of my friends do that). A credit card thief could sign his own name or forge your name on a credit card stub and it wouldn't matter at all. The signature is basically useless, which is why I imagine some places stopped requiring it after the credit card swipe. And yet, our entire monetary system is based on debt that we assume is going to be payed back with interest... eventually. I honestly don't trust the very dollar that I use as my primary currency because the United States could never pay back its debt. But I trust it more than any other common currency. The European countries are even less likely to pay back their debts than we are, and Japan's debt is over two times their GDP. If you think you can handle the truth, check out the stats at http://www.usdebtclock.org/

So what is my point? My point is that these days, it is difficult for us to process what it even means to trust completely. When many of us don't even feel like we can trust our own family members because of past scars, how can we even contemplate trusting completely again? Yet God asks us... demands us to be able to trust in Him with the faith of a little child. The faith of a little child that does not know how cruel and untrustworthy the world is.

If you have a lot of difficulty trusting other people completely from wounds in your past when your innocent complete trust got you hurt when it was taken advantage of, re-examine your own heart. It won't be easy, but you must work through these trust issues. The reason is that many people go through life not trusting completely in anything or anyone. How then can that person say they trust completely in Jesus Christ--who allowed it all to happen? Yes, God is good all the time. Not good as in lacking pain, but good as in what is best for us, which is becoming more like Christ.

Trust in Christ with the last bit of childlike trust you have left. Do not trust in the Christ in your head--who will take away all of your problems--but the true person of Jesus Christ, who has the plan for your best life possible (which includes the completely fulfilled life in Him forevermore). And if you complain to God that life just isn't fair, you may hear Him reply, "I know... but it was because Jesus loved you so much that He took all of the punishment you deserve. Justice is fair: the justice that you deserve would destine you to an eternity in hell. But through Jesus, eternal life is offered to you as a gift of grace."

Godspeed,
JMission

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