Phil.
3:13-14
"...One thing I do: forgetting what lies behind and
reaching forward to what lies ahead, I press on toward the goal for the prize
of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus."
(Philippians 3:13-14)
Wouldn't it be wonderful if, by some miracle, we could begin
again, knowing what we know now. Things would be different, wouldn't they?
Someone said, "It's too bad life can't be lived in reverse." If that
were the case, you could use some of that mature knowledge to avoid making the
mistakes which you ultimately regret later. But, that's not the way life is
lived. In fact, I suppose you have to make the mistakes to gain the knowledge.
And we have all made our share of mistakes.
In fact, there have been many times in my life when things
just didn't turn out right. During some of those times, I found myself wishing
I could turn back the hands of time.
How I wanted to start all over! I believe those times come
in all of our lives. Some have made the wrong career choice and wish they could
go back to school to be retrained, but now they must support a family. Some
have made a bad business deal and now they are ruined. How they wish they could
go back. A girl finds herself in trouble and her heart is broken. How she
wishes she could go back and start over, but its too late. A failed marriage
disrupts family life and deeply wounds everyone involved. If only we could
begin again. These kinds of events occur every day and no one is exempt from
them. Think of the things in your life that you like a chance to change. How we
would like a do-over sometimes.
We call these memories the "past." Obviously, you
can't turn back the hands of time. What's done is done. The mistakes we've made
are there and there is nothing we can do to change them. But there is hope. The
good news of the Gospel is that it is possible to begin again. There is
forgiveness for the past in Christ. That's good news.
But there is some bad news with the good news.
Unfortunately, there are many who have received this forgiveness, but they are
still plagued by the past.
For most of us, the past holds many good memories. We
remember the good times: times when we were happy and enjoying life; times when
we were with someone special. We remember the special events: birthdays,
graduations, weddings and anniversaries. Good memories are a wonderful thing.
It's great to be able to tune them in and play them back. It brings a smile to
our face. We can certainly thank God for the good memories.
The past can also give us perspective. Although it has been
said that, "The only thing we learn from the past is that we don't learn
from the past, we can learn from the past." The past can teach us many
things about living in the present. The past is like the rear view mirror on
our car. As we move forward we regularly glance at it to keep us aware of what
is behind us. The past makes us more knowledgeable and wiser. And in that
regard, the past is good.
But the past also has a dark side. The past can be a prison.
You see, it's possible for the past to put us in bondage. Along with the good
memories, there are the memories of times of failure. Sometimes our memory can
serve to haunt us. Our failures can cause us to see ourselves as failures, or
as unable to break the patterns of failure in our lives. We stereotype
ourselves, and thereby put ourselves in bondage. Many people live today plagued
by their past. In the most extreme cases people sit in mental hospitals
constantly reliving the tragic events of yesterday. They are trapped by the
things that have been, and can't seem to see beyond them.
So how do we deal with the past? Some people relive the
past. They recount the events of the past in great detail in their minds over
and over again. All of the negative emotions which they felt then, they feel
again. And the beat themselves up for the events that are forever gone.
Some people surrender to the past. They decide that they
will never rise above the past and resign themselves to be what the past has
made them. After all, the lot has been cast, and they are a product of their
past.
Others defy the past and refuse to be dominated by it. They
recognize that while the past is an unchangeable part of their history, they
can do something about themselves and how they deal with the memories of the
past.
This is the key to how we deal with the past. There are
basically three things you must do to effectively conquer your past. (1) The
first is that you must recognize the past for what it is, the past. It
is over, done, gone, finished, ended, passed. You can't change one thing that
happened back then, whether back then was years ago or yesterday. (2) The
second thing that you must do is recognize the satanic strategy in reminding
you of the past. His strategy is to discourage you and defeat you. (3) The
third thing you must recognize is what you can do about the past. While you
can't change the past, you can change the way you respond to the memories of
the past.
A
Divine Amnesia
But Paul, the Apostle, tells us that the way to deal with
the past is to forget it. Listen to what he says, "One thing I do:
forgetting what lies behind..." Paul is saying that the way to deal
with the past is to forget it. We must develop what I call a "divine
amnesia."
When I speak about forgetting the past, of course, I'm not
talking about forgetting it mentally. Although there are many things I wish I
could forget, unfortunately, God created our minds to be incredibly powerful.
Even though we might not remember something consciously, sub-consciously it is
always there. Every act, word, event, situation and circumstance is imbedded
forever in our minds. When Paul speaks about forgetting the past, he means that
we must forget it in the sense that we no longer allow it to control our lives.
Unless we do, we will always be on a leash. We will attempt to move forward in
life, only to be snatched back time and again.
You may be saying, "Well, it's easier said than
done," and you're right. But, by God's grace it can be done. You see,
Christ can liberate us from the past. The reason Christ came to this earth was
to offer His life on the Cross so that our sins might be forgiven. Christ can
forgive our past. The Bible teaches that Jesus Christ can release us from sin
and the guilt of sin. There is nothing in your past too great for God to
handle. There is no sin too big for God to forgive. Christ can enable us to
release the past and move on to what can be in the present. He can enable us to
avoid living in the "what has been" and live, instead, in the
"what can be."
A Deliberate Activity
We must not only develop a divine amnesia in terms of
forgetting the past; but also engage in a deliberate activity in the present.
Listen to the words of the Apostle, "One thing I do: forgetting what
lies behind and reaching forward to what lies ahead." In order to deal
with the past effectively, we must live in the present actively.
One of the keys to living in the present is the need for
replacing pessimism of the past with optimism. It’’s very hard to face
failure in your own personal life and come away with an optimistic attitude.
Pessimism seems to reign.
Most pessimism is unhealthy. It creates a cycle of despair.
Many times, we become locked into pessimistic ways of thinking, and we end up
bound mentally by these patterns of thought. Past failures may suggest to us
that we will never succeed. After all, we have tried and failed. But often that
is not the reality of the situation. There was an experiment done with the
Great Northern Pike where the fish was placed into a tank with its favorite
food, minnows. The problem was that a glass divider was inserted into the tank
between the Pike and the minnows. Every time the Pike went for the minnows, he
bumped his nose into this glass divider. Finally, convinced that the minnows
were beyond reach, he gave up. When the divider was removed, the Great Northern
Pike did not go for even one minnow. Sometimes, we are like that Pike. We've
been convinced that we could never break free from the patterns of defeat and
failure that have bound us. But that is not true.
God is an optimist. I know that because when Jesus ascended
into heaven, He put His disciples in charge of winning the world. But we can be
optimists, too. We can be optimists when we come to understand that God truly
has a plan for our lives. We can begin to look to the future with hope. A
divine expectation can be created within our hearts. And an eager anticipation
of what are the possibilities for our life can replace those negative patterns
of thought which bind us. If we would live successfully in the present, we must
not only put the past aside, but we must replace pessimism with optimism. There
are good things which lie ahead.
But not only must we replace pessimism with optimism, we
must also replace passivism with activism. The past seeks to trap us by
discouraging us to the point where we are just so exhausted we don’’t want
to try anymore. Depressed people don’’t even like to get out of bed. They
sit around in their pajamas all day long or engage in hours of mind-numbing
television. Sometimes the first step out of that situation is to get out of
bed, put your clothes on and do something. You see, we need to act on
faith in what God can do. Paul says that he reaches forward to what lies ahead.
Here is someone who is involved with the living of life. He is not merely
content to be acted upon. He must act himself. And if we would succeed, we must
act as well. Someone has said that it's hard to steer a parked car. In other
words, parked cars go nowhere. You could turn the steering wheel all you like,
but it doesn't change its direction. Only as we begin to move are we able to
accomplish those things we would like to see come to pass. We must be active.
Jesus calls us to follow Him. The Christian life is a
commitment to do something as well as be something. The Christian
life has been likened to a walk, a race, a fight. Those are all action terms.
When Jesus calls us, He calls us not simply to believe in Him intellectually,
but to follow Him in the living of our lives. But it's possible for a person to
believe in Jesus intellectually like he believes in Napoleon or George
Washington. You can hold an intellectual belief without making a life
commitment to it. But that is not biblical faith. Faith in Jesus means we put
our trust in Him. We trust Him with our lives. As we commit ourselves to live
for Him daily.
Paul said he was reaching forward to what lies ahead. The
picture we have here is someone stretching forward, like a runner in a race,
seeking to win, not merely to finish. But if we would win over the past, we
must also be willing to aggressively stretch forward.
A
Determined Attitude
But we must take willingness one step further. As we stretch
forward, we must possess the quality of a determined attitude. Listen again to
the words of the Apostle Paul, "One thing I do: forgetting what lies
behind and reaching forward to what lies ahead, I press on toward the goal for
the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus." Here is a man
who is not content with being willing. He is not simply reaching forward to
what lies ahead, he is giving his all to the endeavor. He is determined in his
attitude that nothing will deter him. We must have this determined attitude as
well if we would succeed in conquering the demons of the past.
You see, we are in a real warfare. To be plagued by the past
is to be under spiritual attack. That is why we must counter-attack by
employing a strategy like Paul’’s, whereby we forget the past and focus on
the future.
Perhaps a closing thought on how to do this from the life of
Jehoshaphat would help. In 2 Chronicles 20 we find Jehoshaphat, king of Israel,
in big trouble. He had an enemy, actually three enemy nations about to attack.
We can apply the principles he applied to the enemy of the bondage of the past.
He did several important things. Firstly, he identified
the enemy. We must recognize that there is a real and present force
behind the negative emotions we feel from past events. Secondly, he took
it to the Lord. In verses 3-4 he proclaims a fast in order to seek help
from the Lord. Thirdly, he admitted his inadequacy. Jehoshaphat,
speaking to God, said in verse 12, For we are powerless before this great
multitude who are coming against us; nor do we know what to do, but our eyes
are on Thee. Fourthly, he turned his attention to God. Fifthly, he
was told to relax in faith. God spoke to Jehoshaphat in verse 15 and
said, Do not fear or be dismayed because of this great multitude, for the
battle is not yours but God's. In other words, God was saying to quit
struggling and relax.
Sometimes we are tempted to work things out for ourselves.
When we fail, we feel that we have disappointed God. We feel that we have let
God down. But we cannot let God down because we don't hold God up. He holds us
up. We don't have God in our hands. He has us in his hands. What God wants us
to do is to allow Him to work through us. If you will relax in faith, God will
enable you to forget the past and focus on the future He has for you.
COPYRIGHT PERMISSION AND RESTRICTIONS
|