Highlights of the Week:
1. Taking the Cable Car 360 on Lantua Island up to the Big Budda with the Senior Citizens of the church (age 50-95).
2. Teaching the Culture Club how to line dance.
3. Having Eskimo Night where Emily gets to turn down the temperature in the apartment as low as she wanted. I just pretended it's winter!
Chopsticks: Are you hungry?
Packing furiously for this trip to Hong Kong it never crossed my mind that I would have to use Chopsticks. In the States, I probably eat Chinese food 3 to 4 times a year, maybe attempting twice to use chopsticks and failing miserably. Every time I eat out with friends in Hong Kong I get the same question, "You know how to use chopsticks?" I usually laugh and say, "I didn't but I do now. You can't eat in Hong Kong unless you know how to use chopsticks." I quickly learned that starvation and not knowing how to use chopsticks walked hand in hand. So I learned. Did I have a choice? Not really, if I wanted to eat I needed to learn.
How many times is this true in our spiritual live? We do not learn until we're forced to do it. Maybe it's reading your Bible everyday, trying to memorize scripture, or getting up to pray in the morning. It's something in our lives we know we need to work on spiritually. We try half-heartily, but in the end we might give up because do not commit ourselves to the task.
When I was forced to eat with chopstick I learned - it wasn't easy. I went some nights back to the apartment aching for another meal because I failed to get most of my lunch into my mouth. Yes, it was comical and yes I did (still do) get food all over the table and sometimes on others. But hunger was great motivation. What if we had that motivation in our own spiritual lives because it was survival? What if we felt hungry if we didn't get our spiritual fill? What if we wouldn't survive if we didn't read our bible, memorize scripture, or pray daily? The thing is many of us are starving spiritually because we have forgotten how to be hunger. We've gone hungry so long we do even notice it anymore.
God always has our best in mind and he hates to see us starving, so he gives us opportunities to fix it. Though chopsticks are not on the same level as spiritual matters, the principle is the same. If I had tried to learn how to use chopsticks anytime over the last 23 years my first few weeks in Hong Kong wouldn't have been so shocking (hunger wise). God will give us the opportunity to eat spiritually, to be full, but He may give us a tough or difficult situation to make us realize we are hunger. Do not wait for that situation, commit yourself today. Tomorrow I am getting up 15 minutes early to pray. Will you join me?