The Main Character

If a biography was written about your life, who would be the main character in the story? The most logical answer to that question would be YOU, right? After all, a biography is the story of someone’s life. So, the main character would be the one who the story is about.

But for the believer in Jesus Christ, a biography of the individual’s life should be the story of His life lived through us. So just how would that look? What would it look like if your story was His story? Let’s think about that for a few minutes.

His life being lived through us would bear a resemblance to the portrait we have of Him in the Bible. Jesus was always obedient to His Father’s will, carrying out the purpose and plan that had been established from eternity past. The Bible states clearly that Jesus was the Lamb of God who would give His life for His sheep. He carried out that plan of His Father at great cost to Himself. It literally cost His life. He laid down His life for us.

Our lives should be lived in total surrender to Him, and with the desire to glorify Him in all we do. We should follow the pattern of the prayer He prayed in the Garden of Gethsemane as He faced the ordeal of the cross. He prayed to His Father, “Not My will but Yours be done.” For our story to be His story we must have the same desire, that His will be done in and through us, so that others see Him in us.

Our choices should be based on what Jesus would choose. Sometimes that is extremely easy, as we turn to the Bible for guidance. For example, if we are ever tempted to take something that belongs to someone else, we should remember the Bible’s prohibition against stealing. If we are tempted to tell a lie, we should remember that we are to speak the truth in love. If we are tempted to commit adultery we should remember that we are to live in complete fidelity and faithfulness to our spouse. If we are tempted to dishonor our parents we are to remember that we are to always honor and respect them. If we are tempted to choose a lifestyle that is contrary to the Bible’s parameters for lifestyle choices then we are to submit to His teachings rather than our desires.

My life should be His life lived through me. This sounds easy, and in some respects it is, but in many ways it is extremely difficult. When the Bible’s teachings run counter to my personal preferences and desires, then it becomes more difficult to go the way God would have me go. We see this struggle in Jesus’ life as we once again give attention to that prayer He prayed in the garden: “Not my will but Yours be done.” In His humanity Jesus, realizing the awful pain He was about to experience, and, worst of all, the separation from the Father when the sin of the world came crashing down on Him, Jesus prayed for the cup to pass from Him. But His prayer concluded with His utmost desire: to fulfill the will of the Father.

For our story to be His story, we must make some hard, and sometimes even painful choices. Jesus taught us to pray that God’s kingdom would come, and His will would be done, on earth as it is in heaven. This can be personalized as we pray for His will to be done in MY life as it is in heaven.

Paul, in his letter to the Romans, gives us some much-needed insight into the matter. In chapters 6-8, he talks about the individual believer’s struggle with his old nature. It is like a spiritual tug-of-war that Paul describes as an intense battle between what I know what to do and what I want to do. The desires of the old nature sometimes overwhelm us, and it is in those times of struggle that Paul encourages us to “walk in the Spirit so that we do not fulfill the desires of the flesh.”

I will close by simply encouraging you to let your story be His story. Let His life shine through you. Let others see your good works so that glory will be brought to our Father in heaven.

Until next time:

Blessings!

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