The Reason Why (plus)

Therefore Pilate said to Him, “So You are a king?” Jesus answered, “You say correctly that I am a king. For this purpose I have been born, and for this I have come into the world: to testify to the truth. Everyone who is of the truth listens to My voice.”  John 18:37 NASB

Purpose – [I wrote this just a few days ago.  You read it on Christmas Day.  But I think we need to consider it again, now that we’re into the new annual cycle.  So, here it is, plus some feedback from Bob:]  Well, this word, “purpose,” isn’t actually in the Greek text.  It’s implied, of course, which is why the translators have added it, but what the Greek actually says is “for this.”  The pronoun refers to the later statement “to testify to the truth.”  In other words, Yeshua is telling Pilate that the reason he is here is to be a witness to the truth.  That’s it!  Nothing more.  In his view, “this” means that all those who hear what he has to say will recognize it to be the truth.

It is interesting that the verb used for “testify” is martyréō, from which we derive the English “martyr.”  Witnessing for the truth often leads to death in a world that embraces lies.  But that isn’t what strikes me in Yeshua’s statement.  What really grabs my attention is that he knew the reason why he existed.  He knew his purpose.  He was absolutely clear about what he needed to accomplish in his life and he never deviated from that path.  Oh, how I wish I could say the same!  Perhaps you do too.

I’m sure you remember the best-selling book, The Purpose Driven Life.  I have my autographed copy.  Why did that book become an instant best-seller?  Because most people can’t say with absolute conviction, “For this I have been born.”  Most of us wander into objectives, and because we found them by accident or opportunity, we often wander away as well.  Our paths are not straightforward single-minded commitment.  They are a series of highways and byways, of detours and distractions.  Perhaps we accomplish great things, but those rarely come about through deliberate dedication.  We stumble into life.  That’s why motivational clips from men like Arnold Schwarzenegger or Yo-Yo Ma inspire us.  We idolize those who are so dedicated precisely because we aren’t.  We make personal resolutions in an effort to find inner motivation, but usually, and typically, it doesn’t last.  Drift takes over—again.  How often I wish I had dedicated myself to something noble, something great.  But, as the communist colonel in the movie The International said, “I was once destined to become a man much like yourself.  True-hearted, determined, full of purpose.  But, character is easier kept than recovered.  We cannot control the things life does to us.  They are done before you know it, and once they are done, they make you do other things, until at last everything comes between you and the man you wanted to be.”

The secret to true-hearted purpose is what you don’t do.  The pathway is determined by what you leave out.  Otherwise, everything will come between you and the person you wanted to be.  No one, not even the Messiah, can survive a Messiah-complex.  Only God can do everything with excellence.  And so today, a worldwide religious holiday, I ask myself once more, “Why did I come into the world?”  I wish I knew the answer.  Perhaps I will when I can say, “For this I am willing to die.”  Or perhaps I have just lived too long.

Skip,

First I thought oddly, then I thought probably not so oddly I have asked the same questions…. I know we tend to have a paradigm on “purpose”, yet when looking thru scripture, I seem to see that there really are very few actual people with what we like to call “purpose”…. That pre-defined “this is what your life is/was meant to be”….

   I see that the vast majority of people are, and I’ll put my hand up and speak for myself, just an everyday “farmer” or “herdsman or “wood-smith”…. As in normal folks with a “purpose” just to honor and obey God, thru service, and to honor others the same way (a light maybe?)…. Some are selected to be a Moses, the Prophets, the Disciples, Paul, even with a task orientation like Bezalel and Oholiab…. Some are chosen merely because they are related to a selection like Nadab, Abihu, Eleazar, Ithimar, son’s of Aaron….

   Yet the vast majority, I’ll say again, are normal everyday people, with the same “base purpose” as the others, honor and obey God and others thru service…. I do tend to lean toward encouraging people to live that base purpose, I laugh when I think that it kinda even fits the WWJD, which I am not a big fan of personally, yet it seems to work.  Honor and Obey His Father, and serve those around Him….

   Is that a “Purpose Driven Life”?  Not sure, yet I seem to be more and more compelled that it could be…. Yet, like the other “selected,” maybe we need to be aware and open to the thought that I could be one, still working thru that one, since should I be aware or would I be told?

   Is death, willing to die, the real end purpose, or the choice of service (obedience)…. As for me personally and your impact on my life, I see that service very clearly…. SO maybe it is still a thought of you have not lived long enough YET….

   I appreciate you and Rosanne, you could not do what you do without her, as I am experiencing the same with Heather…. We see the joy in service…

Bob

Topical Index: purpose, true-hearted, testify, martyréō, John 18:37

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Richard Bridgan

As we can witness to the truth only in so far as we know and understand truth… and “the truth” in particular… I’ve come to understand my purpose as that of seeking the truth so as to live the life I’ve been given in witness to the truth. And the truth is that it is found in the One who said, “I am the way and the truth and the life…”