Want to discover what is holding you back? Take the limits quiz now.
“You’re not going to believe this,” Greg exclaimed as he shoved the phone in my face.
Usually it’s a stupid meme, but instead the Zillow app was open.
“This house went up for sale today. It’s a five bedroom, two-and-a-half-bath American Craftsman house with a wrap-around porch, 2 indoor fireplaces, custom-made cabinets, granite counter tops, a jacuzzi suite, and to top it off it’s located on the St. Lawrence River.”
“How much are they asking? I’m sure it’s way out of our price range." I piped up with a dash of cynicism.
“They’re only asking $80,000.” Greg declared in disbelief.
“What’s the catch? I bet the foundation has issues, or there is a massive mold problem, or the previous owner was found dead in the house and now everyone claims it’s haunted.”
Greg rolled his eyes. He was accustom to my antics.
“Well, there is one catch,” Greg hesitated. “They won’t let the buyer do a walk through. You have to purchase it without a home tour.”
“Who in the world would do that? There must be a dead body in there.” I insisted.
Greg dropped the phone, got on his knees as if he was going to propose all over again, clasped his hands around mine and said, “Trust me on this one. It’s worth it.”
This conversation almost destroyed our marriage—just kidding. :)
This is a fictitious story but I wanted you to imagine buying a house without ever stepping foot inside. No one in their right mind would pay that kind of money without entering in.
As a potential homeowner, you want to inspect every nook and cranny. The guys are checking out the furnace and the roof, while the ladies are envisioning snuggling on the couch with their kiddos and a giant bowl of popcorn, or what it would be like to whip up their favorite pasta dish in the massive kitchen.
If you want to buy a house, you must go inside.
Truth is a house.
Yet most Christians are content viewing God’s truth from a distance. They’ll drive by and admire the curb appeal, they’ll scroll through photos, and they’ll spend weeks studying the specs on Zillow.
But the only way for a truth to go from your head to your heart is for you to walk into it and experience it firsthand. Truth is proved through experience.
Right before he died, Jesus said to his best friends, “I’ve got good news and I’ve got bad news. Which do you want first?”
“Tell us the bad news, Jesus.”
“I’m leaving you. And it won’t be a ten-day vacation to Greece. I’m going to be murdered. I’m returning to my Dad in Heaven.”
The disciples were bewildered and at a loss for words—except Peter—he never knew how to shut up.
“And the good news?”
“It’s better for me to leave. When I go, I will send the Holy Spirit. When the Spirit of Truth comes, he will lead you INTO all truth.”
If truth is a house, you can’t fully understand it unless you walk inside. And your friendly realtor? The Holy Spirit. Jesus didn't say the Holy Spirit would teach us truth, or he would model truth, he said he would lead us into truth.
And doesn’t a part of us resonate with this. Whenever Jesus speaks to me, it feels like he’s trying to talk me into something.
Why?
Because he knows we will never pay the cost it requires to follow him unless we enter into the truth he is trying to reveal.
God isn’t trying to talk us out of something, he’s trying to talk us into something
What is God trying to talk you into?