Guarding a Pure Land – The Creator’s Predestination
When
I look down casually, sometime the grass has turned green. After
suffering the trial of wind, frost, blizzard and sleet, the grass
speared out of the earth jostling for position. Under the gentler
breathings, the delicate little life forms,
nodding their heads, say hello to all things, exhibit their various
postures to the world and serve their respective function to express
God’s glory. A line of a poem “The grass cannot be burned out
even by a prairie fire but grows again with the spring breeze.” is
the true picture of their lives’ journey. They bud, blossom and
bear fruit, over and over, which demonstrates their determination
that they will forever show forth their life force bestowed upon them
by the Creator. Moreover, they will strictly stand by their
respective life courses, perform their duties among all things and
play their roles well.
The
grass never cavils at the anonymity brought by fate,
but instead uses its tenacious life force to interpret its whole
life. It dances with the wind and becomes still when the wind lulls,
not scrambling for the luxury of this world. Commonness given to it
from life is its best pursuit in life. So many times, I breathe the
scent of flowers and grass, feeling the beating of life. I find there
are too many imperfections in our lives. We can design the wonderful
blueprints for our lives but can’t draw a consummate conclusion to
our future, for many things in our lives never belong to us. I have
been thinking: Why can’t we live like the grass? If we, between
riches and poverty, choose less avarice and more indifference, then
we will neither have so many desires in our lives, nor feel exhausted
mentally and physically for these desires, nor toil our whole life
for these desires. If we, between status and commonness, no longer
pursue to climb the high mountain-peaks of being the best man but
comply with the will of Heaven and play our roles cast by God, then
in our lives, there will be less slaughter and fight that arise for
the sake of status and there will not be so much burden. … This put
me in mind of a passage of words: “… the
first thing one must understand, when one sets foot on this earth, is
where human beings come from, why people are alive, who dictates
human fate, who provides for and has sovereignty over human
existence. These are the true assets in life, the essential basis for
human survival, not learning how to provide for one’s family or how
to achieve fame and wealth, not learning how to stand out from the
crowd or how to live a more affluent life, much less learning how to
excel and to compete successfully against others. Though the various
survival skills that people spend their lives mastering can offer an
abundance of material comforts, they never bring one’s heart true
peace and consolation, but instead make people constantly lose their
direction, have difficulty controlling themselves, miss every
opportunity to learn the meaning of life; and they create an
undercurrent of trouble about how to properly face death. In this
way, people’s lives are ruined. The Creator treats everyone fairly,
giving everyone a lifetime’s worth of opportunities to experience
and know His sovereignty, yet it is only when death draws near, when
the specter of death hangs over one, that one begins to see the
light—and then it is too late”
(“God Himself, the Unique III”).
God
is righteous. His grace toward us has much for us to enjoy. We own
all granted by God, but we do not realize what He has given us. We
have become accustomed to taking for granted all that God bestows
upon us, having no apprehension. We think that God is rich and
bountiful and He has everything. Yet has it ever occurred to us:
When, one day, we reflect back on the road we have taken, will our
entire life be just a busy life? Will we only pursuit for the sake of
fame and fortune? The grass knows where it comes from, and knows that
adhering to its mission and multiplying green to decorate the world
are the repayment to the Creator. While what do we repay the Creator
who gives us life? Many times we only acknowledge Him and offer the
grateful praise to Him. Little do we know how much painstaking effort
and price God has expended on us, much less know what our missions
entrusted by God are. We exhaust ourselves journeying to and fro for
fame and fortune, yet in the end we find what we get is either pain
or vanity. Even if we achieve something, don’t we finally still
pass away with empty hands? Even King Solomon, after enjoying high
status and great wealth, only sighed with emotion: “Then I looked
on all the works that my hands had worked, and on the labor that I
had labored to do: and, behold, all was vanity and vexation of
spirit, and there was no profit under the sun” (Ecclesiastes 2:11).
The grass feels content while we are weary in body and mind in our
life.
No
matter how perplexed we were and no matter whether we reach the peak
or the lowest point in our life, our roles ordained by the Creator
shall never be changed by us and our missions entrusted by Him shall
never be denied or replaced either. Only when we know the Creator’s
predestination and arrangement can we shake off the desire and
demands of fame and fortune, no longer struggling or competing with
fate, and only then can we live each day readily. If you yearn for
the tranquility of heart, only when you come to the side of the
Creator, listen to His voice and probe the value and purpose of life
can you feel happy, relaxed and released. Just as the grass complies
with the will of Heaven, only living for watching the pure land of
its own!
Jesus Christ is God Himself. The Holy Father, the Holy Son, and the Holy Spirit, They are One. We can know from the bible verses, the Lord Jesus said, “he that has seen me has seen the Father….” (John 14:9) “I am in the Father, and the Father in me….” (John 14:10) “I and my Father are one” (John 10:30).
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