Ever been so thirsty you think you're going to die. And then – then you have a deep drink of fresh, cool, clear, living water. Awesome. In fact Jesus talked a lot about water.
I remember when I was training to be an officer in the Army we used to go out on exercises for weeks at a time, war games and we'd be fighting this imaginary army and learning, I guess, how to fight battles. Back in those days the Army was heavily into water rationing, two water bottles per man, per day, perhaps. That was for shaving, washing, cleaning your teeth, cooking and drinking.
In those hot summers with all the heavy physical work that a battle entails it was never enough, many a time we'd finish an attack up a steep hill in the middle of the noon day sun or be digging a trench and all I wanted was to guzzle down a whole bottle full of water. Of course you couldn't do that, then I'd close my eyes and imagine that I'd be swimming in a nice cool river with stacks and stacks of water. When you're that thirsty, what you really want is water in abundance, you want to be filled to overflowing.
This week on the program we're looking at what it means to be filled by God to overflowing. Not just half full, not just full to the brim, filled so that we overflow all His goodness and His blessing. When we're really thirsty and we have a deep long drink, it is such a satisfying thing isn't it? I mean our need for water is one of the most basic of all needs. 70% of our body is water and after oxygen, water is our most important physical need. You can't go for very long without water. The body starts closing down some of it's functions and depending on the conditions, we can be dead within a couple of days. Or if you're stuck in a hot car without water, you can be dead in a few minutes in extreme heat.
It's interesting that when Jesus was talking about His plan for our lives, He uses 'thirst' and "water" to explain what He means. I think it's because it's something we really can relate to. He meets a woman, a Samaritan woman, at a well and He says to her:
Everyone who drinks out of this water will be thirsty again but those who drink the water that I will give them will never be thirsty. The water that I will give will become in them, a spring of water gushing up into eternal life.
Life gets thirsty and this week on the program we've been looking at what it means to be filled to overflowing because that's Jesus' plan, no ifs, not buts, "oh well, that's not my experience." Maybe not but it's Jesus' promise:
Everyone who drinks of this water will be thirsty again but those who drink of the water that I will give them will never be thirsty. The water that I will give them will become in them, a spring of water gushing up into eternal life.
I wonder sometimes whether in life we don't make things just a bit too complicated. For me, faith is a simple thing, I read what Jesus said, I hear what God has to say and then you say, "well okay, if that's from God, that's what I'm going to believe even if my circumstances are screaming at me saying, that's never going to be possible, you're never going to have a fountain of spring water gushing up in you."
And every time my feelings or the things that are going around me scream at me, "God's a liar," I'm just going to pick that book up again and read what Jesus said again. I'm just going to believe Him and not them. Now you might say to me, "but Berni, that is unrealistic, I've been trying to have a life of peace and of joy and abundance, it seems like forever and it's just not happening for me."
Look at His promise again, John chapter 7, verse 37,
"If anyone is thirsty let them come to me and drink. Whoever believes in Me, rivers of living water will flow from them. By this He meant the Spirit whom those who believed in Jesus were later to receive."