The treasure book
If your house caught fire, what one object would
you try to save? That’s the burning question. I’m sure you’ve heard it many times. It’s a dramatic hypothetical to get us to
identify what we truly care about.
Assuming my loved ones
were safe, I know what I would grab from the flames: my journals. They are the
irreplaceable record of my life over the past three decades. And if I had to be more selective, I would
take the visual journals I shifted to
a few years ago.
My wife will tell you,
I work on these daily. First thing in
the morning. Often in the evenings. In hotels.
Even crammed into an airplane seat, where to let a marker roll off the
tiny table is to commit it to the abyss.
They are my most
treasured possessions. My great hope is
that they will live far beyond me, sharing my faith and art to generations to
come.
This morning, I have found a scene in Malachi
that involves both a permanent record and a treasured possession. It’s easy to gloss over this small section as we flip eagerly toward the
New Testament, but it’s a gem:
Then those who feared the LORD spoke with one
another. The LORD paid attention and heard them, and a book of remembrance was
written before him of those who feared the LORD and esteemed his name. “They
shall be mine, says the LORD of hosts, in the day when I make up my treasured
possession, and I will spare them as a man spares his son who serves him. (Malachi 3:16–17)
Book of remembrance. In the midst of a rebellious culture, those who still exalted and honored
the Lord gather together to speak to each other. I assume they encouraged each other to keep
going, to stand against society’s tide.
And God not only sees, he celebrates them by creating a record of who
was there. A permanent record. A journal of names (and portraits, I so wish) to be opened again in the Day
of Judgment: THESE are my faithful few.
Treasured possession. This is not an emotionless record-keeping, a Bob-Cratchit dutiful accounting. God’s people are his treasured
possession. Older translations used the
word, jewels. We are the Lord’s valuables – close to his
heart, never out of his sight. Precious
in his eyes.
In a very real sense,
when the fire of Judgment comes, we
are what God will save from the flames.
The one thing he cannot bear to lose.
What a glorious
thought.
Lord, we read that we are your
treasured possession and our names in your permanent record. Why are our hearts so sluggish in
response? Teach us how impossibly great
those truths are.
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