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Knowing versus knowing about
Dear Trailhead family,
A brief thought on knowing versus knowing about.
Cassie and I have been married for 17 years.
I’ve known about Abraham Lincoln for over 30 years.
Random? Yes.
But we are going somewhere.
If I were to describe Cassie, I would say something to the effect of how, from the first moment I met her, she exuded joy and hope. I would say how she has never shied away from a challenge, how she stood with me during some dark and daunting years, how she makes our kids laugh, and how she has a startling sensitivity to the Spirit. I would tell you how she likes her coffee and her views on what makes a well-balanced Mexican restaurant. I could tell you why she chose not to ride the mules in Santorini and why any mention of the movie Pocahontas always comes with a story. More importantly, I know what it means to cry with Cassie, to have prayers answered with a yes and answered with a no, to celebrate dreams come true, and to hold each other when we don’t know where to turn.
I know Cassie.
If I were to describe Abraham Lincoln, I would tell you that he was born on February 12, 1809, in Kentucky and that he served as president of the United States from 1861 until his assassination in 1865. I would tell you of his early failures, of his leadership during the Civil War, of his role in abolishing slavery, and of the deep pain he experienced in his personal life.
I know about Lincoln.
Do you sense the difference?
A few days ago I read a paragraph that made me stop.
The paragraph had to do with the way I know Cassie and the way I know Abraham Lincoln.
Here’s what I read,
“Describe the Christ that you have personally encountered on the grounds of your own self. Describe Him as you would to a friend over coffee.
Describe not the deity you have heard about or been taught to believe exists, but only the Christ you have actually encountered.
And then I invite you to reflect soberly on what your own answer reveals to you.”
(from The Ragamuffin Gospel by Brennan Manning)
I know a fair bit about Abraham Lincoln.
I know Cassie.
And then there’s Jesus.
To simply know about Jesus or even to be about Jesus, we can miss Jesus.
Because Jesus’ invitation is to himself.
Jesus invites you and me to know him.
Deeply. Richly. Intimately.
Jesus came to a people who knew a whole awful lot about God.
But they didn’t know him.
That made it easy to turn on him and kill him when he didn’t behave as desired.
And how about us?
Honestly, we probably are not that much different from the Israelites a couple of millennia ago. We know a lot about Jesus.
If that is the point, mission accomplished.
But that is not the point.
The point, the aim of everything, is to know Jesus. And be known by him.
And we have been invited. By Jesus himself.
In his letter to the Jesus followers in Philippi, Paul recounts all his spiritual credentials and he concludes that they are worthy of the garbage heap in comparison to knowing Christ.
“What is more, I consider everything a loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord.” (Philippians 3:5-14)
Knowing about Abraham Lincoln may inspire you to be a better person.
Knowing about Jesus will also inspire you to be a better person.
But knowing Jesus, well, that won't just make you better, rather, it will make you new. A new kind of human.
And that is what our condition requires. That is what we were made for.
That is what all our searching is meant to lead us to.
May we know Jesus.
And if you do not know Jesus that way, he invites you to.
Grace and peace be upon you,
Grant
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