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Wednesday, September 2, 2015

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If you've been to Disneyland or Disney World, you've probably experienced an attraction called Small World. You get in this little boat and you're propelled along this winding canal where you're surrounded by animated dolls from every conceivable area of the world. They're all children: French children, Eskimo children, Arab children, Indian children, American children, children from Mexico. You get the idea. And these animated children are singing to you It's a Small World After All. Don't you want to sing it with me? I'm not going to. You say, "Ron, those lyrics are monotonous." You're right! You hear it about fifty times! It's really cute when they first start singing. And those songs are okay for a little while. But by the time you hear it over and over, you're sick and tired of a small, small world.

I'm Ron Hutchcraft and I want to have A Word With You today about "When Your World Is Too Small."

You may have never been on the Small World ride, but you still might be sick of a small, small world. You might be living in one and not even realize it. We do realize it's a world of frustration, negative thinking, sameness, and monotony. That's the small world. It's called the world of "me". It's a world of self-focused living.

God addresses this inwardly focused kind of living in our word for today from the Word of God, 2 Corinthians 5:15. In a selfie world, it's a great scripture to read. "Christ's love compels us. He died for all that those who live should no longer live for themselves." That's supposed to be the radical affect of Christ coming into your life. Radical because it reverses the way we've been thinking since we were babies. At that time, we expected the whole world to revolve around our needs. "Time for me to eat. Time for me to burp. Time for me to wake up." No thought for how it's affecting everybody around you. We were just totally focused on ourselves.

We're older now, but the baby still wants attention to be on me; wanting my needs to be taken care of, wanting my agenda to be carried out, wanting my issues to be dealt with, wanting my way. In fact, most researchers agree that a lot of us in several generations are really into ourselves.

There are two factors that can make you a pretty self-focused person. One is busyness. "I'm just too busy to think about the needs beyond my backyard. The other factor is pain. "I've been a victim and I'm hurting too much to be aware of what's happening to other people." Look at Jesus' example. No one had more to do in a lifetime than He did. You talk about busy! But He was constantly stopping for others, constantly forgetting himself to meet the needs of others.

No one has ever carried more pain than Jesus did. All the grief of all the sins of all the world, of you and of me, yet even during the agony of His crucifixion Jesus is caring about the needs of His Mother, of his friend, John. He's caring for the eternity of the thief next to Him. He's even caring about the people who crucified Him.

When you invite Jesus into your life, it's this Jesus you get. And He wants you to be like Him. Not self-focused. A world that's only as big as you are is a world that's too small to live in. Jesus invites you to break out, to start finding the needs around you and doing something about them, to focus on others instead of yourself, to find your life, as He said, by giving it away. Not to lose your life by hanging onto it.

This selfless Jesus, who poured out His life for you, the Bible says that when you make Him the center of your life, you open the door for Him to come in and change you, you become a new creation in Christ. And that old selfish "me" starts to die. You start to become part of the answer. You start to become someone who is making other people feel important instead of being about how important you are. It begins at His cross; a transformation you could never effect in yourself.

I invite you to consider beginning that relationship with Jesus today if you never have. He loved you enough to die for you. He's powerful enough to change you. If you want to begin that relationship, go to our website ANewStory.com. Or you can text us at 442-244-WORD.

Jesus died so we no longer live for ourselves. You been in a small, small world long enough? Then follow Jesus into the big life you were made for.

                

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Hutchcraft Ministries
P.O. Box 400
Harrison, AR 72602-0400

(870) 741-3300
(877) 741-1200 (toll-free)
(870) 741-3400 (fax)

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