Maybe Your Bucket is Empty

Several years ago, as I sat in Children’s Church, surrounded by precious little hearts, we talked about our world and the all too often missing ingredient, kindness.

We talked about bullies and what it feels like to live in a world where kindness is hard to find.

“Why do you suppose people are mean?” I asked. “Why are there bullies?”

Without thinking twice, a five year old girl blurted out, “Maybe their bucket is empty.”

“Their bucket is empty?” I inquired further.

“Yes. Maybe they are mean because they ran out of nice. Maybe their bucket is empty.”

It made perfect sense.

We can’t give away something we don’t have. And I wondered, right there and then, in the midst of these precious little faces, how many Christians are trying to make their way through life with empty buckets?

So often, we dart right out into life without first sitting at the feet of our Savior and filling up on His goodness, before communing first with the Holy Spirit and partaking of His sweetness, before allowing the Holy Spirit to fill us to overflowing. All too often, we yield to our natural inclinations because our spiritual buckets are empty. When conflicts arise, when relationships push us to a place of response, when life squeezes us until we react, we reach into self and the only thing we can pull out is the fruit of self.

Instead of love, hate.

Instead of joy, despair.

Instead of peace, strife.

Instead of patience, agitation.

Instead of kindness, animosity.

Instead of goodness, corruption.

Instead of faithfulness, disregard.

Instead of gentleness, harshness.

Instead of self-control, self rules.

No wonder the world has a hard time seeing Christians as Christ-like.

No wonder the world has a hard time seeing Christ in Christians.

When our reaction is anything but Christ-like, very likely, our bucket is empty.

As you look back on the past few hours, past few days, past few weeks of your life, what kind of fruit do you see?

If it isn’t the fruit of the Spirit, maybe your bucket is empty.~❤

~Stacy L. Sanchez / Heartprints of God


Meditation of the Day – Christian Life is a Retreat

“Christian life is a retreat. We are ‘not of this world’, just as Jesus Christ is ‘not of this world’ (John 17:14). What is the world? It is, as St. John said, the ‘lust of the flesh’, that is, sensuality and corruption in our desires and deeds; ‘the lust of the eyes’, curiosity, avarice, illusion, fascination, error, and folly in the affectation of learning, and, finally, pride and ambition (1 John 2:16). To these evils of which the world is full, and which make up its substance, a retreat must be set in opposition. We need to make ourselves into a desert by a holy detachment. Christian life is a battle … We must never cease to fight. In this battle, St. Paul teaches us to make an eternal abstinence, that is, to cut ourselves off from the pleasures of the senses and guard our hearts from them … it was to repair and to expiate the failings of our retreat, of our battle against temptations, of our abstinence, that Jesus was driven into the desert. His fast of forty days prefigured the lifelong one that we are to practice by abstaining from evil deeds and by containing our desires within the limits laid down by the law of God.”— Bishop Jacques-Benigne Bossuet, p. 17-18