Saturated

Rain

Rain, rain.  Go away.  Come again another…month.

Seriously.  We’ve already broken the local record for precipitation in the month of September.  And if the raindrops that pelted my bedroom window again this past Monday afternoon were any indication, we are well on our way to shattering the all-time record.

Newsflash:  We are no longer in a drought.

Across town many folks are repairing flooded basements and drivers are dodging a plethora of new potholes.  But this is nothing compared to the devastation suffered by our Colorado neighbors just to the south.  They were inundated with more than twice the amount of rain we received.  We join them as they mourn their losses and pray for them as they set out on the long road of recovery.

Our pastor’s basement was one of the unfortunate casualties here.  Last Sunday morning it was filling up so rapidly they put out a distress call.  At one point they had no less than NINE Shop-Vacs going, just to keep their knees above water.  The sodden ground was so saturated that the water was coming in through their foundation.  There was just nowhere else for it to go.

Definition of saturated:  “…something that is completely soaked, or something that is filled to the brim and cannot take any more.”

After nearly a week of steady rain, our normally arid plains had surely become saturated.  The soil was like a water-logged sponge, unable to absorb another drop.  The excess had to go somewhere.

So it is with our spiritual lives.

Throughout Scripture, water is used as a metaphor for the Holy Spirit’s filling and empowering.

“For I will pour out water to quench your thirst and to irrigate your parched fields.  And I will pour out my Spirit on your descendants, and my blessing on your children.” (Isaiah 44:3, NLT)

Jesus took these references from the Old Testament and personalized them:

“The one who believes in Me, as the Scripture has said, will have streams of living water flow from deep within him.  He said this about the Spirit.” (John 7:38-39a, HCSB)

The Greek word for “streams” can also be translateda river, torrents, a flood.”  Recent images of flooded Colorado canyons flash through my mind.  Too much water can be a bad thing.  But too much of the Spirit?  No such thing.  The rushing flow of the Holy Spirit doesn’t bring destruction, but rather life.  It’s “living” water.  Zao, in the Greek, means “to be fresh, strong, efficient; active, powerful.”

I’d sure like those words to characterize my life.

I do believe in Jesus.  And I have known what it is like to be propelled by His invigorating, energizing power.  But without the Spirit’s continual filling, I shrivel up like a crusty old sponge.

Dry.  Stale.  Useless.

The abundant rainfall this month has done more than just bring our area out of a persistent state of drought.  It has also served as a timely visual aid to me, a reminder of what my life in the Spirit should be.

Saturated with His Word.  Soaked in His presence.  Filled to the brim with His Spirit.  Flowing over and out into the empty places around me.

As the latest raindrops slid down my window pane, this prayer sprung up from within me.  Perhaps you, too, feel like a dried out sponge.  If so, I invite you to pray along…

Living Water, flow in me.  Flood each thirsty pore with your refreshing presence and sustaining power.  Flush out the clogs of self and the debris of sin so that the river of Your Spirit can run free and unhindered through me.  Fill me up, I pray.  May my mind be so steeped in Your truth, my heart so saturated with Your love, that I have no other recourse but to spill out, overflowing to a world in need.  In Jesus’ name,  Amen.

“He turned the desert into pools of water and the parched ground into flowing springs…” (Psalm 107:35, NIV)

Creek

Photo Notes:  Top photo was taken of our cat looking on as more rain fell on Monday.  Bottom photo was taken while we were up in Boulder Canyon on August 31, 2013, just a week and a half before the flooding.

(Sources:  Definition of “saturated” is from “Your Dictionary.”  Definitions of Greek words are from The NAS New Testament Greek Lexicon.)

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