They packed their whole house on the backs of camels and we fill our whole trunk with this week's groceries.
Jesus took it a step further: the Son of man has no place to lay his head. He didn't even carry a pillow.
The past few months I've been pushing away some things that have crowded my faith, finding that my faith lies mostly in practices and broken promises, and rarely in a God who never changes. The deeper down I've gone, the more I've realized that deep inside of me there is a pioneering heart that has indulged far too long in the stuff of this world. Part of the aim in me moving is to learn greater dependence on a God who supplies and not necessarily a bank account that can sustain.
One of the reasons I have set a cap on my time in Texas is not because I'm counting on it being a dismal failure and having to run home to Potsdam or because I'm counting on staying in Texas and I just want to make you all warm up to the idea. It's because I want to live a tent peg lifestyle. I want to live today with a pilgrimage heart, stopping when necessary, going when necessary. I want to live that way as a single person (because I can) and if someday I'm a married person, I want to continue to live that way. I want to be ready to leave at a moment's notice with no thought for what I'm leaving behind or what I've accumulated in the meantime.
I don't know if I can do it--it's hard to carry a knapsack and not much else in western society--but I want to pack light. I want to untie myself from stuff and this earth. I want to be known by my place of origin: the kingdom of God.
And how blessed all those in whom you live, whose lives become roads you travel; They wind through lonesome valleys, come upon brooks, discover cool springs and pools brimming with rain! God-traveled, these roads curve up the mountain, and at the last turn—Zion! God in full view! Psalm 84:5-7