No Genie Needed
If a genie offered to grant you three wishes, what would you wish for? This is not an easy question to answer. The three-wish limit forces you to prioritize. Wouldn’t it be simpler if the genie offered to grant just one wish?
The problem is not that we can’t come up with more wish ideas. The difficulty lies in deciding which outweigh the others. Do you wish for your debt to go away? But then, what about your dream car? Do you wish for world peace? But what about your grandparents’ health struggles?
While we’re great at identifying problems, we’re not so great at prioritizing which are more worthy of our attention. So, we’ll check emails when we really should eat something. We’ll answer a phone call simply because it might be important, even if it interrupts family time. Every problem can seem like a “now,” problem.
Now, I could quote you a passage from the Bible commanding us not to worry (there are plenty of them: Matthew 6:25-27, Philippians 4:6, 1 Peter 5:6-7, John 14:27 to name a few), but instead let’s continue in the vein we started with the last devotion in looking at closing blessings. See the words the Apostle Paul with which the Apostle Paul closes his second letter to Christians in Corinth:
14 May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all. (2 Corinthians 13:14)
These people, the Corinthians, had no shortage of problems. Paul addressed many of them at length throughout the two inspired letters in the New Testament. If the Corinthians had their chance, they might ask a genie to give resolution to the rampant in-fighting in the church, a superabundance of flashy spiritual gifts, or for financial stability.
However, Paul makes their wishes for them: grace, love, and fellowship. Because he’s not talking to a genie (which aren’t real, by the way), nor is he expressing a wish or a far-off hope. He’s bestowing a parting blessing upon these troubled Christians, speaking a desire from his heart that he has no doubt will be fulfilled, because of the name of the Triune God whom he invokes.
In the name of the Lord Jesus (the Second Person of the Trinity), we have the guarantee of grace: unlimited and unconditional forgiveness from the very God we have sinned against. We have love from God our Maker (the First Person of the Trinity), who looks upon us not as his rotten and wayward children, but his most prized possession; his cherished creation. We have fellowship (in Greek the word means “sharing” or “close relationship”) with God the Holy Spirit (the Third Person of the Trinity). In essence, our three deepest needs are met. Our three most pressing existential crises are already resolved. Paul is sure of it!
That helps put things into perspective. There’s plenty of issues that crop up, problems we are tempted to ruminate on, relationships under strain. Do yourself a favor, and measure these worries and issues up to the overwhelming grace, love, and fellowship the Triune God has accomplished for you, in which you now live. The biggest problems are resolved for you by your Triune God, so he will certainly carry you through everything else. No genie needed.





