Don't you know I'm still standing better than I ever did
Looking like a true survivor, feeling like a little kid
… I'm still standing - yeah yeah yeah
Looking like a true survivor, feeling like a little kid
… I'm still standing - yeah yeah yeah
“I’m Still Standing” – Elton John / Bernie Taupin
Too Low for Zero (1983) – Rocket Record Company (UK) /
Geffen Records (USA)
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Photo credit: Thomas Hawk, on Flickr, Creative Commons license |
It’s customary to begin a devotional thought with verses from
the Bible. So I suppose starting with a Bernie
Taupin lyric from an Elton John song is rather unconventional. But the chorus of that song has been running
through my head a lot lately. The theme
started a couple weeks ago. As I was
exiting the post office, I held the door for an older gentleman, somewhat
hobbled, who was on his way in.
“Have a good day,” I said to him.
“I always have a good day – I’m still standing up!” he
replied, with a big, broad smile.
Not many days later, a sermon I heard mentioned the same
sentiment. “I’m up and I’m moving – I’m
okay!” The pastor had heard that thought
expressed by a person of faith during life’s hard times. It is the way that faith looks at life, constantly
trusting a God whose everlasting arms are underneath us, holding us up (cf.
Deuteronomy 33:27).
To be honest, though, thoughts of faith like that are
unnatural for us. We tend to have in
mind an ideal image of life, of what we want life to be. More accurately, we concoct an idol of how we
expect life should be. We worship that idol; we yearn for that
ideal. But even a non-biblical thinker
such as Plato, the Greek philosopher, recognized the flaw in such
thinking. There is no “ideal” in the
earthly realm. Life in this world is
imperfect, mortal, characterized by struggle.
Plato envisioned that perfect things could exist only in a higher
realm. He wasn’t wrong. Through the testimony of Scripture, we know that
“the whole world lies in the power of the evil one” (1 John 5:19). But we also know “that the Son of God has
come, and has given us an understanding, that we know him who is true, and we
are in him who is true, in his Son Jesus Christ. This is the true God and
eternal life” (1 John 5:20). And the
true God calls upon us to keep ourselves from idols (1 John 5:21) – idols such
as imagining that life on this earth should always be full of easiness for us.
The truth is that “through many afflictions we must enter
into God’s Kingdom” (Acts 14:22).
The truth is that if we’re so much as standing up, it is
because the Lord has given us the strength to be on our feet. It is he who brings us up out of the pit, out
of the miry clay. He sets our feet on a
rock and gives us a firm place to stand (cf. Psalm 40:2).
So our confession of faith will always be this: “Some trust in chariots, and some in horses, but
we trust the name of Yahweh our God. They
are bowed down and fallen, but we rise up, and stand upright” (Psalm 20:7-8).
If you’re still standing—or even if you’re flat on your
back, but still partaking in life—rejoice and be glad in that day. As Eugene Peterson’s paraphrase of
Ecclesiastes reminds us: “Relish life …
each and every day of your precarious life. Each day is God’s gift. It’s all
you get in exchange for the hard work of staying alive” (Ecclesiastes 9:7-9, The Message). Our God took away the sin of the world in a
single day by giving his One and Only, Jesus Christ, into death for us. And
then Christ stood up again after giving himself over to death. Christ's victorious standing up again
(resurrection) gives us reason to stay standing even in life’s darkest days … and gives us promise that even after we have
been laid low, we will stand with our Lord again in eternity.
I’m still standing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Bible quotations from World English Bible (WEB) except where
indicated.