The Unchanging Excellency: Ending the Year with Renewed Pursuit
As another year draws to a close, there's a natural tendency to reflect, to evaluate, to measure what we've accomplished. We think about the weight we didn't lose, the goals we didn't meet, the resolutions that faded by February. But what if the most important question we could ask ourselves has nothing to do with our achievements and everything to do with our relationship?
The Measure That Matters
The Apostle Paul wrote something remarkable in Philippians 3:8: "Yea doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord." This wasn't a man talking about checking boxes or maintaining religious appearances. This was a man consumed by something—or rather, Someone—far greater.
As we close out another year, the critical question isn't what visible things we've accomplished for Christ. It's whether our walk with Him today is different than it was twelve months ago. Are we closer to Him now? Do we know Him more intimately? Or have we simply accumulated more information about Him while our hearts have grown no nearer?
There's a profound difference between knowing about someone and truly knowing them. You can know facts—height, appearance, background—without knowing the person's heart, their character, their essence. The same is true in our relationship with Christ.
The God Who Never Changes
Here's the liberating truth: God has not changed this year. His excellency hasn't diminished. His glory hasn't lost its luster. The only variable in our pursuit of Christlikeness rests entirely in our yieldedness.
Malachi 3:6 declares, "For I am the Lord, I change not." The same God who was worthy of praise in January remains just as worthy today. His strength hasn't weakened. His victory hasn't been diminished. His majesty stands undiminished.
Psalm 113:3 commands us: "From the rising of the sun unto the going down of the same, the Lord's name is to be praised." From dawn to dusk, every single day, His name deserves our worship. This isn't a recommendation—it's a reality based on who He is.
If our praise has diminished, it's not because He's less worthy. It's because we've grown less intentional. Praising Christ isn't seasonal—it's continual.
The Dangerous Drift
In Revelation 2, we encounter the church at Ephesus—a congregation any pastor would be thrilled to lead. They were workers. They were patient. They couldn't tolerate evil. They tested false teachers and found them to be liars. They labored without fainting. By all outward measures, they were an exemplary church.
Yet God had something against them: "thou hast left thy first love."
This is the dangerous drift. It's possible to be incredibly busy in religious activity while our hearts grow cold toward Christ Himself. We can know all the right answers, be involved in every ministry, maintain an impeccable religious reputation, and yet lose the very thing that matters most—that intimate, passionate pursuit of knowing Jesus.
What Does Hunger Look Like?
So how do we know if we're still passionately pursuing Christ? What are the evidences that we truly know Him?
First, there's humility. Psalm 8:4 asks, "What is man that thou art mindful of him? And the son of man that thou visitest him?" The more we truly know God, the smaller we become in our own eyes. The less confidence we have in our flesh. The more dependent we are on His grace. We begin to reflect David's heart: "Who am I that you even know my name?"
The answer to that question is humbling: we're nobody. We're sinners saved by grace. And paradoxically, the more we decrease in our own estimation, the stronger we become in Him. God chose the foolish things to confound the wise. He chose the weak things to confound the strong.
Second, there's praise. Psalm 96:8 calls us to "Give unto the Lord the glory due His name." When knowledge grows cold, worship becomes routine. Praise becomes selective. Gratitude becomes conditional. We love the Lord as long as He's nice to us, but let circumstances turn difficult and watch how quickly our faithfulness wavers.
But genuine knowledge of Christ produces genuine, consistent praise—not based on circumstances, but based on who He is.
The Power Question
In 2 Corinthians 4:7, Paul reminds us: "But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of God, and not of us." We are weak vessels. The treasure—God Himself—is where the true power resides.
Here's where another subtle shift can occur. We begin to trust methods more than the Spirit. We trust programs more than prayer. We trust structure more than surrender. When's the last time we prayed earnestly for the ministries we're involved in, rather than just showing up and going through the motions?
The question isn't whether God still works. The question is: are we still depending on God? Has our dependence shifted from His power to our own efforts?
The Renewal Call
Lasting spiritual change never comes from human strength. No self-help book, no matter how many times you read it, can produce lasting transformation. The only lasting change comes from surrendering to the power of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
The gospel hasn't lost its power. The cross hasn't lost its authority. The Spirit hasn't withdrawn Himself. He is still available, still active, still powerful.
As this year ends and a new one begins, the call isn't to retreat in shame over where we've failed. It's to renewal. It's to return to that first love. It's to pursue with fresh hunger the excellency of knowing Christ—not just knowing about Him, but truly knowing Him in intimate relationship.
His nature remains our aim. His character, our pursuit. His image, our goal. Not through striving in our own strength, but through humble dependence on His transforming grace.
The year may be ending, but the invitation remains: Come closer. Know Me more. Let Me change you from the inside out.
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