Thursday, June 28, 2012

Slapped Upside the Heart



06.28.12

2 Timothy 3.2-4 2 ...preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort, with great patience and instruction. 3 For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but wanting to have their ears tickled, they will accumulate for themselves teachers in accordance to their own desires, 4 and will turn away their ears from the truth and will turn aside to myths. NASB

Two things stood out to me in reading this today:

1.) Reprove, rebuke, exhort. Notice, Paul didn’t say, coddle, caress, and cuddle – no, his words were forceful and imminent. We Christians need to be routinely smacked upside the heart so we get it; because the world will politically-correct us right into a grave of inaction if we’re not careful. The life of the believer is to be a life of active discipline and self-discipline. Notice, it isn’t to be a life of punishment. It’s: eat your peas, do your sit-ups, wash your elbows, and behind your ears. Take care of your heart, be concerned about the things of God.

2.) [They] will turn aside to myths. What are some modern myths? What are some flat-out lies that we comfortably believe to be the truth? They’re out there: and many believe them.

One popular myth: some sins aren’t all that bad. Another is: I’ll be okay all by myself if I don’t have to interact with too many others – I can go it alone. Another is: I can improve myself. Another is: I’m okay because I live in America. Another is: there are some things in this life that are too big to fail.

Paul told Timothy, as Timothy led his congregation, that believers need to be treated with godly dignity and respect by being slapped around by the hard truth so they won’t fall into comfortable myths as a result. Soft myths will make us fall into the sound sleep of error if we’re not careful. The Christian-life is hard enough by itself without the life-saving effects of self-discipline. We need to be reproved, rebuked, and exhorted to withstand what is daily coming at us so that we have the strength and wherewithal to attend to the Master’s purposes. One small indicator of our spiritual strength is simply: what is the content, frequency, and quality of our prayer-life? Feeling guilty yet? I do!

What myths do I hold as true? What have I comfortably embraced as truth that is, in reality, toxic? In myself I can certainly name a few. Paul told Timothy the stark truth because that is the only way to approach life as a Christian (and as a pastor). People are just like a lot of other things in life: like moving water they will always follow the course of least resistance. If there’s one thing we need in this life as believers it’s resistance against the things that lead us away from the truth.

Today, I am rebuked, reproved, and reminded that without diligence I will lapse into indolence with regard to my spiritual well-being. I need to be slapped around because the regular blows of truth will protect me from the subtle kisses of sin. Lord, help me!

Friday, June 15, 2012

A Prayer-Bomb Kind of Guy



06.15.12

Colossians 1.9-12 9 For this reason also, since the day we heard of it, we have not ceased to pray for you and to ask that you may be filled with the knowledge of His will in all spiritual wisdom and understanding, 10 so that you will walk in a manner worthy of the Lord, to please Him in all respects, bearing fruit in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God; 11  strengthened with all power, according to His glorious might, for the attaining of all steadfastness and patience; joyously 12 giving thanks to the Father, who has qualified us to share in the inheritance of the saints in Light. NASB

What a prayer! It seems that in Colossae was a church that was not planted by Paul, but by a fellow worker of Paul's. And Paul was thrilled that they got it and kept it. So Paul prayed and continued to pray for them. I think he prayed similar prayers for all the churches – after all, why not pray and ask the God of infinite providence to give us everything we need for life on this earth and the propagation of the faith - all the time?

When we pray, what do we ask for? Do we ask God for some more of this and more of that? Do we ask God for what He’s already given us? Do we ask Him for things that are against His will? In America it is culturally acceptable to say to someone going through tragic circumstances: our thoughts and prayers are with you. What are those thoughts and prayers? If they aren’t like Paul’s then they probably aren’t hitting the mark. God looks at the heart when one prays and God sees sincerity, but sincerity can be sincerely wrong. Do we pray according to our relationship with God or do we throw up a prayer bomb hoping it explodes in the right place at the right time – with the right results?

I contend that if we pray, then that action alone ought to obligate us to some kind of submission to the rulership of God. If not, why pray? If God is not my King, why ask Him for anything? If He is not my King, do I pray believing He will overlook my lack of loyalty to Him? Probably not. Somehow, I think we culturally think that when we pray we turn on some kind of obligation switch with God: Oh, he’s praying now, I guess I’m obligated now to do something on his behalf because he’s praying; who cares that he ignores Me the rest of the time? Prayer is serious business and prayer is not to be taken lightly or casually; prayer is to be taken causally; we’re to pray with a specific intent in mind. And prayer is to be a habit of the heart; a routine, customary part of who we are and how we live.

I confess it, I’m usually a prayer-bomb kind of guy. I’m not a conversational pray-er. That needs to change – there is too much at stake and too much going on around us that demands I pray. But I have to make that obedient choice – I cannot and must not be guilted into action. On the other hand, if I know the meaning and the value of prayer, is it all that bad that I feel badly for not using prayer for what it is and what it does? When I read a prayer like Paul’s do I not feel some guilt for not taking up the torch and running the race as he did, or as the Lord did? After all, didn’t Paul pray: “…so that you will walk in a manner worthy of the Lord…”?

Prayer is, and always ought to be, an indicator of how I’m walking, and with (and for) whom. My lack of prayer (or my tact of prayer) ought to be an indicator of where my heart and my treasure really are… anything less is a masquerade.

Saturday, June 9, 2012

It Applies to Everyone



06.09.12

Ecclesiastes 12.13 13 The conclusion, when all has been heard, is: fear God and keep His commandments, because this applies to every person. NASB

You know, there isn’t a soul on earth who isn’t precious or unknown to God. There isn’t a soul on the planet who doesn’t deserve to know  and experience the depth and riches of God’s love and goodness; it applies to everyone.

I think what happened when Solomon got to the end of his musings about life and experience, he decided: yes, God has given me much, but I cannot afford to miss the forest for the trees; life ultimately boils down to how I relate to my God. And not just for the day, or for the moment, but always.

It is true; life does come in increments of moments, minutes, hours, days and years – that is how things are structured for now. But as I read Solomon and think about what he said, I pick up a certain tenor to his words that tells me: despite the incrementality of life, it is not each moment, but how we carry our faith from one moment to the next – and continue to carry it so. We’re not to major on the moments, but we’re not to forget them either.

We get so caught up in the moments that we overlook the seasons. We can focus so much on our seasons that we miss our moments. The conclusion: When all has been heard, fear God and keep His commandments as the medium for life through the smallest seconds and longest seasons. This applies to everyone. Or at least it is what is intended for everyone.

To live life and miss God is one of the greatest tragedies in the universe. No, it is the greatest tragedy in the universe. We were made by God and for God and to miss that is to miss the supremest desire of our heart. And that applies to you, me, and everyone else. Everyone’s desire is to be happy; everyone’s desire is to be safe and well; warm on the cold days, and cool on the hot days. And the Answer to the deepest longings of our heart is the Lord God.

Solomon enjoyed what few on earth ever achieve: riches beyond measure, freedom beyond description, and wisdom to know the difference. But even with all this, the smartest guy in the world had to bow his knee and say: to have all this and not have God – well at best, it’s a loss. And it applies to everyone because God is infinitely more than all of what earth has to offer.

God grant me the serenity
to accept the things I cannot change;
courage to change the things I can;
and wisdom to know the difference.

Living one day at a time;
Enjoying one moment at a time;
Accepting hardships as the pathway to peace;
Taking, as He did, this sinful world
as it is, not as I would have it;
Trusting that He will make all things right
if I surrender to His Will;
That I may be reasonably happy in this life
and supremely happy with Him
Forever in the next.

Amen.
-       The Serenity Prayer

Friday, June 1, 2012

Soul Keeping



06.01.12

Proverbs 21.28 28 A false witness will perish, but the man who listens to the truth will speak forever.

It is one thing to listen to the truth of God’s word; it is another thing altogether to act upon what one hears. I cannot help thinking about my life and conduct when I read the Proverbs. And then, when I read passages like Romans 13, I wonder, how am I doing at all this stuff? Life in Christ is not about performance but it is about obedience, and conduct reveals who I am inside.

When Paul says, Therefore let us lay aside the deeds of darkness and put on the armor of light. (Romans 13.12) how am I doing at that? Do I just read this verse, give it mental ascent, and keep right on living my life as I please, or do I stop and say, how am I doing at all that? When I am exhorted to behave properly as in the day, (v. 13) am I behaving properly, or doing just enough to keep from rocking the boat too many times? And when Paul says, But put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh in regard to its lusts. (v.14) Am I doing that?

The Proverb says the man who listens to the truth will speak forever. Forever is a long time. The opposite is true as well: a false witness will perish. He may not perish today, or even tomorrow; but he will perish. Living falsely is kinda like a slow suicide.

In what I do for a living, I offer people a chance to have their voice heard. I present them with an opportunity join an organization that advocates for them and makes their wishes known. Some want to join and are enthusiastic about participating. Others are convinced but won’t join. Some are so cynical that they just can’t see that anything at all can be done to change the way things are: these are comfortable in their cynicism, wishfully thinking that the whole nightmare will somehow go away and things will someday get better.

Every day, the Bible offers us an opportunity to have our voice heard: the man who listens to the truth will speak forever. But listening in this instance is not only hearing but also doing. The man who listens (actively) to the truth (and lives his life accordingly) will speak forever. Hearing is one thing: hearing and acting is another.

I have lived far too many days listening to the truth with my head and doing nothing (or little) with it in my heart. This cannot continue. It may be uncomfortable, it may be difficult, but as Paul urged us (me) put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh in regard to its lusts. That is something I must actively do if I want to live and speak.

One other little nugget today: He who keeps the commandment keeps his soul, but he who is careless of conduct will die. (Proverbs 19.16) Am I active in listening and living or am I careless of [my] conduct? It’s not a case of earning brownie points; it’s listening and living for the truth because I am (supposedly) heading to a Realm of truth where no falsehood is ever allowed: he who keeps the commandment keeps (watch) over his soul. A soul-keeping person is a person who actively listens to the truth and cares about his conduct, his witness, and his destination. What am I doing, and how is what I am doing affecting where I am going? Just saying.