Wednesday, November 30, 2016

The People God is Willing to Work With

11/30/2016

Romans 4.20-22 20 Yet he did not waver through unbelief regarding the promise of God, but was strengthened in his faith and gave glory to God, 21 being fully persuaded that God had power to do what he had promised. 22 This is why “it was credited to him as righteousness.” – St.Paul

In Genesis 1.28, God made this statement: “Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky and over every living creature that moves on the ground.” That became the mission of mankind from that moment forth. And that mission lasts to this day although man’s acceptance of it has somewhat diminished.

However, in Abraham’s day the mission was still nearly full-strength. That is why having a child was so important to Abraham. The culture of those days included the richness of offspring. And Abraham wanted offspring, as did every other red-blooded man. Families were wealth. Children were important.

Abraham, however, had a problem – his wife, Sarah, was barren; beautiful but barren. Sarah could not conceive. I know of people who couldn’t/can’t conceive in these days and their lives are (to them) less than fulfilled. They yearn for children – if only even a child. Sarah was barren and Abraham was bothered. But Abraham believed God – the God who said, I will make you the father of many nations, you will bear many children. (Cf. Genesis 12.1-3)

And it was Abraham’s bothered belief that kept him going through all the childless years.

What keeps us going through the things that bother us? What keeps us going through hardship, pain, scarcity, frustration, losing hope? Enter the magnitude of faith – not faith in what we want, but faith in God and what He has said. God told Abraham, “I will make you into a great nation, and I will bless you; I will make your name great, and you will be a blessing…”

And what made it all work for Abraham was this: he believed God. And in his belief, God made him acceptable. We may or may not be acceptable on earth, but what really matters is if we are acceptable in heaven. Abraham, one man, made the difference for us all in that, he did not waver through unbelief regarding the promise of God, but was strengthened in his faith and gave glory to God, being fully persuaded that God had power to do what he had promised. People like Abraham are the people God is willing to work with.

Friends, are we people like Abraham – those who are willing, against all hope, to hope in God and in the things He has promised? Abraham was bothered in a way many of us can identify with: life isn’t going the way we imagined. But Abraham decided to believe in the One who promised. Can we do the same?

Father in Heaven, You are the same today, yesterday, and forever. You have promised to take care of me no matter the swirling circumstances around me. I ask today that you increase my faith to be a person You are willing to work with – not so that I can get my way, but that it may be credited to me as righteousness. Thank You God, for the gift of faith – it doesn’t take much but is does take some… Amen

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Serve the Truth

11/29/2016

2 Thessalonians 2.9-10 9 The coming of the lawless one will be in accordance with how Satan works. He will use all sorts of displays of power through signs and wonders that serve the lie, 10 and all the ways that wickedness deceives those who are perishing. They perish because they refused to love the truth and so be saved. – St. Paul

The lawless one will be one who has no regard for God, or God’s people. He will show up on the scene with convincing evidence which will be appealing, and compelling to what it is he is peddling. He will use things that serve the lie he is foisting.

At first, when I read this, I thought: Hmmm, serving the lie. First I don’t think I’d ever read that, that way; and second I thought about how many times in our day, someone uses something to serve the lie they are promoting. Lying isn’t always the easiest thing to discover. We know what we you want to hear, so we say what we want you to hear. And we use whatever is at our disposal to serve our lie.

Nowadays we have abundant information. It’s everywhere. News media, the internet, Facebook: they all are sources of information. And misinformation. And Disinformation. And, it’s becoming more apparent that we’ll use whatever we can to undergird our agenda to further its cause. Whatever serves the lie is what is used.

The election that just took place is evidence of at least this: some will use whatever means necessary to sell their point of view and to gain the coveted power of ruling authority. It is far easier to control people than it is to reason with them. Dumb them down and tell them what they want to hear and the path is already paved to make them do whatever you want.

Which is why we in the Church need each other; and that we need to know who we are, why we are, and what we are to be about. God has called us to the truth. And the truth God calls us to is not about the world, but about Him and His Kingdom. The quickest way to uncover a lie, is to look simply at its focus: earth, or heaven. Whatever is said about the earth and its future and promise are lies that distract from the truth about Heaven and her King: the Savior Who came to divert us from earth. Whatever promotes human potential is a lie. Whatever excludes God from the conversation is a lie.

In the Church we need to keep each other from what serves the lie that we only need God for certain things at certain times. We must help each other remember that without Him in everything always, we can do nothing, ever. We must conduct ourselves and encourage one another to live in a way that serves the truth. The truth is God created all of this to serve Himself and to serve us so that we can know Him forever. Present earth is secondary to Heaven, and a new earth is coming.

We live in dangerous days. We need each other to serve the truth. We need each other to serve God. And we need each other to stir up love and good deeds and so much the more as we see the day approaching.

Father, may Your Good Spirit lead me on level ground to do Your will and to serve Your truth. You have told me, I will all serve something. Help me to serve the good and to help save some in the process. Amen

Monday, November 28, 2016

The Truth

11/28/2016

1 Thessalonians 2.13 And we also thank God continually because, when you received the word of God, which you heard from us, you accepted it not as a human word, but as it actually is, the word of God, which is indeed at work in you who believe. St. Paul

The word of God (or Word) is the truth. At some point, everyone needs to hear the truth. At some point, everyone needs to know what this life is all about and what our place in this life truly is. So, when Paul said, when you received the word of God…you accepted it not as a human word, but as it actually is, the word of God, which is indeed at work in you who believe. That is the truth; the truth works in the life of a believer.

What would happen today if we received a letter from St. Paul? It’s kind of a silly question because we in fact, already have. But what if there was some lost letter, written centuries ago, that was discovered and was addressed to the Church in America, from Paul the apostle? Would we heed it? Would it make a difference in our lives and conduct?

Paul’s letters were full of instruction about how to live the godly life, but his letters were not necessarily the word of God – they were reminders, but they weren’t, and aren’t, necessarily evangelistic. Paul was evangelistic; that is how he led people to Christ – he told them the truth about God. His letters were to remind and encourage the ones he won over, to keep on keeping on, and to conduct themselves in a godly manner in this dark and deadly world.  

At some point the truth needs to resonate with a hearer, empowered by the Holy Spirit, to awaken the spirit in that hearer so that true life begins. Then Paul’s letters begin to make sense. In his letters we are reminded of what we are saved from, and what we are saved to. Paul teaches us a code of conduct based on truth: there is a God, we are not Him, and He desires to be our Friend. The way to please God is to do what He says to do. That is why we need Paul’s letters. That is why we need each other: we are letters to one another of what God has done in each of us by His truth.

If we can accept it, the Bible is a love-letter to us. In it, the concept of true love is revealed. God so loves the world that He sent His Son to save us from it, and ourselves. That is the truth. But the bigger truth is this: God loves us. His love is His attempt to save us from all we lost by Adam’s disobedience: especially our ability to love. We cannot truly love without His help, and we cannot love by trying to read Paul’s letters apart from the Truth he refers to, as he encourages us to love God and love others.

Life is all about accepting the truth and then living to please God. Of course, it is more complex than that, but the essence of life is truth: there is a God who loves us and has promised us a life with Him that far surpasses the life we have on our own without Him. The life that accepts God is the life that is free to accept Him in love. All of life hinges on knowing God in love. The truth will set us free.

Father, thank You for Your great love and for the truth shared in this world by the men and women You’ve appointed to share. Use Your truth in me to make a difference in the life of someone today who cannot get over the hurdle of fear on their own. Then, let me point them to the letters that will address all their questions and give them direction and encouragement to keep on keeping on… Amen

Saturday, November 19, 2016

In How I See It

11/19/2016

Matthew 4.4 Jesus answered, “It is written: ‘Man shall not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of God.’" – St. Matthew

It is one thing to see things one way, it is quite another to see them another. The challenge levied at Jesus was this: If You are, then… In other words, since it says, then you ought. I think that is a universal given. The devil himself knew certain things, but only saw them one way. Jesus knew all things and then challenged His tempter to see things correctly – I [don’t] live on food (bread) alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of God.

Which would we rather: a full belly, or the presence and fullness of truth?

Many know of God but they don’t necessarily know God – they only see Him as they are, not as He is. After forty days of fasting, one ought to be hungry, but the end of the fast is to be full of God (if that is Who one is seeking) not to seek the next meal. Fasting is the abstention of food for the gaining of wisdom and understanding, in order to live and obey.

As human, Jesus was hungry, but the end of His fast wasn’t just to gain a meal, it was to gain an even deeper sense of the power and presence of God. Withstanding food (in the proper way) might possibly be the mightiest weapon at our disposal in the fight again one who would bid: eat for crying out loud; take care of yourself; aren’t you hungry!?

The problem with the enemy, his minions; and many of us, is we’re tremendously limited in our appropriation of spiritual discipline. There is no seeking God in the motives and actions of the devil. There is a need for fullness, but fullness is more than what goes into and comes out of the body. It’s about what goes into, and transforms the life of the one who believes. Forever.

Jesus said to His detractors: “You are in error because you don’t know the Scripture or the power of God.” (Matthew 22.29) – you think it’s about food – it’s about what God desires we become.

How are Scripture, and the words of God changing us – for the better, or only for a full stomach? We must view our blessings carefully.

Sadly, I am often guilty of merely seeking a full stomach; only seeing things the way I want to see them. But God continues to tug at my heart to see things the way He sees them: and that requires more from me than trying to turn my rocks into bread so that I can be temporarily filled with that which only aids the body for a moment; and then, several hours later, I have to do again… it’s all in how I see it.

The devil is only ever concerned about himself. The true believer, modeled by Jesus Christ, is only, always, concerned about God. God is first, food is optional.

Father, may I continue to learn about the true nutritional benefit of Your word and Your words. May I learn to quit seeking that which only concerns me, and give myself always to what concerns You and Your will for Your people and their lives. Fill me God with only that which satisfies true hunger and transforms my life forever – amen.

Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Reasons

11/15/2016

2 Corinthians 1. 4 …who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves receive from God. – St. Paul

Paul’s relationship with the church in Corinth was rocky at times; they said and did things that he had to correct them over, and sometimes, his correction was unpleasant, to say the least. But Paul maintained that his correction was for a reason: his correction was redemptive.

Redemption isn’t a code-word. Redemption is a process whereby someone is brought back from a place – either mentally, spiritually, or physically – where they shouldn’t have gone. It is a process of discipline and correction but it is for a purpose. The reasons we go through the redemption process with people is for their good. Otherwise if there is no redemption, there is no correction and there is no care; and they are left in their own error. Comfort is not coddling. Comfort is correcting.

People in error without correction have a very small chance of ever getting things right in the future.

But when correction occurs, there is healing, and restoration and, redemption. A person goes through correction for at least two reasons: one, is to get themselves in a better place, and two, is to help others get there as well. God in His infinite wisdom has called us to help each other in times of trouble to (with His leadership) find our way back – or out. It’s one of the primary reasons that the Church (with all of her faults and blemishes) is so important: she is to be a place of godly healing, restoration, and redemption. It’s a place of loving people so that we can love God. (Yes, I said it that way…)

Paul was harsh with the Corinthians at times, but he never slammed the door on his relationship with them despite the exasperation he felt with them. Paul knew the magnitude of redemption: he’d been redeemed. And his redemption was to help others get redeemed as well. We all need redemption – that is God’s way. Paul stated there was a reason for the process: for good and not harm. And, to help in the process with others who need redemption.

Comfort is a strange thing in this harsh world of ours. People are hurt and hurting and need someone to come alongside them and comfort them. Comfort is not meant for us to remain in the same place but to move to another place; a place of then helping others so that they too can help others in need. We all have needs and we all need to get past them so we can then help others in their need – and that is precisely when true help and hope begin: in serving others in their need.

I work with 6th, 7th, and d 8th grade boys. Sometimes they need correction (okay, all the time…). But they also need to be helped and encouraged to see life differently and to learn how to question their behaviors and outlook. It is an uphill battle at times but it is necessary because boys need to learn to become true men; and true men are necessary to help this world keep from self-destructing. Boys will be boys unless they are taught to become men. It’s all a part of the redemption process and the reason for is are myriad.

Father, as You have comforted and corrected me, I pray You use me in the process to do the same for others that we all may become the people You’ve created us to be – Amen.

Sunday, November 13, 2016

What Never Fails

11/13/2016

1 Corinthians 13.8-10 8 Love never fails. But where there are prophecies, they will cease; where there are tongues, they will be stilled; where there is knowledge, it will pass away. 9 For we know in part and we prophesy in part, 10 but when completeness comes, what is in part disappears. – St. Paul

In the myriad comings and goings of life, it is like an iced tea on a hot day to read 1 Corinthians 13. It’s like a gifted and caring counselor coming alongside the fretful and harried me, worried and bothered by all the agendas, timelines, and business saying: Calm down, focus on what really matters: love never fails.

I think Paul was that counselor to his friends in Corinth saying to them: Hey guys, love never fails. Remember that above all else, because not everything – not even prophesies, tongues, or knowledge can do justice to the love that God has for us. All of that stuff will reach an end, but the love of God knows no boundaries; and one day He’ll bring it all come together.

We need to remember that. It doesn’t mean we quit prophesying. It doesn’t mean we quit tongues. It doesn’t mean we quit seeking the knowledge of God. But it does mean that we don’t get so busy doing the good that we neglect the great. No one will care about our buildings and programs – all that will matter when we got together, is they felt a touch from Jesus, and their lives were somehow changed.

It seems we worship “big”. It seems we think that bigger buildings and better programs are what people need. We push and we strive and we clamor for what looks good on the outside, but what happens to people in the process? Are the lives of the people focused on loving God and loving others? Are people’s hearts and minds changed because of better carpet and paint? Or do they sense they are loved and cared for and that someone has their best interests in mind?

Is the church about activity, or is it about worshiping God and seeking Him? The difference will be our love. The difference will be our humility. The difference will be the lengths we go to, to have the presence and power of Jesus to help and to guide the ones of today who really aren’t sure if He is real, let alone, cares.

Our politics, preferences, and positioning need to carefully monitored because if we’re not careful those things will drive us because as we deem them good, how can they be bad? And we’ll live life and ministry accordingly. But the great is what we’re called to and it is the greatness of the Lord that is to drive us to do and to seek His will. His love will make our way, not necessarily easier, but better. I think that is what Paul was attempting to say to the church at Corinth and to us today.

Lord, Your love for me is all that matters. From Your love is my ability to love You and to love those around me. I pray today for wisdom to separate the good – which is good – and live for the great, because it is better. All the stuff I hold so dear will only get me so far – but Your love will get me home. Love never fails… Amen

Wednesday, November 9, 2016

Imitate Me

11/9/2016

1 Corinthians 4.15-16 15 Even if you had ten thousand guardians in Christ, you do not have many fathers, for in Christ Jesus I became your father through the gospel. 16 Therefore I urge you to imitate me. – St. Paul

Who led you to Christ? Was there anyone who influenced you to turn your life over to Jesus and follow Him (as he or she followed Him)? Who is your father in Christ?

For some, your Father is your father; you came to Christ by the power and influence of God’s presence and simply turned your life over to Him. For others, there was a person or two that convinced you the path you chose was leading you to nowhere, and somehow you decided to turn and follow another path, the path of Christ. Would that person have said: “I urge you to imitate me (as I follow Christ)”?

That’s a big question to an even bigger statement: I urge you to imitate me. Who says that – the timid, the questioning, the confused!? It takes quite a person to say: I urge you to imitate me

The guy who led me to Christ may have been that kind of person. He was a bit brash and came off as somewhat arrogant. But he had a heart of gold and he followed Jesus with all of his heart. He urged me to imitate him in his faith in Jesus. That’s what true discipleship is all about: imitation, emulation, following the leader. Those kinds of people are fathers.

Awhile back at my men’s group, we mused: who are the fathers in our respective churches? None of us made the list. I wonder why. Is it because we can’t see ourselves as fathers; or is it because we’re uncertain of our calling? Part of it may be, we’re so shocked when we read Paul’s words that we’re blown away at the thought of anyone on earth urging others to imitate their faith and devotion to Christ?

Even the most spiritual I know seem reticent to act that way or say such a thing. We judge ourselves weirdly.

So, we’re blown away by Paul, whom we deem as the bellwether for our faith, but what do we really think about Jesus who said, go everywhere to everyone and tell them about Me? Do we think Jesus would urge: Imitate Me, as I give Myself to God? These are questions worth asking. Is Paul on a pedestal with no room for anyone else? Who are we imitating if we’re not imitating him? And why, if we’re not, aren’t we? Who are we asking to imitate us? Or do we dare venture out onto that ice? If not, why not.

My questions today are: where is my faith taking me; and who am I following (imitating) to get where I think I’m going? Do I imitate anyone, or am I just winging it all on my own, hoping for the best? Maybe the difference in my faith-walk would turn on such questions as these. Maybe God is waiting for me to urge someone to imitate me in my faith and practice. I think I am confronted today in the real reality of my faith and understanding.

Father in Heaven, You did not invite me into the Kingdom to wing it on my own. I believe (at least for today) that You are urging me to walk in such a way as to urge others to imitate me in my faith in You. It is not performance or production, but heart. Is my heart so full before You that I would ask others to follow me as I follow Jesus – that is the question. Help me to answer it I pray, amen

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

A Demonstration

11/8/2016

1 Corinthians 2.4-5 4 My message and my preaching were not with wise and persuasive words, but with a demonstration of the Spirit’s power, 5 so that your faith might not rest on human wisdom, but on God’s power. – St. Paul

I think we have two options when it comes to the Holy Spirit: accept Him, or deny Him. I think the Holy Spirit is the most misunderstood and underutilized Person of the Trinity. I think the Holy Spirit confuses people as much today as back then. He is not the Author of confusion, but we are confused about Him. We’re confused in our perception of Him as predictable, or willy-nilly. He, in fact, holds us together.

Yesterday, I sat with my friend Benny and we talked about ministry and why it is that faith and power seem to be so lacking in our day. Benny works with “at-risk” youth and tries to connect them to Jesus by building relationships with them, and giving them practical skills to use in everyday life. He holds camps to help kids disconnect with their ‘norm’ so that he can teach them and show them about Jesus. What Benny desires is a demonstration of the Spirit’s power not only to renew, but also to transform.

We talked about why it is that so many kids seem to start out well but end up so poorly. They seem to want something different in their lives, yet they keep returning to what it is they know: living life by reaction. They aren’t being led by God, but by the willy-nilly whims of their own mind.

Benny talked about leading them to see the Northern Star of life: Jesus Christ. The North Star is out there, and it is the star by which we earthlings determine the location of everything else. Jesus desires to be ‘in here,’ (point at your chest) on the throne of our heart, to lead us to where He calls us to be. The inner beacon, the inner compass, is the Holy Spirit. He is the divine GPS in our lives.

It is by the Holy Spirit that we see evidence of God’s power and presence, because in us, He is God’s power and presence. The Spirit is neither predictable nor willy-nilly; He is the Presence of God in our daily lives and practice. We don’t seek Him above God: He is God; In Him we live, move and have our being.

Paul said he demonstrated the Spirit’s power. He did this for two reasons: 1) to demonstrate the presence of the Holy Spirit, and 2) to differentiate between that of God, and that of man. Man, in all his glory is fatally weak. He may sound good and look good, but he is broken and untrustworthy. God is his only hope. The presence of the Holy Spirit is his only credibility. To proclaim change without the presence of the Holy Spirit is all man has: his proclamation. Without the Holy Spirit, he has no proof.

His words may sound good, his actions may look good, but without proof he is just one more huckster in the arena of life trying to control and persuade men. The presence of God’s Spirit doesn’t make me God; I am made genuine if I cooperate with His power and presence within me. Said the Apostle Paul: My message and my preaching were not with wise and persuasive words, but with a demonstration of the Spirit’s power, so that your faith might not rest on human wisdom, but on God’s power. We either trust men, or we trust God.

Father, fill me afresh today with Your Spirit in all I do. May my life be a demonstration of the Spirit’s power within me. Amen

Monday, November 7, 2016

Off The Leash

11/7/2016

Galatians 5.1 It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery. – St. Paul

What is the price of freedom and what does freedom do for us? It is hard to think about the entirety of culture mankind has built up over the centuries. It is hard to think about the issues and isms we humans have fought for, and even shed blood over, because we thought it was the right thing to do. So, what does freedom, really give us?

Freedom, gives us God. It is unimaginable what the world would look like had Adam and Eve never sinned. But now, since they did, it is better to imagine what the world will look like in the days to come when God restores all that. But that world comes at a cost, and that world will truly be a world set free.

In Paul’s writings, he dealt (largely) with grace versus law. Grace is freeing, law is slavery. But Paul also informed us that since we will all be slaves to something, then we should consider being slaves to freedom. And freedom, he insists, comes only from Christ.

Specifically, in Galatians, the church was being assaulted by those who would put forth that true obedience to Christ comes only from a mixture of faith, but also, obedience to the Mosaic Law. Nothing, he claims, could be farther from the truth. The freedom of faith is the grace to love God and love others and if there is a law to be followed it is simply this: faith expressing itself through love (Galatians 5.6).

We don’t need a law to command us to love, but we do need grace to free us to. And grace, no matter what we think it to be, always boils down to this: favor and friendship from God freely given to us as we are right now, not as we become by following rules. Law is inflexible. Grace is fluid. Law demands, grace frees. Look at what we’ve become by following the rules…

Our problem, perhaps, is our fear of grace. Sometimes, I take my dog out on a walk (which she truly loves to do) and I don’t attach the leash to her collar. She gets all weird about it. She keeps looking at me as if to say, Is this right!? She is so used to the leash that freedom from it sorta freaks her out. I spend way more time encouraging her off the leash than I do yanking her on the leash when she decides to be a dog and stop to smell the smells. We are not dogs, but we do understand “leashes”; Law is leash.

Dogs were not designed for leashes; we were not designed for law. We were designed for freedom and the laws we’ve created have bound us from that freedom. So, Paul rejoices by saying: It is for freedom that Christ has set us free; in other words, you don’t need a leash to guide you other than the leash of love. Love for God and love for others.

Too simplistic? Too naïve? Too fanciful? Too unbelievable? It is unimaginable what the world would look like had Adam and Eve never sinned; but it is precisely to that world Jesus is leading us – off the leash.

Father, sometimes we are so used to our sins, our rules, and our slavery that we cannot imagine what true freedom would look like. Yet Your servant said that is precisely where You are leading those who believe. It is for freedom, that Christ has set us free. May I learn to walk in freedom. May I learn to love at depths I’ve never considered. By Your Spirit lead me in love this day – to Your glory and because of Your grace, amen.

Sunday, November 6, 2016

The Proper Order of Things

11/6/2016

Galatians 3.17 “What I mean is this: The law, introduced 430 years later, does not set aside the covenant previously established by God and thus do away with the promise.” – St. Paul

I think I have reasoned through this before, but I have had to reason through it again today: the Law is apart from the Promise. Always has been. Always will be. The Law was not a covenant; the Law was given to Moses so that through it the people of Israel (later called the Jews) could relate to God. The Law is not for all mankind, the Law was for a specific people for a specific time.

I think people get tripped up easily by the Bible. Its message is very straight forward. It is plainly written and very well laid out. But here’s where I think the problem is: Religion demands rules. And the Old Testament Law is a set of rules. And most people want religion rather than relationship with God. To them, it is easier to try to follow rules, traditions, and customs than it is to get to know God.

Most people don’t believe God is personable and knowable. They prefer to deal with an abstract view of God; finding that abstraction excuses their living. They reason: God is somehow God and He will do what He does, and if they are harmed or discomforted in the process, well, that’s just karma. To them, friendship with God is impossible and mostly unnecessary because God is going to do what He’s going to do anyway.

At least with the rules, there is something to follow and work at. When standing before God, most men (and women and children) will want to direct God’s attention to what they’ve accomplished so they can tell God: I tried. I got this far. I put some effort into this. Judge me for my effort, not how I knew You.

What most of us forget in our religious penchant is that God promised Abraham that through Abraham’s Seed (Jesus Christ) all the nations of the world would be blessed. That Promise still stands, the Law is long gone.

The Promise is accepted by faith: “So those who rely on faith are blessed along with Abraham, the man of faith.” (Galatians 3.9) The Law was given, not promised. Only the faithful know this and relate to God in faith. There is no need for a Law for them, because they are not Jews and the Law does not apply to them – but faith does. Abraham was blessed by what he believed, not by what he did.

I always need to be reminded. I don’t need to memorize the entire Bible; I just need to know that the Law, as big and powerful as it was – never circumvented the previous Promise. I need to remember that I am a child of Promise, not a follower of the Law. I need to be reminded that centuries ago, a man like me believed God, and it was credited to Him as righteousness. I must be reminded to keep the proper order of things: Promise trumps Law every time.

Father, it is so crystal clear: You gave Abraham the gift of Faith: he believed You. You have never changed the relationship since then. It is by faith that I relate to You and by faith that I live out my days knowing You. Help me to remember the proper order of things and what applies to whom. The Law was never meant for Your kids. Thank You God! Amen

Saturday, November 5, 2016

Ruthless Humility

11/5/2016

Galatians 1.10 Am I now trying to win the approval of human beings, or of God? Or am I trying to please people? If I were still trying to please people, I would not be a servant of Christ. – St. Paul

You know, the part of the people pleaser is futile, for he can’t please people. Yet he tries because he sees people-pleasing as something of value. He wants to remain neutral in all things so as not to make waves but by doing so, the waves rage all around him. Sadly, many people attempt to be people-pleasers for they think, if we could all just get along, life would be better… We can do it!

Can’t say that I blame the people-pleaser; after all, I’d like it if we could all just get along. When I think of the conflicts around the world and the carnage of human life in the process, yes, I wish we could all just get along. But we can’t and, more, we won’t. But we insist on pleasing people.

I think a people-pleaser wants everyone to get along and wants everyone to like him. People-pleasing isn’t as much about people as it is about self; and being accepted, and liked. Can you blame him? He just wants to be all things to all people all of the time – isn’t that noble? The people-pleaser exalts himself to the place of being the example for the rest of us – if only we all could be just like him. Then, our mission, like his, would be to please everyone else.

But what happens when his brand of people-pleasing differs from mine? Then what? Well then we’ll have that group over there led by their people-pleaser, and my group over here being led by me. And provided we don’t spend too much time around each other, everyone will be pleased with their people- pleasers.

And then we’ll build colleges for teaching “People Pleasing”. And we’ll write books. And we’ll have an appointed time each week where we gather in our special people-pleasing buildings, and sing songs, and hear testimonies, and enjoy rousing speeches on the merits of pleasing people. And we’ll have kids groups, and women’s societies, and things for the men to do. And we’ll all please each other and live blissful lives of being blissfully pleased.

And we won’t need God. Imagine there’s no heaven, it’s easy if you try. No hell below us; above only sky. Imagine all the people, living for the day… * We’ll have out-pleased God.

Paul said people-pleasing is what separates us from service to Christ. If Christ is Who He is and has done what He has done, then there is an enormous need for Christ, because then and only then, do we live for others, empowered and helped by Him to help them. Many want people pleasing because they don’t need or want Christ – thanks Jesus, we got it.

Only as we each focus on, and move toward Jesus Christ, will we be drawn closer together. We won’t be focused on anything but Him and His purposes for each of us, which by the way, includes loving each others out of respect and love for Him… Christ is pleased and we all are happy. Hmmm…

Father, may I live wholly, solely holy for You. May I keep my eyes on Your eternal Kingdom and love You with all of my heart, soul, mind, and strength. And may I love others as myself regardless of whether (or not) they measure up to being loved. Your will and way is perfect and calls for ruthless humility in my daily walk. I cannot please others, I can only love them as You lead me to love You… Amen

*Credit to whom credit is due: John Lennon, 1971

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

God Thoughts

11/2/2016

Job 23.10 But he knows the way that I take; when he has tested me, I will come forth as gold. – Job

I used to think of Job as a theologian of sorts. I used to think, when I read Job, that everything he said was right on, and everything his three friends said was garbage. This time through, I’m thinking Job was a guy just like you and me (perhaps, apart from his wealth); What we read in Job are Job’s thoughts about God; thoughts just like you and I have.

It’s obvious from the text that Job and his friends had thoughts about God. The problem was their thoughts were stunted or incomplete. Now, Job certainly had experienced a calamity in his life and he was trying to figure out why – so the natural thing for him to do was to question God in his own way: why have You allowed this to happen to me?

I think Job chose to live an upstanding life. I’m not sure what he based that on, but because we get a peek into his life, we even hear God say: “Have you considered my servant Job? There is no one on earth like him; he is blameless and upright, a man who fears God and shuns evil.” Job was a good man by the standards of his time and by the testimony of God.

But Job only had thoughts of God. Unlike Abraham, Job didn’t sit down and have coffee with God; he was left to his thoughts. And Job understood that somehow God knew about him, even though all he had were thoughts of God. I think, at some point, everyone has thoughts about God. Some thoughts might be good thoughts about God and others maybe not so good. The more important question for me is do I think about God at all?

So, Job reasoned: But [God] knows the way that I take; when [God] has tested me, I will come forth as gold. Job’s thoughts led him to believe: though he himself had thoughts of God, God had knowledge of him. That’s important for all of us to know – that God knows us. And because Job thought that way, he reasoned that whatever was happening, and when it was all over, God would bring him (Job) forth as better. Job reasoned there was a positive plan a purpose to his calamity.

Do we do that? Do our thoughts of God allow us to reason that if God knows us and allows stuff to happen to us, that somehow, some way, we’ll be better for it in the long run? Job, in my estimation seemed to think that. Which brings me back to God thoughts:

What do we think the Almighty thinks about us? Obviously, Job lived in such a way as to garner attention from God; do we? Does that matter? Do we perceive there is a plan and a purpose to our lives? When stuff happens to us, do we thank God that His plan for us in on track or do we blame Him for disrupting our lives? Can we say like Job, “…when [God] has tested me, I will come forth [better]?

Where have our thoughts led us in thinking about God?

Father, You know me and know what I think. You know, more often than not, I am not pleased with my circumstances and arrive at a conclusion that I have somehow made You mad, and You are paying me back. Help me to elevate my thoughts of You above such whiny adolescence. You are about the business, not of fixing me, but of transforming me. Find me faithful and cooperative in Your process that I too, may come forth as gold… Amen.

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

Pecking Order

11/1/2016

Mark 10.39-40 39 “We can,” they answered. Jesus said to them, “You will drink the cup I drink and be baptized with the baptism I am baptized with, 40 but to sit at my right or left is not for me to grant. These places belong to those for whom they have been prepared.” – St. Mark

I think it was a normal guy-thing – you know, the jockeying for position. It seems the disciples were just like everyone else: infected with the natural human affliction of pecking order. So, it really was not a surprise that James and John (who’d come to the conclusion that something really was going to happen to Jesus) came to Jesus and asked for preferential treatment: Let us sit on Your left and right when You are in Your glory…

Already in chapter 9, the disciples had been squabbling over position and Jesus asked them: “What were you arguing about on the road?” (v31) And now in chapter 10, James and John do the unthinkable: they go straight to the Source to reserve their seats. And the other 10 are livid: Who do they think they are!?

To which Jesus said: “You don’t know what you are asking,” Jesus said. “Can you drink the cup I drink or be baptized with the baptism I am baptized with?” James and John say they can and Jesus replies: you will!

Preferential treatment is not what the Kingdom of God is all about. I don’t know where James of John are sitting currently, but before they got to glory, James was cut down with the sword and John was boiled in oil and left for dead. (He didn’t die then, but you can be sure he was a sore sight to those who saw him). They both suffered the baptism meant for them. They both entered glory, and I’m betting they both heard the words: Well done good and faithful servant!

The only position and preference meant for the child of God is this: to act justice, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with God (Micah 6.8). When we moderns think about our exit strategy, we will have to include the cup we will all drink, and the baptism we will all endure. It’s that way for everyone who follows Jesus.

Special seats were culturally important to James and John; just getting into the party is important to me.

That’s not to put down James and John, they worked hard and loved Jesus. But they, like many of the rest of us were caught up in hierarchy and pecking order. With mankind, that’s just the way it goes. But it doesn’t have to be that way. That’s why walking with Jesus is so important. When our hearts are aligned with His then proximity to Him is as close as our heart. We don’t have to sit with Him, He sits within us by His Spirit. How much closer do we need to be?

Father God, I too am caught up in positon, possession, and pecking order. I pray for the grace to simply accept who I am where I am and the cup I will ultimately have to drink as I am baptized with the baptism meant for me. When I stand before You, I will stand alone – no one else will give and account with me. Find me faithful Lord. Let me hear the words meant for those invited to the celebration of Your glory: Well done good and faithful servant! Amen