Monthly Archives: October 2014

Know that the Lord is God

 

 

 

 

Know that the Lord is God. It is He who made us and not we ourselves.

Psalm 100:3

 

 

My ancestors came to America in 1639. For dozens of generations they made their living making shoes and boots. My great great great-grandfather Ezra was the first man to manufacture leather shoe strings here. In those days you made your boots and you pulled yourself by your own bootstraps, literally as well as figuratively.

 

Here in the western world we take pride in being ‘self-made’ people. Independence and self-sustainability are closely held values. Especially in the last 60 years, we have come to view ourselves more and more as the answer to our own problems. “The answer is within you,” we are told. The self-help section of the bookstore is replete with volumes on how we can fix whatever ails us.

 

It’s true that God has endowed us with miraculous brains capable of far more than we imagine. He was bestowed upon us the gift of willpower to choose a new direction and carve a new path for ourselves and our families. We are not slaves to our heritage. Chains of bondage and abuse can be broken in a single generation that has the will to break them.

 

But given all that ability, do we really have this all-powerful ‘genie’ within us? Well, yes and no.  Yes, we have many abilities. But no, we never have discovered the way to the end of our sorrows in our own power.

 

But ordinary people loved by an extraordinary God find power greater than themselves. History is filled with persons who were unlikely candidates for success. The bible especially emphasizes this. True to His Word, God doesn’t just call those equipped to be successful; He God equips those He calls. He wants us to be victors over trials, overcomers, freed from the bonds that otherwise would enslave us.

 

But we are like sheep with a strong tendency to stray from the fold, each of us to their own way. We easily get lost and put ourselves into dangerous fields by our own wrong thinking and self-seeking behaviors.

 

I know two things:

1. There is a God.

2. I’m not him.

 

We start to discover the equipping power that God wants to give us by acknowledging that it is God who made us, not we ourselves. When we acknowledge that we are His sheep and belong in His pasture, we don’t rely on our own distraught ways.  All throughout scripture we are reminded, “Remember I am the Lord your God.” (It is He who has made us and not we ourselves.)  When we remember our true identity, a child of God, one of his beloved sheep, we’ll be glad to stay under His protective watch.

 

In all your daily activities, your plans, your fears, and your ambitions, know that the Lord is God. It is He that made us and not we ourselves.

 

Jesus loves me this I know

 

 

 

Jesus loves me this I know.

 

I know this isn’t technically a verse from the bible but it is the message of the bible. Jesus loves you!

 

Perhaps the text behind the famous Sunday School song comes from John 15:9. Jesus, while visiting with His beloved disciples said to them, “As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Now remain in my love.” He feels the same way about the ones who love Him today.

 

Jesus loves you, as much as His Father God loves Him!  Most of us have heard it from the time we walked. Perhaps we don’t think about it much or maybe have even discarded the thought along with other childhood truths we’ve tossed aside.  Maybe we feel unlovable or unable to love as we are called to do.  How do you love God or others when you don’t feel loved? Any real and honest Christian will admit that when life beats them up they feel:

 

Unloved
Defeated
Wracked with pain
Broken
Lost
Weak
Alone
Sad
Ashamed
Depressed
Surrounded by darkness
Without hope
Anguished
Exiled
Exhausted.

 

Even as we acknowledge that Jesus paid the supreme price for us, we easily forget how much He loves us even when we don’t feel it. But even despair cannot keep us from His love. In fact, God tells us that nothing can separate us from his love, even though we sometimes feel God has abandoned us.

 

When we call on Him from the depths of our suffering, something stirs in us. Actually, someOne stirs in us. Jesus in us, rises from the ashes of our pain and sorrow with strength we thought had left us long ago. Of course, we knew He was there all along. We’ve been taught that since we first asked Him to be our Lord. But we never experience the reality of His presence so much as when our own being is so subdued. Only when we can’t stand on our own legs can we fully rest in His loving arms.

 

The truth is, when we are honest about our brokenness, we come to the most profound statement in the world, one that has confounded scholars for centuries:

 

Jesus loves me.

 

Sometimes the Sunday school songs ARE the simple truth we need to hear.

 

Jesus loves you.

 

What are you going to do with that?

 

 

I will praise you for I am fearfully and wonderfully made

 

 

I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made.
Psalm 139:14

 

 

If you’ve been trying to ‘walk the talk’ you know how easy it is to become discouraged. We quickly beat ourselves up over the little progress we make toward our goals, and the mistakes we make along the way. We might be tempted to give up and say, “It’s no use. I’ll never become better.” Like Paul, we keep doing the things we shouldn’t and don’t do the things we should. Welcome to living in your own power.

 

But behind this pessimistic view of ourselves is a backdrop of how we are actually wonderfully made. Our bodies are marvels of creation. I mean, which of you tell your heart to beat, your lungs to breathe, or your kidneys to clean your blood? Even though you may think you cannot learn, your brain is constantly absorbing and processing new information, teaching you how to adapt to your environment. (Have you ever lived next to a railway or fire station and soon discover that you have tuned out the loud sounds?) Who taught you to handle both heavy and delicate objects with the same hand? Who taught your digestive track to handle all the junk food you put into it and keep your body functioning? Despite what YOU see in the mirror, you are fearfully and wonderfully made.

 

Beyond a wonderfully created body, you’ve been given a spirit that knows what it wants and yearns to achieve it. Even though our will chooses sometimes to believe lies, we have inside of us this still small voice that speaks truth. We have a natural yearning to be close to God, even though we try to feed that need with oh so many other things.  You have the ability to learn from mistakes, to choose goodness, to forgive, to perceive and enjoy true beauty. There is no law or military force that can take away from you your decision to be at peace, to pray, to be content, to trust in God, or to praise Him. You are fearfully and wonderfully made!

 

Psalm 100:3 reminds us that it is God who made us so wonderful. No matter what the self-books say, we are not self-made. So it naturally follows that we should:

 

In all your ways acknowledge the Lord and the Lord will direct your path. Proverbs 3-6

 

In everything give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you. 1 Thessalonians 5:18

 

Look in a different mirror today and see the person made by the Creator of the Universe who knows the stars by name and holds the oceans in His hand. It is this same awesome God who wonderfully made you and chooses to love you, even when you mess up. You’re not perfect. But you are wonderfully made by a loving God. Tell Him “I will praise you.”

 

 

Have Faith

 

 

Have faith in God.  Mark 11:22

 

He alone is my rock and my salvation. Psalm 62:2

 

Faith. It’s what you trust, believe in, put your full confidence in, and your hope. But it’s not enough to say to someone, “Have faith,” as if it were a ‘good luck’ wish.  Faith can be misplaced in a lot of things. We could have faith in cramming for a test, but it is an unlikely strategy for success. We can put our faith in healthy living but it alone does not prevent cancer.  We can put our faith in fetishes, statues, and icons, but with what tongues would they speak to us? We can put faith in karma, that what goes around also comes around. That reminds me of the man and wife and went to heaven. Standing before the Pearly Gates she says to him, “George, whatever you do, don’t insist on getting everything you deserve!”

 

But wait. Jesus said that if we had even a tiny amount of faith we could move mountains. Because of the centurion’s faith a child was healed. By faith a blind man’s sight was restored. By faith we are saved, not by works. There is a difference between putting our faith in people, things, or empty ‘religions’ and putting our faith in God. Jesus said, “Have faith in God.”

 

Doesn’t having faith in God mean you get what you want, like that verse that says He will give you the desires of your heart? Can’t we just gather 2 or 3 people together, add “in the name of Jesus” at the end of our prayer with confidence we will get exactly what we asked for?  Not quite. Even a child learns that saying ‘please and thank you’ are not always the ‘magic’ words.

 

Having faith in God means having confidence in who He is, that He will always be true to His character. It means trusting Him completely. (It’s not saying, “God I trust you, but in case things don’t work out the way I like, I’m keeping my back-up plan.”) It means agreeing with the psalmist who wrote, “(God) alone is my rock and my salvation.” In the movie The Mummy, the weasel-like character Beni tries to placate the resurrected Egyptian Imhotep with all kinds of talismans, hoping one might work. It’s like the actress who described her faith as, “A bit from Christianity, a little from Buddhism, and some New Age thinking,” as if faith works like a buffet line at the local restaurant.   We scoff at such foolishness but I wonder, don’t we often put the ‘gods’ of wealth, work, family, and our natural abilities to succeed above the One and only true God?

 

By faith in God we understand, persevere, overcome, and rejoice. By faith all things are possible, not easy, but possible. Have faith in God. Even a small faith, when nurtured grows to maturity.

 

“‘If you can’?” said Jesus. “Everything is possible for one who believes.” Mark 9:23

 

 

God is love

 

God is love. 1 John 4:8

 

Love is not God’s only attribute. He is also holy, just, righteous, all-powerful, wise, and everlasting. But one attribute of God that speaks clearly to us over the ages of time is that our unchanging and timeless God is love.

 

Love is not just what God does; love is who God IS.

 

The best known verse in the bible begins, “For God so loved the world, He gave…” Love is inherently forgiving and for giving. “Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres. Love never fails.” (1 Corinthians 13) This is the picture of how God loves you and me.

 

Is God love in the middle of your deepest sorrows? Our darkest moments certainly test our faith. What comes out when life squeezes us reveals what is truly inside us. There is no room for pious religion when you are squeezed. In those moments God wants us to be real about our brokenness, our sorrow, and our disappointment. He also wants us to know this truth: None of this has any authority or power over His presence in us. Though my struggles again and again toss me to the ground like a ragamuffin doll, though I feel crushed under their weight, they are no match for Jesus in me who loves me, no matter how I feel.

 

How big is your God? How we view God does not change who He is, but it does change how we perceive our circumstances. Look at the heroes of God, how they are honest about their struggles with life and with God.

 

Rich Mullins was a short-lived Christian musician who gave us such inspiring songs like, “Sing Your Praise to The Lord,” “(Our God Is An)Awesome God,” and “Hold Me Jesus.” Yet he struggled greatly. I like how one writer described him: “A lover of God and a rebel in the church, Rich refused to let his struggles and his own darkness tear him away from a God he was determined to love.” (Or from a God determined to love him!) “Rich desired most of all to live a life of honest and reckless faith.”

 

The truth is God loves you, regardless of how you feel or what circumstances beset you. I hope when the darkness surrounds you that you will be able to sing, “Hold me Jesus – be my prince of peace.” Experience the light of His love as you say to God, “And still I will love you.”

 

“I would rather live on the verge of falling and let my security be in the all-sufficiency of the grace of God.”
– Rich Mullins

 

 

Facing Fear

 

 

Fear not, for I am with you. Isaiah 41:0 (ESV)

 

Everyone is afraid of something.

 

As a child I was afraid of the dark, convinced there was a monster under my bed and another in my closet. I was afraid of heights then…and even a bit now. I know it is irrational, but the feeling of fear sometimes overtakes my rational thinking processes and I have to fight it to get over it. You too?

 

What are you afraid of? They say the most common fears include public speaking, rejection, failure, pain and death. The list of our fears is probably a very long one if we are honest with ourselves.  You probably know some of your own fears. God knows all your fears, including the ones you haven’t admitted yet. He knows that fear is a creepy crawly thing that invades your daily life, sometimes paralyzing you in its hypnotic trance. He speaks a lot about this in His Word, and gives us reason to face our fears with confidence. Read these truths slowly out loud. Maybe you’ll want to write some of them down and repeat them later. Memorizing God’s Word is a mighty weapon against fear.

 

  • Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me. (Psalm 23:4)
  • For I am the Lord, your God, who takes hold of your right hand and says to you, Do not fear; I will help you. (Isaiah 41:13)
  • Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid or terrified because of them, for the Lord your God goes with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you. (Deuteronomy 31:6)
  • For God gave us not a spirit of fearfulness; but of power and love and discipline. (2 Timothy 1:7)
  • The Lord is my light and my salvation–whom shall I fear? The Lord is the stronghold of my life–of whom shall I be afraid? (Psalm 27:1)
  • So we say with confidence, “The Lord is my helper; I will not be afraid. What can Man do to me?” (Hebrews 13:6)
  • Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid. (John 14:27)
  • Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God; I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous right hand. Isaiah 41:0 (ESV)

 

We can face our fears with the confidence that He who is beside us and in us is greater than all our fears! Fix your eyes on Jesus, the perfecter of your faith. Abide in the Spirit He has given you, the Spirit of power, love and a sound mind.

 

For God has not given us a spirit of fear and timidity but of power, love, and self-discipline. 2 Timothy 1:7

 

 

Every good and perfect gift

 

 

 

Every good and perfect gift is from above. James 1:17

 

Do you like to receive gifts? According to Gary Chapman and Ross Campbell, authors of The 5 Love Languages,  receiving gifts is one of the ways some people best express and receive love.

 

What comes to mind when you think of “the best gifts ever?” For some the answer might be jewelry. For others technological gadgets, new tools. It has been said that “the best things in life are free.” If you agree you might think of a quiet walk in the park, watching a beautiful sunset, spending time with someone you love, or watching a child in a moment of discovery.

 

Certainly, forgiveness and life itself would be included in your list of ‘best’ gifts. But how do we achieve these? Your world view will lead you to one of two conclusions: “best gifts” either result from our own efforts and deeds or they come as a gift of love from God. Sometimes we receive these gifts and sometimes it seems we are oblivious to them.

 

There is a fable of a man who died and went to heaven. Upon arrival he was given a welcome tour where he was shown many great mansions and wonders. Coming to one building with no windows, he asked to go in but was encouraged and his guide to not pay any attention to it. The man insisted on seeing it and once inside he discovered a huge trove of beautifully wrapped presents. Looking closer he saw that each one had a tag with his name on it. Asking why they were here, the man was told, “These are the blessings you were freely given in life, but never received; they are gifts you never opened and so never enjoyed.”

 

God describes His very best gifts in the love letter He wrote to us, the Bible. When we receive and open these we discover forgiveness, eternal life, love, peace, joy, and hope. We receive undeserved grace and mercy, compassion. We are filled with strength, wisdom, and courage. When we enjoy His gifts we are embodied with goodness, faith, perseverance, contentment, and the character of the living God. We don’t earn these by our own doing. They are free gifts from a loving God who knows the true desires of our heart and longs to graciously give them to us.

 

It’s true. The best things in life are free: good and perfect gifts from our Heavenly Father – love, life, laughter, friendship, forgiveness, freedom, and so much more. Receive and open the gifts He freely offers you today and every day. Live thankfully and share them with others and discover yet another great gift, the joy of living.

 

Every good and perfect gift is from above.  James 1:17

 

 

Deliver us from evil

 

 

 

Deliver us from evil.  Matthew 6:13

 

 

What comes to your mind when I say, “Prayer?” Perhaps you think about all the things you want God to do in your life. Or maybe you think about humbling yourself before Him and just confessing how much you need Him. Prayer might bring you to ask for God’s blessing and protection for others, those you know and some you’ve never met. Prayer might lead you to thank God for who He is and for all He has done.

 

In the middle of what we call ‘The Sermon On The Mount’, Jesus speaks to his followers about living a humble life and of giving to the needy. And then, without any transition, He gives us an example of how to pray, a model we refer to as ‘The Lord’s Prayer.’  In this, He teaches us to acknowledge and worship God, to seek Gods kingdom here on earth, and to ask for our basic needs, including forgiveness, and then concludes with our great need. What is this great need of ours? Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. (Some scripts say, ‘the evil one.’)

 

I suspect most of us think we have so very many needs. We need to pay our bills, to be healthy, to love and to be loved by others. We need our children to behave and to believe. Our list of needs seems endless. But perhaps one of our greatest needs is to keep from the ways of temptation and to be delivered from evil…not just in terms of our eternal destination, but also in our daily life.  I wonder what would happen if each day we concluded our prayers with this sincere request:

 

God deliver me from evil. Help me to set boundaries around where I go and where I do not go, boundaries in my thinking, in what I choose to look at, and in the words I say. Deliver me from the evil of believing lies and telling them, and from the evil of being both too lazy and too busy to see You and those You love as the mainstay of my day. Deliver me from evil that leads me into the temptation of living for myself, of ‘getting ahead,’ of seeking my pleasure at the indifference of the needs of others, the very thing that prompted you to teach us how to pray! Deliver me from the evil of neglecting the gifts you give to me, including the gift of today. Deliver me from the evil of fearing darkness more than delighting in Your light.

 

Lord, deliver me from evil, for Yours IS the kingdom, the power, and the glory, forever! Amen!

 

“And do not lead us into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For Yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen.”  Matthew 6:13

 

 

Confess – Create – Cast

 

Confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be healed. The prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective.  James 5:16

 

Create in me a pure heart O God and renew a steadfast spirit within me. Psalm 51:10

 

Cast your cares on the LORD and he will sustain you; he will never let the righteous be shaken. Psalm 55:22

 

Confess sins: Two words that seem rather old-fashioned in today’s self-help and self-sufficient world. But these two words should be part of our daily vocabulary. Why? Because they are the secret to right living (righteousness). We cannot live in harmony with each other or with God unless we are reconciled with them. What kind of prayers are powerful and effective? The ones of a righteous person. Righteousness is not being ‘holier-than-thou.’  Righteous means being humble (reconciled) before God and others.

 

Righteousness involves asking God for a pure heart and a steadfast (right) spirit to live in us. It means being loyal, faithful, committed, dependable, trustworthy.  These are the qualities you seek in your closest friends; they are also the same qualities we need to demonstrate in order for us to be friends. It takes more than singing a song to be friends of God. We need to act like a real friend, one with a steadfast heart.

 

When we confess our sins and continually ask God for a clean heart, we finally find the capacity to truly cast our cares upon the Lord. Oh, we try to cast them on Him even when we remain in our sin. But it is a clean heart, a right conscience that allows us to really let them go.  When we hold onto our sins and our anxieties we are never fully at peace. We say ‘Time heals all wounds’ and ‘this too shall pass.’  But time alone is a lousy healer and ‘this too’ sometimes doesn’t pass, at least in this lifetime. Time allows a wound to scar. Forgiveness allows it to be fully healed.

 

Our health can be shaken, our finances decimated. Relationships are sometimes severed and we can be hard pressed in so very many ways. But God promises “He will never let the righteous be shaken.” How can you have this unshakable life? God says:

  • Confess your sins to each other and to God.
  • Ask God to create in you a pure heart.
  • Cast your cares on God and let HIM sustain you.

 

Enjoy the unshakable peace of God today.

 

 

Be kind – Be a peacemaker

 

 

Be kind one to another. Ephesians 4:32

 

Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called the sons of God. Matthew 5:9

 

Such a simple concept: be kind. It’s one of the first lessons we learned as children. But even as adults we need reminders to “play nice in the sandbox.” I remember one motivational speaker talking about communication, giving the example of a ‘discussion’ he had recently with his wife. He shared with us, “And then I had this brilliant thought: ‘Say something sarcastic!'” It doesn’t take much imagination to understand how the rest of that conversation went, does it? And yet, it is so easy to say an unkind thing. How many times in the busyness of our own agenda do we say a careless thing that is hurtful to others? It’s so easy to do.

 

You know what else is easy? To say a kind word, to encourage someone else. It takes so little time to actually greet the person in the checkout lane, to compliment the worker in the aisle who is attending to their job, to let someone with fewer items (or the mom with three kids in tow!) go ahead of you in line, or to thank someone for helping you. This same treatment goes for strangers we meet throughout the day, and of course our family. I revel in hearing my daughter praise her children often. I suspect that too many people go through life thirsting to be acknowledged as a person of value and to hear an encouraging word. You may find it difficult to praise someone because they are so often acting in a contrary way. But take your time and watch for an opportunity to praise them, thank them, or just recognize them as a person of worth.

 

In the same manner, we don’t have to disagree with everyone, even if we are sure we are right. We really don’t have to correct everyone in our path about every little thing. Even if you believe you are right, consider the value of saying, “Perhaps you’re right,” or “Thanks for sharing your perspective.” God calls us to be peacemakers, to live in an understanding way with each other. Ultimately, this means we are to live in a manner that encourages others to become reconciled with God. But it starts by us creating relationships with others that reconcile us to one another.

 

“Be kind” might seem too simple a strategy for successful living. But consider this: Maybe your agenda isn’t what’s so important today. Maybe God’s primary agenda for you today is for you to be a peacemaker. Who knows – a kind word from you may be the vital drop of water needed to sustain and encourage someone who is dying on the vine, who may look fine on the outside, but inside is ready to call it quits. Be kind to each other. Bring peace to the world in the way you interact with those around you.