Our Heart Versus Our Awesome God! God’s Hammer Will Soften Our Heart. Jeremiah 23:29

Jeremiah 23:28-29 The Message

28-29 “You prophets who do nothing but dream—
    go ahead and tell your silly dreams.
But you prophets who have a message from me—
    tell it truly and faithfully.
What does straw have in common with wheat?
    Nothing else is like God’s Decree.
Isn’t my Message like fire?” God’s Decree.
    “Isn’t it like a sledgehammer busting a rock?

The Word of God for the Children of God.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

In this ancient text, the Prophet Jeremiah uses two startling images to describe the Word of God.

It is like a fire and it is like a sledge hammer.

Both are images of power -almost of danger.

The point is that this Word of God, the Message of God is not to be treated lightly, or indifferently, but handled with extreme care.

In the context Jeremiah is preaching against false prophets.

And the warning in v28 is serious news for all preachers: “Let the one who has my word speak it faithfully.

The analogy used here by Jeremiah of God’s Word being “like a hammer which shatters a rock” likely has the sense of the power of God’s Word in shattering and breaking up the hardness of our hearts.

John Gill, a Puritan writer commented on this passage,

“to which the heart of man may be compared, being hardened by sin, confirmed in it; destitute of spiritual life; stupid and senseless; stubborn and inflexible; on which no impressions are made, and is impenitent and inflexible; see (Zechariah 7:12); now the word of the Lord, in the hand of the Spirit, is a means of breaking such hard hearts.”

In a word, God’s Word breaks the rock of “SELF” into pieces, so God can shape, break apart, break down and then work His purposes out in our life, making it possible for us to be sculpted into usefulness for His own kingdom purposes.

I am sure we have all dealt with a hard heart and so need the hammer of God’s Word to do a major softening work in breaking down the hardness of our heart.

God’s Hammer Softens Our Hearts

Jeremiah 23:28-29 Amplified Bible

28 The prophet who has a dream may tell his dream; but he who has My word, let him speak My word faithfully. What has straw in common with wheat [for nourishment]?” says the Lord. 29 “Is not My word like fire [that consumes all that cannot endure the test]?” says the Lord, “and like a hammer that breaks the [most stubborn] rock [in pieces]?

Have you heard of God’s indestructible hammer as described in Jeremiah 23:29?

If not, you may never have thought or been taught or preached to of God’s Word being like a powerful hammer.

The Old Testament often describes how at times, the Israelites hearts had hardened towards God. 

Zechariah 7:12 explains, “They made their hearts as hard as flint and would not listen to the law or to the words that the Lord Almighty had sent by His Spirit through the earlier prophets. So the Lord Almighty was very angry.”

To have an adamant or hard heart describes a person who simply refuses to be persuaded, who is steadfast and unmovable or unshakeable in their thinking.

In Scripture, it refers to the spiritual condition of a person who is rebellious towards God’s law and His words.

By describing their heart condition as hard as flint, the hardest of stones and used to cut other rocks, meant their hearts were hardened to the point where they were too hard to receive God’s law, to be carved or to receive His words.

Yet God’s hammer, His Word, is able to judge the hardest of heart. It’s able to infiltrate into the deepest part of man’s heart and bring to light true motives, thoughts, and attitudes.

Can we imagine such a hammer, His hammer is able to break the unbreakable kind of rock, to utterly shatter man’s stubbornness and arrogance against God.

As Hebrews 4:12 describes, “For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart.”

R.C. Sproul writes, “God’s hammer smashes not just the icons of the world around us; it also smashes the idols of my heart. It is hard, heavy, even painful, precisely because of the love of the One who wields it. He has promised to forgive me for my hard heart but has also promised to soften it.”

Ezekiel 36:26 reveals God’s desire towards men, “I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you; I will remove from you your heart of stone and you a heart of flesh.”

Like a physical hammer shatters when hard swung, God’s hammer demolishes spiritual strongholds as 2 Corinthians 10:4 explains “The weapons we fight with are not the weapons of the world. On the contrary, they have divine power to demolish strongholds.”

With God’s hammer, as 2 Corinthians 10:5 describes, “We demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.”

God’s Word in Our Heart Comes Alive in Our Lives

There is power in the Word of God.

It is empowered with His living energy.

In the pages of Scripture, we read the story of life… life as God created it… life as God sustains it… life as God will forever reign over it.

All Scripture is inspired by God (2 Timothy 3:16)

Its origin is divine… originating in the mind of the all-wise and omniscient One.

It is Truth in its purest form.

The Holy Spirit gave God’s true and holy words to the authors of Scripture.

God’s Word has been cherished by believers throughout history.

We, too, are to treasure it as the very words of God for us personally.

By it we learn to grow in His love and grace.

“’Is not My word like fire?’ says the Lord, ‘And like a hammer that breaks the rock in pieces?’” – Jeremiah 23:29

How is God’s Word like fire?

Fire burns away the brush, the chaff in our lives.

All wrong thinking, beliefs, ideas, motives are set ablaze as we read God’s Word.

False doctrine is reduced to ashes as as we are correctly taught the truth, as we learn how to live the Truth (1 Corinthians 3:13).

Fire melts away the dross, the sin in our lives (Zechariah 13:9). 

When silver is melted and the impurities burned away, it gleams and reflects light.

As we become more pure, more Christlike by applying God’s Word to our lives, we better reflect our Savior.

Fire gives light to open our eyes to our own unrighteousness (Romans 3:23). 

We see how desperately we need a Savior.

God’s Word shows us how we are to live.

It enlightens our spiritual path (Psalm 119:105). 

Through it, God reveals His will for our lives.

Fire radiates the warmth of God’s love for us.

In God’s Word we discover His undying love and faithfulness.

In its richness, we find His comfort and encouragement (Zephaniah 3:17).

Our faith is strengthened.

Fire sets a flame in our hearts for God.

Through His Word our spiritual zeal is ignited (Jeremiah 20:9). 

We desire to share all that God has done for us. We long to tell the Good News of salvation in Christ to the lost.

How is God’s Word like a hammer?

A hammer breaks up the hardened, unhumble heart… a heart hardened by sin.

The Truth of God’s Word reveals our need for repentance.

Our hearts of stone crumble in the presence of our Redeemer (Ezekiel 36:26).

A hammer shatters all pride and stubbornness.

In God’s Word, we see how far we fall short of His holiness and perfection.

We read of our humble, loving Savior who was bruised and broken for us.

With broken and contrite hearts (Psalm 51:17), we seek to emulate Him.

A hammer smashes the worldliness in our lives.

God’s Word shows us how kingdom values contrast with worldly values.

It crushes our earthly, temporal desires.

We come to live life with God’s perspective… storing up heavenly, eternal treasures (Matthew 6:20).

A hammer destroys the evil in our lives.

God’s Word is the sword of the Spirit we use to resist the evil one (Ephesians 6:17). 

The power of His Word demolishes the strongholds of the enemy (2 Corinthians 10:4).

Nothing can stand against His mighty Word.

“My word that comes from My mouth will not return to Me empty, but it will accomplish what I please and will prosper in what I send it to do.” – Isaiah 55:11

God reveals Himself to us through His Word.

His revelations give our finite minds a glimpse into all that is infinite… holy… eternal – we gain not just head knowledge but Spirit wisdom.

Anyone can read the Bible and gain information.

Yet only the divine inspiration and revelation of the Holy Spirit can take this information and cause transformation in our lives.

We begin to transform into the likeness of Christ from the inside out.

“Blessed are those who hear the word of God and follow it.” – Luke 11:28

In His Word, God not only gives us the guidelines for a life in His favor, protection and blessing.

He also promises to come alongside us personally through His Spirit, giving us the power and courage to live out His guidelines in our daily walk.

For when God’s mighty Word lives in our hearts, it comes alive in our lives.

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Living Word, Lord of wisdom, I sometimes, well, actually most times, I am finding understanding the Bible to be difficult. I know you want me to apply your word to my life. I thank you for giving me your word so I can grow in my relationship with you. Holy Spirit, Help me grasp what you want me to know as I read your revealed word. Open my eyes to see the wonderful truths in your instructions. Be my teacher, so I can learn to apply them, live and obey your word. Thank you for your wise advice. Amen.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

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Our Kingdom Presence: Cultivating a Honeycomb of Humble and Gracious, Encouraging Words. Proverbs 16:24 

Proverbs 16:24 English Standard Version

24 Gracious words are like a honeycomb,
    sweetness to the soul and health to the body.

The Word of God for the Children of God.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

It’s true.

People are drawn to those who speak to them and about them kindly.

Speaking to others in a kind manner is a characteristic that we don’t come in contact with today like we use to.

IT TAKES VERY LITTLE COURAGE TO CLICK SEND.

In the past when anyone wanted to speak poorly about someone, they did it behind their back (still a terrible thing to do) but today, in this age of the smart phone and the internet, people get to “hide behind” their computer screens and phones and we get a whole lot more wild, bold with how we respond to others.

You don’t even have to share your name.

You can send something “anonymously” and hide your computers address.

If one was inclined, they can just be blatantly mean and remain anonymous.

SWEETNESS TO THE SOUL

I think today, more than ever before, it’s incredibly refreshing to hear kind and gracious words – such rare words have a huge impact on our mind and our body.

Like the verse says in Proverbs 16:24

Proverbs 16:24 King James Version

2Pleasant words are as an honeycomb, sweet to the soul, and health to the bones.

I know how much my soul grieves, I know that I have felt sick to my stomach for days when someone has been downright mean toward me and I have felt a renewed sense of joy and energy when I hear true encouragement and praise.

Words affect our entire being. And they can remain a part of our souls makeup for the rest of our lives. I can remember as a child things I was told, both good and bad, and even today I really have to battle all the lies to embrace the truth.

I WANT TO BE REMEMBERED AS KIND AND LOVING

As one who is getting more mature in their years, if I leave one Kingdom legacy, I believe I would want it to be that I left others feeling good about themselves.

Not because I lied to to be politically correct, to over inflate their egos, to butter them up or with man’s wisdom made things up to baby them into feeling good.

But because I truly found the good in someone and left them feeling like I saw that piece of them and treated them in a way that they felt loved and respected.

Even when I have to share something negative, I want to turn to God, I want to strive to do it in a way that is gracious and kind – I want to turn them onto God.

There really are ways to give constructive criticism, to not be so blunt and so disrespectful, both in our every day lives and our social media lives. There are real people on the other side of that screen, who feel hurt, pain, joy, and love.

CHOOSE TO SPEAK LIFE

We each have the power to speak life and/or death into those around us.

We each can make a person feel either incredibly small or incredibly loved.

We need to be more careful with our words.

With our friends, with strangers, and for sure with our families- the ones who sometimes get the brunt of our frustrations.

So, in these days of 2024, stand out from the crowd – please have the courage to be kind – have some courage to speak life into those we come into contact with.

CULTIVATING A HONEYCOMB OF GRACIOUS WORDS

Proverbs 16:24 Amplified Bible

24 
Pleasant words are like a honeycomb,
Sweet and
 delightful to the soul and healing to the body.

What words are you putting out into the world?

Are we choosing our words thoughtfully, are we taking every opportunity to be Kingdom builders, Kingdom edifiers, speaking to encourage and uplift others?

our words “adding honey” sweetening the lives of those who hear, read them?

Or, are we following the Social Media trend to be anonymous, speak your mind, speak truth to set someone straight, or put another in his or her rightful place?

Maybe you try to be encouraging but others just push your buttons to the point where you feel like you have to say something, anything or you’ll simply burst!

It’s so easy in heated moments of conflict to get caught up in the latest political, social, fashion, or celebrity debate, say things you’ll wish later you hadn’t said.

So if you and/or I have slipped up in our words a few times, we are not alone.

James 3:2 describes how, “We all stumble in many ways. Anyone who is never at fault in what they say is perfect, able to keep their whole body in check.”

Still, Scripture reminds that,

“Those who consider themselves religious and yet do not keep a tight rein on their tongues deceive themselves, and their religion is worthless” (James 1:26).

Maybe we have been surprised by things we have heard or have read by other Christians and perhaps even our own words at times have caught us off guard?

Proverbs 13:3 gives incentive for choosing to be careful with your words, describing the difference it can make in your life to do so, stating,

“Those who guard their lips preserve their lives, but those who speak rashly will come to ruin.”

If you struggle with speaking careless words, ask God to, “Set a guard over my mouth, Lord; keep watch over the door of my lips” (Psalm 141:3).

As well, Psalm 34:13 urges to

“Keep your tongue from evil and your lips from telling lies.”

When you do, Proverbs 12:14 encourages that from the fruit of your lips you will be filled with good things.

Proverbs 12:14Easy-to-Read Version

14 People get good things for the words they say, and they are rewarded for the work they do.

Likewise, Proverbs 16:23 describes how, “The hearts of the wise make their mouths prudent, and their lips promote instruction.”

Speak truth, Speak of God, Speak Jesus, Speak Holy Spirit, ask God to direct your speech so that your words are helping to build up the faith of those around you.

As Colossians 3:16 urges, “Let the message of Christ dwell among you richly as you teach and admonish one another with all wisdom through psalms, hymns, and songs from the Spirit, singing to God with gratitude in your hearts.”

What is the object lesson of Proverbs 16 24?

As Proverbs 16:24 tells us, pleasant words are like a honeycomb, bringing sweetness to the soul and health to the bones.

We want to be known for the fruit of our gentleness and for the fruit of our compassion and be using our words to uplift and encourage those around us.

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Psalm 34:1-10 The Message

34 I bless God every chance I get;
my lungs expand with his praise.

I live and breathe God;
if things aren’t going well, hear this and be happy:

Join me in spreading the news;
together let’s get the word out.

God met me more than halfway,
he freed me from my anxious fears.

Look at him; give him your warmest smile.
Never hide your feelings from him.

When I was desperate, I called out,
and God got me out of a tight spot.

God’s angel sets up a circle
of protection around us while we pray.

Open your mouth and taste, open your eyes and see—
    how good God is.
Blessed are you who run to him.

Worship God if you want the best;
worship opens doors to all his goodness.

10 Young lions on the prowl get hungry,
but God-seekers are full of God.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

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As We Have Accepted Christ Into Our Lives: Freedom From Worldly Rules. Colossians 2:6-7

Colossians 2:6-7 New Living Translation

Freedom from Rules and New Life in Christ

And now, just as you accepted Christ Jesus as your Lord, you must continue to follow him. Let your roots grow down into him, and let your lives be built on him. Then your faith will grow strong in the truth you were taught, and you will overflow with thankfulness.

The Word of God for the Children of God.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

Parents quickly understand the necessity of rules in order to keep children safe.

Six years ago, when I ventured into pre-school teaching for four and five year old’s, I learned for toddlers, the rules are very simple but often life or death!

Rules like listen to your mom and dad, listen to your teachers, sit up straight, don’t run out into the street; don’t touch a hot stove; don’t run into a burning campfire; don’t jump into the water without a life jacket before you can swim …don’t get lost.

When they reach school age, the rules include manners- respecting their teachers and other adults in their lives; and honesty, reading, and studying hard for tests instead of their peering over onto another classmate’s paper.

As they grow older, and they observe people, the rules become a more tangled mess of life, morality we, ourselves, struggle alongside our kin to maintain.

At any age, rules more often allow us to frame how we become the best version of ourselves rather than always inhibiting us from experiencing life to the full. 

A rule, as a noun, is defined as a principle or regulation governing conduct, an action, procedure, arrangement, etc.

As a verb, to rule means to control or direct; to exercise domination power, to have authority, or influence over; to govern.

I found it interesting that the heading before today’s verses, in the NLT translation of the Bible, reads: Freedom from Rules and New Life in Christ.” 

Jesus didn’t come to abolish the necessary growth we obtain through following rules; He came so we would have freedom, “to be free indeed,” to benefit from complete obedience, though we cannot obtain perfection this side of heaven.

Christ Jesus makes up for our lack.

Freedom From Rules?

Matthew 5:17-18 The Message

Completing God’s Law

17-18 “Don’t suppose for a minute that I have come to demolish the Scriptures—either God’s Law or the Prophets. I’m not here to demolish but to complete. I am going to put it all together, pull it all together in a vast panorama. God’s Law is more real and lasting than the stars in the sky and the ground at your feet. Long after stars burn out and earth wears out, God’s Law will be alive and working.

Two spiritual poisons are deadly to the soul: legalism and lawlessness.

Legalism implies that God loves and accepts us because of our performance.

We ingest this toxin when we look favorably at our own brief history of good behavior and think and then (gasp) come to believe that’s why God loves us.

Lawlessness says we are free to live however we wish because God’s love is not based on our good works.

We ingest this toxin anytime we brush aside the importance of obedience to God or we self reason and self rationalize then (gasp) minimize some sin in our life.

Jesus warns against both.

To those who insist that God’s law is unimportant, Jesus says he has come to obey God’s law perfectly.

Obedience to God matters so absolutely much that Jesus had to keep God’s commandments perfectly (fulfilling the law) so that we might have salvation.

At the same time, also Jesus warns that if we try to gain God’s approval based on our moral and ethical performance, our goodness must then surpass that of the Pharisees and teachers of the law – “be the wisest above everyone’s eyes.”

They were high and mighty religious authorities and experts famous for their “obedience to the law” but still so far from perfect, as Jesus often pointed out.

The Gospel is that although we cannot obey God’s law, Jesus fulfilled it for us.

Then he was punished for our sake as a law-breaker so that God might view us as law-keepers!

As the gospel truly lives in us, may we live a life of obedience to God that flows from deep gratitude to Jesus, who frees us from both legalism and lawlessness.

Freedom from rules, through Christ, releases the pressure of a burden we can never hope live up to. Jesus was the perfect sacrifice, willing to walk out the will of His Father to free us from the burden of our own sin …and lack of obedience.

Though our hearts are often in the right place as we wake each day to follow Jesus, we carry with us a hopeless entanglement of sin that trips into our daily lives and then, prayerfully rolls over into our confession of them in the next.

Grace-filled and unfailing in love for us, God made a way for us to be forgiven and a chance to repent …to change. 

From the Parable of the Sower, we know that seedling planted in the ground slowly makes its way up through the soil and breaks through to see the sun.

Our lives are a continual process of blooming where we are planted.

Paul uses the illustration of our “being rooted in Christ,” the Life Application Bible explains, “Just as plants draw nourishment from the soil through their roots, we draw our life-giving strength from Christ.

Colossians 2:6-7 The Message

From the Shadows to the Substance

6-My counsel for you is simple and straightforward: Just go ahead with what you’ve been given. You received Christ Jesus, the Master; now live him. You’re deeply rooted in him. You’re well constructed upon him. You know your way around the faith. Now do what you’ve been taught. School’s out; quit studying the subject and start living it! And let your living spill over into thanksgiving.

The more we raise up, draw our strength from him, the less we will be fooled or entangled by those who falsely claim to have life’s answers apart from Christ.”

Our Life Now On God’s Terms, New Life In Christ.

Romans 8:1-2 The Message

The Solution Is Life on God’s Terms

1-2 With the arrival of Jesus, the Messiah, that fateful dilemma is resolved. Those who enter into Christ’s being-here-for-us no longer have to live under a continuous, low-lying black cloud. A new power is in operation. The Spirit of life in Christ, like a strong wind, has magnificently cleared the air, freeing you from a fated lifetime of brutal tyranny at the hands of sin and death.

Today’s verses from Paul’s letter to the Colossians I pray encourage us to keep raising up, a life straining for the light and to let our roots grow down into Him.

Perennials are those plants that return year after year and spread out each time they come back to life in the Spring.

I like to plant things that tend to grow and spread out without my obvious lack of a green thumb to hindering their life cycle.

What begins as a spacious garden soon overflows with fresh wildflowers.

I love giving nature a space to take over in my yard and plodding out to pick fresh blooms each day as more and more cut through to the light of the sun. 

Our lives are new every day, just as God’s mercy is new every day.

He is faithful to complete His promise of our new life in Christ.

We are a new creation in Him, and it doesn’t happen overnight!

A bulk of the change occurs progressively over time, season after season, and year after year.

“New life in Christ starts and continues when we acknowledge Him as leader over all we are and do,” just as the Life Application Study Bible explains;

“Then we must accept his leadership daily by being rooted, built up, and strengthened in the faith.” 

Intersecting Faith and Life

Ephesians 2:16-22 The Message

16-18 Christ brought us together through his death on the cross. The Cross got us to embrace, and that was the end of the hostility. Christ came and preached peace to you outsiders and peace to us insiders. He treated us as equals, and so made us equals. Through him we both share the same Spirit and have equal access to the Father.

19-22 That’s plain enough, isn’t it? You’re no longer wandering exiles. This kingdom of faith is now your home country. You’re no longer strangers or outsiders. You belong here, with as much right to the name Christian as anyone. God is building a home. He’s using us all—irrespective of how we got here—in what he is building. He used the apostles and prophets for the foundation. Now he’s using you, fitting you in brick by brick, stone by stone, with Christ Jesus as the cornerstone that holds all the parts together. We see it taking shape day after day—a holy temple built by God, all of us built into it, a temple in which God is quite at home.

Today’s verses talk of freedom in Savior Christ overflowing with thankfulness as a result of the truth we are being taught.

Gratitude is a natural by-product of knowing God.

It’s impossible to know Him and not be able to grasp gratitude, even in the worst and hardest of times.

Today’s beautiful verses, written by the apostle Paul, I pray remind us all of the amazing gift of freedom we have as we embrace life within the love of Christ.

If ever we find ourselves feeling burdened by rules, we can be assured the guilt is not rooted in Him!

But freedom is.

We are free to admit our weaknesses, run to Him in our lack, and know without a doubt He sacrifices His perfect life so we could live ours to the full.

He is with us, always.

Let’s release the pressure, follow Jesus, allow our roots to grow down in Him, and our lives be built on Him.

Let’s proclaim freedom, embrace the promise Paul penned: Then our faith will grow strong in the truth we are taught, and we will overflow with thankfulness.

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,  

Let us Pray,

Psalm 16 The Message

16 1-2 Keep me safe, O God,
    I’ve run for dear life to you.
I say to God, “Be my Lord!”
    Without you, nothing makes sense.

And these God-chosen lives all around—
    what splendid friends they make!

Don’t just go shopping for a god.
    Gods are not for sale.
I swear I’ll never treat god-names
    like brand-names.

5-6 My choice is you, God, first and only.
    And now I find I’m your choice!
You set me up with a house and yard.
    And then you made me your heir!

7-8 The wise counsel God gives when I’m awake
    is confirmed by my sleeping heart.
Day and night I’ll stick with God;
    I’ve got a good thing going and I’m not letting go.

9-10 I’m happy from the inside out,
    and from the outside in, I’m firmly formed.
You canceled my ticket to hell—
    that’s not my destination!

11 Now you’ve got my feet on the life path,
    all radiant from the shining of your face.
Ever since you took my hand,
    I’m on the right way.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

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When God Is Doing Something New, and We’re Still Stuck in the Old Stuff. Isaiah 43:18-19

Isaiah 43:16-21 The Message

16-21 This is what God says,
    the God who builds a road right through the ocean,
    who carves a path through pounding waves,
The God who summons horses and chariots and armies—
    they lie down and then can’t get up;
    they’re snuffed out like so many candles:
“Forget about what’s happened;
    don’t keep going over old history.
Be alert, be present. I’m about to do something brand-new.
    It’s bursting out! Don’t you see it?
There it is! I’m making a road through the desert,
    rivers in the badlands.
Wild animals will say ‘Thank you!’
    —the coyotes and the buzzards—
Because I provided water in the desert,
    rivers through the sunbaked earth,
Drinking water for the people I chose,
    the people I made especially for myself,
    a people custom-made to praise me.

The Word of God for the Children of God.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

Sometimes… truthfully, more often than we I believe actually realize, God is wanting to do, reveal, something “new” and yet we’re still stuck in the “old.”

It’s hard at times.

To let go.

It is not so hard at times … refuse to give up any control over what we value, even if what we have valued so highly has pretty much all of lost its shelf life.

Of what’s familiar, and what we know, of what has always worked best for us.

It seems easier to stay “comfortable,” to stay in control, or give the illusion of staying in control, to just keep going with the flow, so not to mess anything up.

But then “new” happens, and it often sends us spiraling, on one big, long loop.

For those adrenaline junkies who 100% love change – “new” is mostly exciting.

For those who don’t like change and 100% resist it- “new” is mostly stressful.

Your home, your family, or workplace if you’re like most, or anyone who thinks and believes far more differently than you is probably a mix of those two traits.

But here’s what I love about God.

Isaiah 55:8-11 The Message

8-11 “I don’t think the way you think.
    The way you work isn’t the way I work.”
        God’s Decree.
“For as the sky soars high above earth,
    so the way I work surpasses the way you work,
    and the way I think is beyond the way you think.
Just as rain and snow descend from the skies
    and don’t go back until they’ve watered the earth,
Doing their work of making things grow and blossom,
    producing seed for farmers and food for the hungry,
So will the words that come out of my mouth
    not come back empty-handed.
They’ll do the work I sent them to do,
    they’ll complete the assignment I gave them.

He always thinks and always works far outside our own finite box of thinking.

He doesn’t always work in the ways that we would have chosen for our “new.”

If we had to have a “new.”

He always sees the big picture.

He always knows what He’s doing.

He always works behind the scenes of life that unfold our every day, in the unexpected places where we can’t always see or understand all the “why’s.”

1 Corinthians 2:9-13The Message

6-10 We, of course, have plenty of wisdom to pass on to you once you get your feet on firm spiritual ground, but it’s not popular wisdom, the fashionable wisdom of high-priced experts that will be out-of-date in a year or so. God’s wisdom is something mysterious that goes deep into the interior of his purposes. You don’t find it lying around on the surface. It’s not the latest message, but more like the oldest—what God determined as the way to bring out his best in us, long before we ever arrived on the scene. The experts of our day haven’t a clue about what this eternal plan is. If they had, they wouldn’t have killed the Master of the God-designed life on a cross. That’s why we have this Scripture text:

No one’s ever seen or heard anything like this,
Never so much as imagined anything quite like it—
What God has arranged for those who love him.

But you’ve seen and heard it because God by his Spirit has brought it all out into the open before you.

10-13 The Spirit, not content to flit around on the surface, dives into the depths of God, and brings out what God planned all along. Who ever knows what you’re thinking and planning except you yourself? The same with God—except that he not only knows what he’s thinking, but he lets us in on it. God offers a full report on the gifts of life and salvation that he is giving us. We don’t have to rely on the world’s guesses and opinions. We didn’t learn this by reading books or going to school; we learned it from God, who taught us person-to-person through Jesus, and we’re passing it on to you in the same firsthand, personal way.

So we can trust…that He has our best in mind.

That He’s got our back.

He’s with us right now.

And He’s secured our future too.

Sometimes our “new” comes out of great blessing, new opportunities.

And sometimes it comes through great pain, huge loss.

People move, life happens, decisions are made, many change jobs, kids grow up, and there are times we might go through some really tough struggles.

We may even start to feel cheated.

Like life is unfair.

But it still breathes this truth: God is not finished with our lives yet.

We are still here.

And on a never ending basis, He has great purpose in all that we walk through, even in every life change and season.

Whether we recognize it or not, we’re rubbing shoulders everyday with people that we needed to meet in our “new,” however hard that new thing might be.

We can rest in His care for us.

He knows.

He sees.

He works in ways we do not always “get,” but there’s a special place of peace in our knowing, in our acknowledgment that we don’t have to try to control it all.

By these ancient yet still relevant words from Isaiah 43:18-19 God says we can let go – of the need to figure it all out, and the striving to make things happen.

We can trust Him.

Our future awaits, and there’s still good around the bend. God has more in store.

Intersecting Faith and Life – The Joy of Forgetting

Isaiah 43:18-19 Easy-to-Read Version

18 So don’t remember what happened in earlier times. Don’t think about what happened a long time ago, 19 because I am doing something new! Now you will grow like a new plant. Surely you know this is true. I will even make a road in the desert, and rivers will flow through that dry land.

Do you like new stuff?

Many of us do.

Part of the excitement for kids as they open presents at Christmas or on their birthday is that they’re getting something new and hopefully more exciting.

Older family members may get excited about new clothing, a new vehicle, or new tools for the workshop, even the fresh smell of new carpet in their home.

Yes, we like new things.

But, and it bears to be repeated that it’s also possible to get stuck in the past.

Some of us may have a nostalgic hope that we can recover the “good old days,” and others of us may be locked face to face with a past we simply can’t ­escape.

Maybe we feel stuck by the circumstances of a broken home, made bad financial choices, stuck on sins we now regret, or of an injustice that has been done to us.

Though Christians do not and should not ­ever ignore the hardcore lessons of their past, Isaiah 43:18-19, faith in Christ always challenges us to look forward.

Our goal is not and should not be exclusively “change for the sake of change,” as if instantly new things by themselves could give us 1% hope and fulfillment.

But these ancient yet always relevant words from Isaiah 43:18-19 reminds us of the only One who brings lasting change: “I am doing a new thing!” God says.

Take a photograph of the old stuff and frame it because we can each find joy in forgetting our past only when our future rests on the change Christ works in us.

Philippians 3:13-14 The Message

Focused on the Goal

12-14 I’m not saying that I have this all together, that I have it made. But I am well on my way, reaching out for Christ, who has so wondrously reached out for me. Friends, don’t get me wrong: By no means do I count myself an expert in all of this, but I’ve got my eye on the goal, where God is beckoning us onward—to Jesus. I’m off and running, and I’m not turning back.

The years are gone, finished, past.

We cannot reclaim them nor can we undo them.

We cannot, should not rest on the great distance those years have brought us.

If and when tomorrow dawns, and we exercise our lungs to breathe, it will be another day, a new opportunity, and the time to show our faith in Jesus as Lord.

It is God’s gift of a new day Let’s journey forward, knowing our God already inhabits the future, promises to provide us refreshment on our journey there.

Because of Christ’s work on the cross, we can experience the joy of forgetting our sinful past (Philippians 3:13-14) pressing on as new people in Jesus Christ.

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Psalm 40 The Message

40 1-3 I waited and waited and waited for God.
    At last he looked; finally he listened.
He lifted me out of the ditch,
    pulled me from deep mud.
He stood me up on a solid rock
    to make sure I wouldn’t slip.
He taught me how to sing the latest God-song,
    a praise-song to our God.
More and more people are seeing this:
    they enter the mystery,
    abandoning themselves to God.

4-5 Blessed are you who give yourselves over to God,
    turn your backs on the world’s “sure thing,”
    ignore what the world worships;
The world’s a huge stockpile
    of God-wonders and God-thoughts.
Nothing and no one
    compares to you!
I start talking about you, telling what I know,
    and quickly run out of words.
Neither numbers nor words
    account for you.

Doing something for you, bringing something to you—
    that’s not what you’re after.
Being religious, acting pious—
    that’s not what you’re asking for.
You’ve opened my ears
    so I can listen.

7-8 So I answered, “I’m coming.
    I read in your letter what you wrote about me,
And I’m coming to the party
    you’re throwing for me.”
That’s when God’s Word entered my life,
    became part of my very being.

9-10 I’ve preached you to the whole congregation,
    I’ve kept back nothing, God—you know that.
I didn’t keep the news of your ways
    a secret, didn’t keep it to myself.
I told it all, how dependable you are, how thorough.
    I didn’t hold back pieces of love and truth
For myself alone. I told it all,
    let the congregation know the whole story.

11-12 Now God, don’t hold out on me,
    don’t hold back your passion.
Your love and truth
    are all that keeps me together.
When troubles ganged up on me,
    a mob of sins past counting,
I was so swamped by guilt
    I couldn’t see my way clear.
More guilt in my heart than hair on my head,
    so heavy the guilt that my heart gave out.

13-15 Soften up, God, and intervene;
    hurry and get me some help,
So those who are trying to kidnap my soul
    will be embarrassed and lose face,
So anyone who gets a kick out of making me miserable
    will be heckled and disgraced,
So those who pray for my ruin
    will be booed and jeered without mercy.

16-17 But all who are hunting for you—
    oh, let them sing and be happy.
Let those who know what you’re all about
    tell the world you’re great and not quitting.
And me? I’m a mess. I’m nothing and have nothing:
    make something of me.
You can do it; you’ve got what it takes—
    but God, don’t put it off.

God of all Creation, God of new beginnings, thank you for a fresh start in Christ. Help us to leave behind our sin and to live joyfully for him. In Jesus’ name we pray. Amen.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

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Into the Word of God: More Truth Than We Can Ever Dare To Imagine. John 21:25

John 21:25 The Message

25 There are so many other things Jesus did. If they were all written down, each of them, one by one, I can’t imagine a world big enough to hold such a library of books.

The Word of God for the Children of God.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

It’s called hyperbole.

That’s the literary device John uses here to express his thoughts about the astonishing signs and wonders of Jesus.

In these closing words from his Gospel narrative, John is using wonder and imagination to say that the sum total of Jesus’ life and teachings and all the amazing things he did were so great the world could barely contain them all.

Hyperbole is a literary tool that helps us express the inexpressible, to say, to try and communicate, express, the depths of what one’s words cannot fully say.

John’s words clue us in to the fact that no human agent can fully capture the divine.

The sum total of who Jesus is and the sum of what he has done cannot ever be adequately transcribed by human hands and truly grasped by human minds.

The sum total of Jesus is infinitely more than what can be expressed in words.

“Oh, for a thousand tongues to sing my great Redeemer’s praise,” says one of the great church’s hymns – yet even that many is so very woefully insufficient.

Sometimes we may think we have Jesus completely figured out. But that’s impossible. Jesus is always more than what we can wrap our minds around.

Thankfully, Jesus wants to be known, and he reveals himself to us.

He reveals to all that He is God, that He is the Way, the Truth, and the Life.

In receiving his love and forgiveness, Jesus becomes our brother, friend, and Savior – In the words of another church song, “Jesus is all the world to me”!

And even singing that great hymn a million times comes up indescribably short of what my Lord, Savior, Jesus Christ has truly come to mean to me personally!

I Believe There Is Always More Truth To Be Learned!

John 21:25 Amplified Bible

25 And there are also many other things which Jesus did, which if they were recorded [a]one by one, I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that would be written.

In these words closing out this Gospel narrative, we uncover a profound truth about our Lord and Savior – a truth that calls us to pursue lifelong learning.

There is always more to learn about Jesus!

“I do not know it all!”

“I cannot know it all!”

“I will never know it all!”

“But, that does not stop my desire from trying to learn more of my Jesus!” 

The Gospel of John features many inspirational revelations about Jesus.

However, the closing verse should intrigue us, reminds us that the recorded accounts are only a glimpse into what Jesus did during his earthly life – not even considering the far innumerable things that Jesus has done in heaven!

This verse is an intriguing invitation for us to embark on a journey of discovery, to dive deeper into the depths, mysteries of God, to be inspired with wonder. 

Why is this pursuit of lifelong learning and wonder so important?

It’s because our faith is not stagnant; it’s a living, breathing relationship with a God whose depth surpasses our understanding – every verse, every story, every revelation is another opportunity to encounter profound truths about Jesus. 

Ecclesiastes 12:9-10 English Standard Version

Fear God and Keep His Commandments

Besides being wise, the Preacher also taught the people knowledge, weighing and studying and arranging many proverbs with great care. 10 The Preacher sought to find words of delight, and uprightly he wrote words of truth.

By actively engaging with the Bible, by actively disciplining ourselves to read God’s Word, we open our hearts to the transformative power of God’s Word.

Luke 24:28-35 New King James Version

The Disciples’ Eyes Opened

28 Then they drew near to the village where they were going, and He [a] indicated that He would have gone farther. 29 But they constrained Him, saying, “Abide with us, for it is toward evening, and the day is far spent.” And He went in to stay with them.

30 Now it came to pass, as He sat at the table with them, that He took bread, blessed and broke it, and gave it to them. 31 Then their eyes were opened and they knew Him; and He vanished from their sight.

32 And they said to one another, “Did not our heart burn within us while He talked with us on the road, and while He opened the Scriptures to us?” 33 So they rose up that very hour and returned to Jerusalem, and found the eleven and those who were with them gathered together, 34 saying, “The Lord is risen indeed, and has appeared to Simon!” 35 And they told about the things that had happened on the road, and how He was [b]known to them in the breaking of bread.

Just as the disciples experienced Jesus in countless ways during their time with him, we too can encounter him in fresh ways through the pages of the Bible.

There’s always something more to learn, a new facet of God’s character to uncover, and a deeper, infinitely richer understanding of his will for our lives.

As we read and study God’s Word, let’s approach it with a sense of wonder and anticipation – may we be like children, eager to discover the hidden treasures within each passage, knowing that the more we seek, the more we will find. 

God promises us in Jeremiah 29:13: “You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart.”

When we wholeheartedly seek God, we all should always be about the Father’s business of listening to Jesus, always learning something wonderful about him.

Luke 2:43-50 New King James Version

43 When they had finished the days, as they returned, the Boy Jesus lingered behind in Jerusalem. And [a]Joseph and His mother did not know it; 44 but supposing Him to have been in the company, they went a day’s journey, and sought Him among their relatives and acquaintances. 45 So when they did not find Him, they returned to Jerusalem, seeking Him. 46 Now so it was that after three days they found Him in the temple, sitting in the midst of the teachers, both listening to them and asking them questions. 47 And all who heard Him were astonished at His understanding and answers. 48 So when they saw Him, they were amazed; and His mother said to Him, “Son, why have You done this to us? Look, Your father and I have sought You anxiously.”

49 And He said to them, “Why did you seek Me? Did you not know that I must be about My Father’s business?” 50 But they did not understand the statement which He spoke to them.

In a world that often emphasizes instant gratification and quick truths, the pursuit of lifelong learning and wonder seems like a countercultural virtue.

Pray, it encourages each of us to approach our faith journey with a curiosity that spans a lifetime, acknowledging that we’re always students inside God’s school.

It’s an invitation to a transformative journey of the heart.

The more we read, study, learn, and the more our discoveries inspire us with truest awe, the more we can fall in love with the God who loves us completely. 

Pursuing learning and wonder every day God gives us to live is an important way to gain wisdom – but even more than that, it’s a soul-stirring adventure, soul stirring time of the deepest of discoveries that draws us into God’s heart.

Psalm 119:9-16 New King James Version

ב BETH

How can a young man cleanse his way?
By taking heed according to Your word.
10 With my whole heart I have sought You;
Oh, let me not wander from Your commandments!
11 Your word I have hidden in my heart,
That I might not sin against You.
12 Blessed are You, O Lord!
Teach me Your statutes.
13 With my lips I have declared
All the judgments of Your mouth.
14 I have rejoiced in the way of Your testimonies,
As much as in all riches.
15 I will meditate on Your precepts,
And [a]contemplate Your ways.
16 I will delight myself in Your statutes;
I will not forget Your word.

The acknowledgment in John 21:25 that the world could not contain the books if every knowable deed of Jesus were recorded, should righteously humble us.

It reminds us of the limitations of language and severe limitations of human expression when attempting to even minimally encapsulate God’s majesty.

It calls us to approach Jesus with reverent awe, recognizing that our own finite minds can only finitely grasp a fraction of his infinite glory as the Son of God. 

By embracing the endless wonder of our knowing Jesus, we position ourselves for spiritual growth – our lifelong learning becomes a rhythm of discipleship.

The more we learn, the more we love.

The more we love, the more we are transformed into his likeness and the more we grow in holiness. 

Romans 12:1-2 The Message

Place Your Life Before God

12 1-2 So here’s what I want you to do, God helping you: Take your everyday, ordinary life—your sleeping, eating, going-to-work, and walking-around life—and place it before God as an offering. Embracing what God does for you is the best thing you can do for him. Don’t become so well-adjusted to your culture that you fit into it without even thinking. Instead, fix your attention on God. You’ll be changed from the inside out. Readily recognize what he wants from you, and quickly respond to it. Unlike the culture around you, always dragging you down to its level of immaturity, God brings the best out of you, develops well-formed maturity in you.

So, let’s dare ourselves to take our lives on a sacred pilgrimage into God’s heart.

Let’s dare ourselves to look forward to what Jesus will teach us day by day, and further dare ourselves to allow those discoveries to spark wonder in our souls.

The more we dare ourselves to seek, the more God will reveal, and we will find, and the more we find, the closer our relationships with our Savior can become. 

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Dear Lord, as I read these passages of scripture, show me Your truth, what you want me to learn. Pinpoint the things in my thinking and my life that aren’t right. Help me to remember that Your word is life and always true, whereas my ideas are too often fleeting. Use the truth of Your Word to transform my limited thinking and behavior. Let Your truth, your wisdom, inform my faith, let my faith guide my actions. Amen.

O God, your love is much greater than we can imagine. Thank you for your salvation, revealed, offered to us in Christ Jesus. May our hearts and lives overflow with thanks.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

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The Always Unresolved Resolution, A Task That Is Always Left Unfinished. Can God Get Even One Witness Today. Luke 24:44-49

Luke 24:44-49 New King James Version

The Scriptures Opened

44 Then He said to them, “These are the words which I spoke to you while I was still with you, that all things must be fulfilled which were written in the Law of Moses and the Prophets and the Psalms concerning Me.” 45 And He opened their understanding, that they might comprehend the Scriptures.

46 Then He said to them, “Thus it is written, [a]and thus it was necessary for the Christ to suffer and to rise from the dead the third day, 47 and that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in His name to all nations, beginning at Jerusalem. 48 And you are witnesses of these things. 49 Behold, I send the Promise of My Father upon you; but tarry in the city [b]of Jerusalem until you are endued with power from on high.”

The Word of God for the Children of God.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

Resolution: “I Will Finally Pray God Opens My Eyes”

After rising from the dead, Jesus met several times with his followers.

On the road to Emmaus, while he walked along with two of them, they didn’t know who he was while he taught all about himself from the Scriptures.

Only later, when he broke bread with them, were their eyes finally opened to see Him as the Messiah, God’s truly Anointed One, the Savior (Luke 24:13-35).

These two heavily enlightened followers ran back to the disciples in the Upper Room to testify to their miraculous experiences with the resurrected Jesus.

Then later that same day, in Jerusalem, resurrected Jesus met with a large group of his disciples – not bothering to knock on the heavily locked door.

And after he opened their eyes to see that He had risen in the flesh, Jesus then explained that all of the Scriptures—“the Law of Moses, the Prophets, and the Psalms”—were fulfilled in him.

For us to see and understand Jesus in the Scriptures, for us to testify, to witness to the resurrection truths revealed in those days, we too need our eyes opened.

As the Psalmist writes …

Psalm 119:17-24 New King James Version

ג GIMEL

17 Deal bountifully with Your servant,
That I may live and keep Your word.
18 Open my eyes, that I may see
Wondrous things from Your law.

19 am a stranger in the earth;
Do not hide Your commandments from me.
20 My soul [a]breaks with longing
For Your judgments at all times.
21 You rebuke the proud—the cursed,
Who stray from Your commandments.
22 Remove from me reproach and contempt,
For I have kept Your testimonies.
23 Princes also sit and speak against me,
But Your servant meditates on Your statutes.
24 Your testimonies also are my delight
And my counselors.

Although the ancient psalmist when he penned these words couldn’t see Jesus or know what we know about Jesus today, the psalmist certainly understood the need for all generations of followers eyes be opened to understand God’s Word.

One of the more traditional, and probably the one left the most unresolved of all resolutions followers of all maturity levels will make as they are all resolving to do at least one thing better entering the new year-to learn more of God’s Word.

Without first resolving to have our eyes opened, God’s Word can seem like a giant legalistic code to measure how others—and we—fail to live righteously.

With this first resolution first and foremost on our prayer list, taking time with Jesus, taking time to converse with Jesus, taking time to listen to Jesus, with our hearts fully exposed, two eyes become fully opened as on the Emmaus Road, we will see in God’s Word the living God who is graciously revealing himself to us.

Be it Resolved that we will learn more how to live the way God intends for us.

Be it Resolved …

We ultimately find the “wonderful things” of God’s grace and mercy—above all, in God’s gift of Jesus—and we live in gratitude for all he has done for us.

A Resolution, A Task That Is Always Left Unfinished.

Matthew 28:16-20 New King James Version

The Great Commission

16 Then the eleven disciples went away into Galilee, to the mountain which Jesus had appointed for them. 17 When they saw Him, they worshiped Him; but some doubted.

18 And Jesus came and spoke to them, saying, “All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth. 19 Go [a]therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 teaching them to observe all things that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.” [b]Amen.

“When they saw Him; they worshiped Him; but SOME DOUBTED. ”

By the words of the resurrected Jesus Himself, being the Great Commission, we are called to a task that we cannot accomplish alone: to be witnesses to Christ.

Following His death and resurrection, Jesus appeared to His disciples in the Upper Room, dispelling their fear and doubt by revealing the nail marks in His hands and His feet (Luke 24:39), reminding them of all that had been written concerning Him (v 44), and opening their minds to the truth of Scripture (v 45).

And before He returned to His heavenly throne He gave them one single task: to witness to the outside world what they had seen Him do and heard Him teach.

The truth about Him needed to be proclaimed “testified to all nations” (v 47).

Since that task is as yet unfinished, and will always remain unfinished, God’s people today are called to witness no less than God’s people of that day were.

Hebrews 12:1-2 New King James Version

The Race of Faith

12 Therefore we also, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which so easily ensnares us, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking unto Jesus, the [a] author and [b]finisher of our faith, who for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.

We may not be able to physically go out and testify with the apostle John, “That which … we have heard, that which we have seen with our eyes, that which we looked upon and have touched with our hands, concerning the word of life … we proclaim also to you” (1 John 1:1, 3) – but we are each still called to be among the great clouds of witnesses who laid aside every weight, ran the race of faith.

But from the first verse Genesis to the last verse of Revelation, we have God’s very spoken word, which we are called not only to believe but also to proclaim.

Be it resolved to finish what God has commissioned-yet we are so very limited!

We are steadfast and immovable, resolute and resolved, yet one minute we are faithfully believing; then the next minute our minds are filled with uncertainty.

It is never really our conscious intent to allow it to happen, inevitably Human frailty, somehow, somewhere, always and forever gets in the way of divinity.

We too soon lose our resolve often step back in fear rather than forward in faith.

Matthew 10:27-31 New King James Version

Jesus Teaches the Fear of God

27 “Whatever I tell you in the dark, speak in the light; and what you hear in the ear, preach on the housetops. 28 And do not fear those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. But rather fear Him who is able to destroy both soul and body in [a]hell. 29 Are not two sparrows sold for a [b]copper coin? And not one of them falls to the ground apart from your Father’s will. 30 But the very hairs of your head are all numbered. 31 Do not fear therefore; you are of more value than many sparrows.

We find ourselves unable to overcome ourselves, not quite knowing what we are should be, saying about communicating the gospel message to those around us.

Jesus, the Good Shepherd, knows this.

He knows His sheep—He knows our propensity for fear and timidity—and He assures us that we do not have to speak or act merely by our own power.

No, but we have each received what Jesus told those first disciples to wait for:

“the promise of the Father,” His Holy Spirit, so that we are “clothed with power from on high.”

Jesus gives us His Spirit in order that we might be involved in kingdom business—in order that we might each take the good news to the nations and to the ends of the earth (Acts 1:8).

Matthew 10:32-33 New King James Version

Confess Christ Before Men

32 “Therefore whoever confesses Me before men, him I will also confess before My Father who is in heaven. 33 But whoever denies Me before men, him I will also deny before My Father who is in heaven.

Don’t give in to fear and timidity.

What we cannot accomplish alone we can do in the power He has given to us.

So, go out in complete dependence on the Spirit of God, prayerfully commit, to resolving, to be playing your part in the great, unfinished task of proclaiming, of exalting the name and glory of Jesus Christ to all the nations near and far:

Facing a task unfinished that drives us to our knees,
A need that, undiminished, rebukes our slothful ease,
We who rejoice to know Thee renew before Thy throne
The solemn pledge we owe Thee to go and make Thee known.
[1]

1 Frank Houghton, “Facing a Task Unfinished” (1931).

Be it resolved …

– if you cannot connect with the world, then start with your own family, then move on to your neighbors, your friends – maybe start a home bible fellowship.

Be it resolved …

-into your church-with your Pastor, begin a small group bible fellowship there.

Be it resolved …

-make plans to expand your current small group bible fellowships, connect them with other churches in your area-exalt God, create bible communities.

Be it resolved …

-believe that with God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit, all things are always possible!

Be it resolved …

Can God, Jesus, the Holy Spirit get even ONE WITNESS to make their testimony?

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Psalm 119:33-40 New King James Version

ה HE

33 Teach me, O Lord, the way of Your statutes,
And I shall keep it to the end.
34 Give me understanding, and I shall keep Your law;
Indeed, I shall observe it with my whole heart.
35 Make me walk in the path of Your commandments,
For I delight in it.
36 [a]Incline my heart to Your testimonies,
And not to covetousness.
37 Turn[b] away my eyes from looking at worthless things,
And revive me in [c]Your way.
38 Establish Your word to Your servant,
Who is devoted to fearing You.
39 Turn away my reproach which I dread,
For Your judgments are good.
40 Behold, I long for Your precepts;
Revive me in Your righteousness.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

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Seasons With God, My Days With My Savior Jesus, A Prayer of Surrender to Jesus’ Calling. Mark 8:34-38

Mark 8:34-38 New King James Version

Take Up the Cross and Follow Him

34 When He had called the people to Himself, with His disciples also, He said to them, “Whoever desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me. 35 For whoever desires to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for My sake and the gospel’s will save it. 36 For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world, and loses his own soul? 37 Or what will a man give in exchange for his soul? 38 For whoever is ashamed of Me and My words in this adulterous and sinful generation, of him the Son of Man also will be ashamed when He comes in the glory of His Father with the holy angels.”

The Word of God for the Children of God.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

Preparing ourselves for the coming of the new year of 2024 …

As part of that preparation …

Have you ever prepared for and practiced the discipline of dieting?

Have you ever prepared for and practiced the discipline of fasting?

Have you ever prepared for and practiced the disciplines of self denial and of self sacrifice?

Have you ever prepared for and practiced the discipline of talking to God?

Although most followers of Christ agree that the discipline of prayer is a highly valuable practice, there’s some debate about the practicing discipline of fasting.

Fasting is the disciplined practice of refraining from normal activities to focus our full attention on God, the Father, His Son Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit.

Most commonly, fasting is about avoiding food for a certain period of time.

In today’s verses from Mark’s Narrative, Jesus tells his disciples that following Him will require His disciples to disciplined practice of self-denial and sacrifice.

We might be able to intellectually understand, agree with the call to self-denial.

We might be able to see the benefit of obeying Christ, even when it contradicts our better more worldly desires.

We might even sincerely pray we would have the self discipline, the strength to discipline ourselves to overcome our “not so glorious worldliness” to obey Him.

However, when that time and that season arrives, summoned by God, called our by Jesus, comes to lay aside our desires and obey God’s commands, we’ll falter.

If we would ever get around to telling ourselves the God’s honest truth, it is not easy to say no to our own desires, especially when we have the means to satisfy our whims – the discipline of fasting helps us practice saying no to ourselves.

We do not gain virtue points by saying no to wolfing out on our favorite foods or not eating gobs of chocolate during the season of Lent, but we do learn the habit of setting aside our desire to make room for praying for, pursuing of, God’s will.

Self-Discipline: Prayer of Surrender to Jesus’ Calling

Mark 8:34-38 The Message

34-37 Calling the crowd to join his disciples, he said, “Anyone who intends to come with me has to let me lead. You’re not in the driver’s seat; I am. Don’t run from suffering; embrace it. Follow me and I’ll show you how. Self-help is no help at all. Self-sacrifice is the way, my way, to saving yourself, your true self. What good would it do to get everything you want and lose you, the real you? What could you ever trade your soul for?

38 “If any of you are embarrassed over me and the way I’m leading you when you get around your fickle and unfocused friends, know that you’ll be an even greater embarrassment to the Son of Man when he arrives in all the splendor of God, his Father, with an army of the holy angels.”

Most days, my day to day life feels like a back-and-forth battle with control.

One day I’m easily relinquishing my own way in favor of God’s plan.

Other days I have to physically, spiritually, struggle to keep surrendering over and over because of my weakness, the pull of being in control is just too strong.

“Give up your own way…”

That phrase sounds ridiculously easy – some days even – embarrassingly easy.

Truth Be Told …

My Confession for today …

“Not so much … If at all …”

“Who am I trying to run a con game on today, who am I trying to scam?”

Those five simple words Master Rabbi Jesus spoke to the crowd are probably the very ones I wrestle with the most.

Even after my heart surgery, I get too attached to my own way of doing things.

Even so, too soon afterwards, self-sufficiency rises and I start making decisions in my own former strengths, I am trying way too hard, and wearing myself out.

I end up exhausted instead of welcoming the peace Jesus offers.

Surrender. 

34 When He had called the people to Himself, with His disciples also, He said to them, “Whoever desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me.

Surrender is a hardcore concept to grasp because God gave us the will to choose.

Surrender means to give up complete control.

To yield to the power of another.

Surrender is an amazing gift offered to us.

Wouldn’t when we are at our weakest physically and spiritually, not rather hand over control of our lives to our Creator who literally holds power over all things?

Then why, in our great strengths, do we struggle to surrender when Jesus calls?

God designed us to hope, dream, create, and build.

Do not we long to do great and little things and make an impact on our world.

Do we not desire to great and little things, make an impact in God’s Kingdom?

So whether from our strengths or weaknesses, we must discipline ourselves to pray and find our purpose using the gifts God gave us, while daily surrendering, while daily disciplining our lives and daily subjecting our whole hearts to Him.

Mark chapter 8 tells us about Jesus’ ministry—from feeding four thousand people to healing one blind man.

After a private word with his disciples, Jesus turned to a crowd and explained how to surrender. Jesus said,

“If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake and for the sake of the Good News, you will save it. And what do you benefit if you gain the whole world but lose your own soul?” (Mark 8:35-36)

In our efforts to do good, let’s not forget the presence of our Holy God.

Jesus is calling us to release control and follow His ways instead of our own.

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Dear Heavenly Father,

I hear your precious son Jesus gently calling me, yet I realize I’ve let the temptation of control keep me from responding to his voice. Forgive me for trying to do things on my own when I know your ways are best. I resolve to surrender to Savior Jesus today.

Thank you for sending the Holy Spirit to draw me back to you in those times when I’ve relied on my own strength. Your Word in John 14:26 says, “But the Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things and will remind you of everything I have said to you.” Thank you for reminding me that if I want to follow Jesus, I need to release my own way resolve to surrender to my Savior.

I have felt the weaknesses in my own body mind, spirit, I have felt your Holy Spirit tugging at my heart. So I am laying down my own plans, desires, and goals. I replace those right now with total surrender to your will. I am grateful for the guidance of the Holy Spirit and that Jesus never stops pursuing a deeper relationship with me.

Your will be done in my life, Lord. I will follow where you lead me. In Jesus’ name,

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

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Reflecting On the Teachings of God: Learning the Value of One Single Day. Psalm 90

Psalm 90 New King James Version

BOOK FOUR

Psalms 90–106

The Eternity of God, and Man’s Frailty

A Prayer of Moses the man of God.

90 Lord, You have been our [a]dwelling place in all generations.
Before the mountains were brought forth,
Or ever You [b]had formed the earth and the world,
Even from everlasting to everlasting, You are God.

You turn man to destruction,
And say, “Return, O children of men.”
For a thousand years in Your sight
Are like yesterday when it is past,
And like a watch in the night.
You carry them away like a flood;
They are like a sleep.
In the morning they are like grass which grows up:
In the morning it flourishes and grows up;
In the evening it is cut down and withers.

For we have been consumed by Your anger,
And by Your wrath we are terrified.
You have set our iniquities before You,
Our secret sins in the light of Your countenance.
For all our days have passed away in Your wrath;
We finish our years like a sigh.
10 The days of our lives are seventy years;
And if by reason of strength they are eighty years,
Yet their boast is only labor and sorrow;
For it is soon cut off, and we fly away.
11 Who knows the power of Your anger?
For as the fear of You, so is Your wrath.
12 So teach us to number our days,
That we may gain a heart of wisdom.

13 Return, O Lord!
How long?
And have compassion on Your servants.
14 Oh, satisfy us early with Your mercy,
That we may rejoice and be glad all our days!
15 Make us glad according to the days in which You have afflicted us,
The years in which we have seen evil.
16 Let Your work appear to Your servants,
And Your glory to their children.
17 And let the beauty of the Lord our God be upon us,
And establish the work of our hands for us;
Yes, establish the work of our hands.

The Word of God for the Children of God.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

As the present year of 2023 draws to a close we are reminded once again of the relentless unstoppable procession of time.

Whether we like it or not, we are being carried onward through the years of our life, until inevitably, in one moment, in one day we’ll finally reach the end of it.

As the years come and and as the days and years go, there comes a day when our time in this world will be no more – our moments, our days, our years, will have passed away for ever into eternity depths, we will never ever see them again. 

So what should we do? 

Psalm 90:12 Moses prays to God reflecting on his long life (120 years) “So teach us to number our days, that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom.”

Moses had quite the life – born into slavery, set afloat on a river by his mother to protect his life, raised into the royal house of Egypt to the highest places of riches and prestige and military leadership – being groomed to be a Pharaoh.

Then one day, what does not collapse around him?

Realizes his birth origins, returns to his slave family, afflicted by the severity of a life of slavery, kills an Egyptian, runs away a fugitive under a death warrant.

With minimal provisions, he walks, trudges across the sun baked wilderness to a place of refuge called Median where he finds his rest, where he settles down, where he gets married, has children, gets a long term secure job, makes a home for himself and his family – no longer having to think about a murder charge.

Then God shows up – a burning bush – and a mission: “set my people free!”

The mission of all missions – back to Egypt, face the dangers, the Ten plagues.

Servant of God – into the crucible – eighty years old and he must now lead all of those former slaves – all five plus million of them – into the wilderness and to the mountain of God and His laws – but first comes the part where he must lead he must protect, all those five plus million people through the parted Red Sea.

Then he must repeatedly climb up and down mountain peaks, receive the Law of God, deal with all of the impossible messes a golden calf can give raise to.

Intercede with God – to keep God from wreaking His unimaginable wrath on the nation of former slaves-for their impossible measures, degrees of disobedience.

I could go on and on and on – as Moses led this nation an additional 40 years in the wilderness – until standing on the brink, in full view of the promised land, God deliver’s to him the worst possible news for all of his years of leadership:

“Sorry, Moses, you can see the promised land, but you will not enter the land!”

The sum total of all that effort over a life span of 120 years of devout service?

A wonderfully reflective poem – reflecting on God work and our brevity of life.

Reflecting, Numbering Our Days: The Value of Today

Life is filled with opportunities, but the big question is what we do with them.

Do we let them so casually slip by, saying, “Maybe next time. There is always another day”? Expecting to live as long as Moses did-or, should we seize them?

We may not have as much time as we think.

Late English Theologian Dr. Leslie Weatherhead, calculated the average length of a life using the hours of one day to illustrate the importance of recognizing the brevity and value of time.

He concluded that if your age is 15, the time is 10:25 a.m. If your age is 20, the time is 11:34. If your age is 25, the time is 12:42 p.m. If you’re 30, the time is 1:51. If you’re 35, the time is 3:00. If you’re 40 the time is 4:08. At age 45, the time is 5:15. If you’re 50, the time is 6:25. By age 55, the time is 7:24. If you’re 60, the time is 8:42. If you’re 65, the time is 9:51. And if you’re 70 the time is 11 p.m.

Psalm 90:12 reminds us, “Teach us to number our days that we may apply our hearts to wisdom” (NKJV).

Or as the Living Bible puts it, “Teach us to number our days and recognize how few they are; help us to spend them as we should.”

To number your days is to keep careful watch over your time with the same kind of care and attention that we would give to budgeting, balancing your accounts, making sure there are always enough funds to make payments for the housing loan, the utilities, telephone bill, daily provisions, medicine and vehicle costs.

The more limited our income is, the more we would want to ensure that we are making the very best use of it.

‘Numbering our days’ is simply applying that same kind of discipline, but now with time instead of money.

It means optimizing the limited time we have left, planning your activities carefully and deciding what activities deserve more time and what deserve less.

It also means trying to save time whenever possible, so no hour is ever wasted.

As the apostle Paul wrote in Ephesians 5:15,16, we should “walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise, redeeming the time, because the days are evil.” 

If you do not keep careful track of where your time is spent, you will find it difficult to accomplish everything that you need to do.

You will always be complaining that you do not have enough time.

Perhaps there have been “more than your fair share of those times when the twenty four hours of the day do not seem to be ever enough for you and you’ve heartily wished that you had a few thirty-six hour days or an eight-day weeks.

But the problem is often not a lack of time, but poor time management.

If you find yourself unable to fulfill your responsibilities because of what seems to be a shortage of time, it probably means you’re not managing your time well.

Jesus told the story of a man who went on a journey and left his money with his servants.

This was not an uncommon thing in those days.

A wealthy man or a ruler would have many servants in his household, from those who performed basic labor to those who managed the financial affairs of his household, even his business.

In many cases some of the man’s servants would be better educated and skilled than he was.

Those highly trusted slaves had a virtual free hand within their prescribed areas of responsibility while the owner was at home.

the owner would go on a journey, he would leave full authority in the hands of these key servants, who’d have the ancient equivalent of a power of attorney.

So Jesus described a scenario in which a wealthy man went on a journey and left the key servants in charge of his possessions.

It’s difficult for us to know exactly what sum he left them, but one possibility is that he gave the equivalent of $5,000 to the first servant, $2,000 to the second servant, and $1,000 to the third.

What Are You Investing Your Days & Time In?

What is Jesus’ story saying to us?

I think it’s quite obvious. Jesus is like that wealthy man who goes on a journey, which spans the day he left this earth to the far day he which he returns in the Second Coming.

We are the servants he has invested in, and we are to take what he has given us and use it for his glory while we await his return.

In the New Testament, a word that is often used for “slave” or “servant” is the Greek word doulos.

It’s a term that describes a unique class of servant, not someone who was made that way by constraint or by force.

A doulos was someone who had been freed by their master yet still chose to continue their service out of their love for their master.

The servant was so thankful for this pardon that he or she would willfully choose to serve.

The apostle Paul often referred to himself as a doulos, and that is what we are as followers of Jesus Christ.

Christ has paid an incredible debt for us.

He has pardoned us.

He has forgiven us.

And now we should become his voluntary servants, not because we have to but because we want to – because we love him.

We recognize that he has instilled certain things in our lives that we are to use for his glory.

Certain gifts.

Certain talents.

Certain resources.

Everything.

Paul wrote, “Don’t you realize that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit, who lives in you and was given to you by God? You do not belong to yourself, for God bought you with a high price. So you must honor God with your body” (1 Corinthians 6:19–20 NLT).

Jesus said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross daily, and follow me” (Luke 9:23 NLT).

This doesn’t mean that we must take a vow of poverty.

It simply means we recognize that it all belongs to God. Our lives belong to God.

Our families belong to God. Our possessions belong to God. Everything is his.

In Jesus’ story, the first servant took what he had, invested it, and received a 100 percent return.

He doubled his master’s investment.

The second, though he had less, did the same thing.

This demonstrates that it isn’t a person’s talent that matters as much as how he or she uses that talent.

God never demands from us the abilities we don’t have.

But He does demand that we should use, to the full, the abilities that we do possess.

We may not be equal in talent, but we should be equal in effort.

Take what God has given to you, do the most that you can with it for his glory.

God can do a lot with a little.

If you don’t believe me, just ask the boy with the five loaves and two fish who gave everything he had to Jesus.

It didn’t seem like a lot, but Jesus used them to feed a hungry multitude.

Jesus can take a little, bless it and multiply it.

He can use it beyond our wildest dreams.

How to “Number Your Days” 

If we will humble ourselves, take what we have and offer it to God, if we will be willing to do to the utmost what He has placed before us and be faithful in the utmost to the little, littler, littlest things, then He will give us more to do.

I would rather try and fail than never try at all.

Any time you take a chance, you can fail.

But it’s better to try than to never take chances and never have anything happen in your life.

So seize the day.

Seize the moment.

Seize the opportunities before you.

Don’t put it off too long, because you may not have as much time as you think.

Be productive with your life.

Be productive with your time.

Seize the opportunities God has given you.

Seize God, the Father!

Seize God the Son!

Seize God the Holy Spirit!

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Psalm 90 The Message

90 1-2 God, it seems you’ve been our home forever;
    long before the mountains were born,
Long before you brought earth itself to birth,
    from “once upon a time” to “kingdom come”—you are God.

3-11 So don’t return us to mud, saying,
    “Back to where you came from!”
Patience! You’ve got all the time in the world—whether
    a thousand years or a day, it’s all the same to you.
Are we no more to you than a wispy dream,
    no more than a blade of grass
That springs up gloriously with the rising sun
    and is cut down without a second thought?
Your anger is far and away too much for us;
    we’re at the end of our rope.
You keep track of all our sins; every misdeed
    since we were children is entered in your books.
All we can remember is that frown on your face.
    Is that all we’re ever going to get?
We live for seventy years or so
    (with luck we might make it to eighty),
And what do we have to show for it? Trouble.
    Toil and trouble and a marker in the graveyard.
Who can make sense of such rage,
    such anger against the very ones who fear you?

12-17 Oh! Teach us to live well!
    Teach us to live wisely and well!
Come back, God—how long do we have to wait?—
    and treat your servants with kindness for a change.
Surprise us with love at daybreak;
    then we’ll skip and dance all the day long.
Make up for the bad times with some good times;
    we’ve seen enough evil to last a lifetime.
Let your servants see what you’re best at—
    the ways you rule and bless your children.
And let the loveliness of our Lord, our God, rest on us,
    confirming the work that we do.
    Oh, yes. Affirm the work that we do!

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

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Our Seasons Spent With God Seeking Jesus: Great gains through Godliness. 1 Timothy 6:6-8

1 Timothy 6:6-8 New King James Version

Now godliness with contentment is great gain. For we brought nothing into this world, [a]and it is certain we can carry nothing out. And having food and clothing, with these we shall be content.

The Word of God for the Children of God.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

In a surprising program on HGTV, people go looking for tiny homes.

They don’t want an enormous monthly mortgage payment, and they don’t want to accumulate all kinds of unnecessary junk in their lives.

So they look at 200-squarefoot homes instead of 2,000 square-footers.

Some of these have a master bedroom you crawl into under the rafters, a children’s bedroom under the other end of the roof, and a kitchen, dining room, bath, and living room cleverly squeezed into one surprisingly small area.

Sometimes the biggest question they have to contend with is “Do we really need that bathtub? A shower takes up less space.”

In Japan, an old farmer’s futon was folded and stored in a closet each morning.

Presto! The bedroom became an instant living room!

“If we have food and clothing,” says Paul, “we will be content with that.”

Of course, if we live in daily colder climates, we might need a place to get in out of the icy blasts and a nice sized wood burning stove to stave off the cold nights.

If we are living daily in a more tropical climate, we might want to make more of a provision for places to keep cool – perhaps jury rig some kind of refrigerator?

I don’t know – because I have never lived year round in any tropical climate so I have no idea how they would create conditions to make ice cubes for lemonade.

But whether cold, warm or neutral climates, Apostle Paul’s point is well-taken.

Materialism sets all kinds of traps and temptations that can lead us astray from seeking after the things of God, after the life of my Savior upon the path of faith.

I know as most people do The tenth commandment which says that we — Do not covet our neighbors stuff (Exodus 20:17)— points the way to contentment.

If we always have a roving eye, hankering for our neighbor’s house, car, or power tools or lawnmowers, spouse, there will be no end to feeling unsettled.

But with the Holy Spirit living deep within our hearts, filling the void that would otherwise drive us to distraction, we should all have peace, contentment within.

Seasons With Our God: Great Gains through Godliness

1 Timothy 6:6-8 The Message

6-8 A devout life does bring wealth, but it’s the rich simplicity of being yourself before God. Since we entered the world penniless and will leave it penniless, if we have bread on the table and shoes on our feet, that’s enough.

When you and think of devoutly “gaining greatness” what comes to mind?

Personally, I have found in different seasons of my life that I’ve unknowingly picked up the view that  “greatness” is only measured by my degrees of success over my degrees of my failures or how my abilities match up to someone else.

However, the Bible teaches us a completely different narrative, it teaches a more humbles truth about devout greatness.

This biblical view of greatness is radically different than what we encounter and what we would typically measure in the standards of living inside our world. 

We are taught through the Word of God our greatness is steeped in Godliness.

Greatness in these eyes of God through the living Word of God, is directly tethered to the Gospel, who Jesus is and who He has called us to be in Christ.

We are reminded that to live is Christ and to die is gain.

Philippians 1:19-26 New King James Version

To Live Is Christ

19 For I know that this will turn out for my deliverance through your prayer and the supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ, 20 according to my earnest expectation and hope that in nothing I shall be ashamed, but with all boldness, as always, so now also Christ will be magnified in my body, whether by life or by death. 21 For to me, to live is Christ, and to die is gain. 22 But if I live on in the flesh, this will mean fruit from my labor; yet what I shall choose I [a]cannot tell. 23 [b]For I am hard-pressed between the two, having a desire to depart and be with Christ, which is far better. 24 Nevertheless to remain in the flesh is  more needful for you. 25 And being confident of this, I know that I shall remain and continue with you all for your progress and joy of faith, 26 that your rejoicing for me may be more abundant in Jesus Christ by my coming to you again.

Ponder that passage of text written from within a Roman prison for a moment!

That passage, the context of that passage alone, reveals how different we must more devoutly, humbly, view greatness and that it must be viewed through the lens of eyes, through eardrums and beating hearts set on a Kingdom mission.

We’re promised in the Word that we will find true contentment when we have a beating heart swelled with love, pumping out love and max desire for the Lord. 

In 1 Timothy 6, the Apostle Paul has listed for his protégé Timothy, a detailed instruction about what living for Christ with a heart of contentment looks like.

It reveals that those seeking after God, seeking after, pursuing Christ will have peace and contentment with what they have and where God has placed them.

They will trust the Lord’s provision and timing.

They will know the difference between truth and lie.

Most importantly, they will know who is of God and who is not.

This is something of great gain.

This portion of scripture is just one of the many places where we see how we should be more devoutly, humbly, measuring out of our life’s “greatness”.

It isn’t based on us – it never should be, but on how Christ has called us to live.

This biblical perspective also changes everything for you and me when it comes to devoutly seeking after and finding contentment in the seasons God has us in.

It again realigns how we value “great things”.

Personally, as a brother to three sisters, an uncle to a niece, a step father to an adult son with his own growing son, I find myself in a season of life where I’m left giving far more than I am receiving – but even that paradigm is challenged.

In my season of recovering and rehabilitating from major Cardiac Surgery, I am in a season of having to receive an extra measure of care from my loving wife.

Most of the time my familial roles comes without accolades and pats on the back most days, and without bear hugs (praise God – ouch)and that’s okay.

However, this can sometimes leave me wondering if am I really making any lasting impact on the Kingdom of God God has me currently engaged with.

Does devoutly, humbly doing my daily tasks really lead to great gain for Jesus?

Truth be Told, somedays I find myself wondering exactly how long will it take to see, bear witness to the fruit of this labor of love that I do day in and day out.

I’m sure each of you readers have in some season of God experienced this too.

Regardless of what you do on a daily basis, have you found yourself asking of God through His Son Jesus, if what you’re doing is really making an impact? 

The answer to that question is this, if you are devoutly, humbly seeking the Lord and His Son and on mission and ministry for His kingdom, then YES!.

Though it is probably unseen, we are making an impact and we are making great gains towards Godliness as you and I live for Christ where He has us.

My prayer is that in these our current seasons and circumstances in life, we will freely give God the space in our hearts to step in and take hold of all our hearts.

Let Him alone be the one to remind you that greatness is steeped in Godliness.

Let Him be the one who fills you with contentment in the roles He’s given you.

Covet the Gospel! Take the gospel forth! Covet, share the love of Jesus, and remind those around you that their “great gains” are found in Christ alone.

In the name of God the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Psalm 23 King James Version

23 The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.

He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he leadeth me beside the still waters.

He restoreth my soul: he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name’s sake.

Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.

Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies: thou anointest my head with oil; my cup runneth over.

Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever.

Lord, thank you for giving us your Word which paves the way for great gains in Godliness. Help me to look to you rather than my abilities and milestones. Help me to rest in the truth that you have called me to a life rooted in the Kingdom mission and how that alone is a great gift that will come with eternal reward – a lifetime of celebration with you. To live is Christ, to die is gain. Thanks be to God! Jesus’ name,

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

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On This Another Christmas Day, Do I Still Believe in Christmas Miracles? Matthew 1:20-23

Matthew 1:20-23 Authorized (King James) Version

20 But while he thought on these things, behold, the angel of the Lord appeared unto him in a dream, saying, Joseph, thou son of David, fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife: for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost. 21  And she shall bring forth a son, and thou shalt call his name JESUS: for he shall save his people from their sins. 22 Now all this was done, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the prophet, saying, 23 Behold, a virgin shall be with child, and shall bring forth a son, and they shall call his name Emmanuel, which being interpreted is, God with us.

The Word of God for the Children of God.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

The Miracle: What If God Were to Disrupt Your Life?

Like that emergent need for Open Heart Surgery …

Like suddenly listening to the news, trying to absorb the impact of learning that my “Widow Making” Left Anterior Descending Coronary Artery is 99% blocked.

Like learning from the Cardiac Surgeon my much troubled heart will be 100% stopped for some period of time during my Triple Bypass Open Heart Surgery.

Some things in life insert themselves like hard claps of thunder into our lives and can take us completely by surprise, stun us into complete insensibility.

Some­times things happen that seem to turn our world utterly upside down.

I learned I needed emergent surgery on my heart July 14, 2023 – I had no choice but to be admitted to the Hospital for my Open Heart Surgery on July 17, 2023.

God brought me through my heart being stopped – God gave me my life back!

That is what essentially happened to a man named Joseph, a builder living in the town of Nazareth in Galilee about 2,000 years ago.

A blessed disruption: engaged to be married to a young woman named Mary, he was so looking forward to when they would become husband and wife, to have children, to make a home together, to be surrounded by their extended family.

But then Joseph learned that Mary, his future wife, was expecting a child.

Could there have been a more sudden and unexpected disruption to his life?

To Joseph’s mind, that meant that somewhere young Mary had been unfaithful.

Could Joseph’s life be turned more upside down – all those plans of a family?

Rush to a decision-protect the families – act, work to salvage their reputations.

Now what to do about this thunderclap news – to keep her from being publicly disgraced, he intended to “divorce her quietly” and then simply send her away.

Planning all the steps needed, but that same night, an angel came to Joseph in a dream, telling him that the child to be born was conceived by the Holy Spirit.

Now, what kind of thunderclap news was this – another brand new disruption?

How much more hardcore disruption to his life could this Joseph deal with?

The angel told Joseph to believe the unbelievable and to take Mary as his wife.

God Himself stepped directly into his life and disrupted many of Joseph’s plans.

God Himself would make sure that Joseph’s life would never ever be the same.

Miracle of Miracles!

Wonder of Wonders!

Mystery of all Mysteries!

The Disruption of all Disruptions!

Matthew 1:20-21 Authorized (King James) Version

20 But while he thought on these things, behold, the angel of the Lord appeared unto him in a dream, saying, Joseph, thou son of David, fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife: for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost. 21 And she shall bring forth a son, and thou shalt call his name JESUS: for he shall save his people from their sins.

Instead of allowing Joseph to brood for too long, to make this disruption into an obsession – so to make bad plans, God caused a deep sleep to come upon Joseph.

As God went to King Solomon in a dream, God sent his angel unto Joseph and in a divine, much needed moment of divine disruption-“It is all going to be okay!”

When Joseph woke up from his dream, he did what the angel commanded him.

Perhaps God has disrupted your life as He disrupted mine, as He did Joseph’s.

Perhaps he turned your life upside down.

Are you ready to accept the miracle, that miraculous disruption of God’s will for your life? Miraculous turnaround? ready to surrender to Him and to Serve Him?

Like Joseph, Do You Believe in Christmas Miracles?

Matthew 1:20-23The Message

20-23 While he was trying to figure a way out, he had a dream. God’s angel spoke in the dream: “Joseph, son of David, don’t hesitate to get married. Mary’s pregnancy is Spirit-conceived. God’s Holy Spirit has made her pregnant. She will bring a son to birth, and when she does, you, Joseph, will name him Jesus—‘God saves’—because he will save his people from their sins.” This would bring the prophet’s embryonic revelation to full term:

Watch for this—a virgin will get pregnant and bear a son;
They will name him Immanuel (Hebrew for “God is with us”).

Have you noticed how many Christmas movies focus on receiving a Christmas miracle?

The miracle of Santa Claus coming at exactly the right moment into someone’s life – bringing the miracle of exactly the right and perfect gift – always exactly the right time in exactly the right place-disrupting the negative expectations?

Although many center on Santa Claus making things happen, still Christmas is always portrayed as a time for long-awaited hopes and dreams to be fulfilled.

Rightly so, too, because Christmas is all about disrupting the negative impact of all the sudden or not so sudden bad news we received – hardcore disrupting all of them inside one fell swoop with miracles whose origins can only be of God!

It’s a heavenly celebration of the miraculous virgin birth of Jesus, God comes to earth in human form, to live among mankind and save people from their sins.

What could be more miraculously hardcore of hardcore disruptive than that?

So how do you approach Christmas?

Are you hoping for God to do the impossible in your life?

Do you believe what the angel told Mary, that all things are possible with God?

Luke 1:36-38 Authorized (King James) Version

36 And, behold, thy cousin Elisabeth, she hath also conceived a son in her old age: and this is the sixth month with her, who was called barren. 37 For with God nothing shall be impossible. 38 And Mary said, Behold the handmaid of the Lord; be it unto me according to thy word. And the angel departed from her.

If you aren’t expecting God to do the impossible at Christmas or any other time of the year, perhaps because of past disappointments, of times where you had great hope, anticipation but didn’t see your life disrupted – prayers answered?

If so, pick up your Bible, ask God to first disrupt your expectations then renew your expectancy in Him, to revive your faith despite all your disappointments.

Choose to disrupt your life – choose to base what you believe about God on what Scripture says about Him, rather on those of the past discouraging experiences.

If former letdowns are what’s holding you back from having faith in God, James 1:6 encourages you to hardcore disrupt your unbelief, believe with all your heart and all your soul and do not doubt God because doubt inhibits the impossible.

James 1:5-8 The Message

5-8 If you don’t know what you’re doing, pray to the Father. He loves to help. You’ll get his help, and won’t be condescended to when you ask for it. Ask boldly, believingly, without a second thought. People who “worry their prayers” are like wind-whipped waves. Don’t think you’re going to get anything from the Master that way, adrift at sea, keeping all your options open.

Scripture explains what happened when Jesus visited His hometown and the residents doubted Him.

Their disbelief affected what they were able to receive from Jesus.

As Matthew 13:58 explains, “And He did not do many miracles there because of their lack of faith.”

If you are lacking faith in believing God is able to do the impossible, ask Him to increase your faith. 

Hebrews 11:1 explains, “Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.”

Hebrews 11:1-2The Message

Faith in What We Don’t See

11 1-2 The fundamental fact of existence is that this trust in God, this faith, is the firm foundation under everything that makes life worth living. It’s our handle on what we can’t see. The act of faith is what distinguished our ancestors, set them above the crowd.

Consider how everything you see created was once impossible without God.

As John 1:3 explains, “Through Him all things were made; without Him nothing was made that has been made.”

As Jeremiah 32:17 describes, “Ah, Sovereign Lord, You have made the heavens and the earth by Your great power and outstretched arm. Nothing is too hard for You.”

Colossians 1:16 further describes, “For in Him all things were created; things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things have been created through Him and for Him.”

At Christmas and all year long, choose to believe that disruption is okay, that nothing is too difficult for God to bring about in your life by stepping out in faith and praying to Him to transform your impossibilities into possibilities.

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Psalm 23

A Psalm of David.

The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.
He maketh me to lie down in green pastures:
he leadeth me beside the still waters.
He restoreth my soul:
he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name’s sake.
Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
I will fear no evil: for thou art with me;
thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.
Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies:
thou anointest my head with oil; my cup runneth over.
Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life:
and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever.

Father in heaven, help us to accept your will for our lives, even when it turns our world upside down. Help us always to acknowledge Jesus as our Lord and Savior.

Glory be to the Father,
and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost;
as it was in the beginning,
is now, and ever shall be,
world without end. Amen, amen.

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