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Freedom from guilt to obey

The second question the author of Search for Significance asked was:: “Are you a ‘have to’ person or a ‘want to’ person?” If I can grasp my significance in Christ and rest in that, then I will “want to” do those things which are pleasing to Him, not “have to” do them in a legalistic, self-saving way.

This is part of the freedom of the abundant life Christ is calling us to: knowing who we are and, as a result, acting in obedience to Him for the right motives rather than just to make ourselves feel good. There are several very important consequences that flow from this.

First, instead of being pushed by the inner drive for gaining significance through getting this or that done, we can listen more quietly to what the Lord wants us to do.
Second, we can be more willing to do the unpleasant but necessary things that do not bring us any sense of significance.

Third, since we do less, (having eliminated the unnecessary, “have to” things) there is more time to do well the things God has for us.

Fourth, flexibility, grace and kindness can replace the harried, nervous, pressured attitude of the “have to” Christian.

These things I am learning. It reminds me that my walk with Christ is one long and wonderful process of growth, deepening and transformation. And we can constantly praise God for His wonderful, unending patience with us in it.

Prayer: “Lord, help me to regularly check my motives before you so I can deepen my rest in the significance you have given. Help me to be a “want to” believer, not a “have to” one. May I love you through obeying your Truth. Amen.”

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Question 1

“My salvation and my honor depend on God; he is my mighty rock, my refuge.” Psalm 62:7

 

Our team has been working through a book called Search for Significance by Robert McGee (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 2003). After establishing that our foundational significance comes from God (being made in His image, redeemed by the blood of the Lamb, chosen before the foundation of the world, and adopted as a child of the King), the author asks two questions.

First, “What do I have to do in order to feel good about myself?” This points us to where we actually draw our significance. If we are resting in the Truth of our being Sons and Daughters of the King, we don’t need to add anything to “feel good” about ourselves. Our true source of stability, significance and “feeling good” is not what we do, but who we are in Christ.

God does want us to have satisfaction in a job well done, pleasure in doing what is right and joy in good relationships, but none of these are the source of the significance and worth that flow through a correct understanding of who we are.

As I honestly evaluated this, it became clear that there are a lot of items on my “to do list” which are there so I can feel good about myself; that is, my motive in doing them is wrong. These are things like: get up early, have a good quiet time, pray through my list, don’t eat too much, exercise enough, and be nice to everyone around me. All of these are good things, many of which I am responsible to do, but they are not to be the source of my significance, stability or sense of goodness. I must switch my motive from doing these to feel good, to doing them because I love the Lord and want to obey and please Him.

My wrong motives point to the disparity between intellectually grasping a truth and the deep implementation of it in one’s life. The way out of this is to be aware of the tendency to look for significance in the wrong areas and to counter it with Truth. Memorizing verses that give God’s viewpoint, such as, “Therefore as God’s chosen people, holy and dearly loved…” (Col 3:12), and “Chosen before the foundation of the world, accepted in the beloved…” (Eph. 1:4)—then  meditating on them, certainly helps to internalize it. When trying to decide what to do, examining my motives and rejecting the wrong ones also helps

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Unchanging Ultimate Good

“… you, Lord, remain the same, and your years will never end” (Ps. 102:27). Yes, Lord God, in contrast to the temporariness of all in time, you, who are outside of time, are permanent, eternal, unending, unchanging, uncurtailed in your existence.

As you were before time began, so you will be after time ends: the perfect and pure paragon of all that is positive. In you there is no alteration, no shifting, no deterioration, no development, no growth, no vacillation–for you are already perfect.

We rejoice in your eternalness, in your enduring through all generations, in your permanency. You are the only stable, unchanging, certain thing in all of creation, in all of time, in all of existence. And you have made yourself our Rock, our Fortress, our Defender.

We glorify you, we rejoice in you, we exalt you, we lift you up. Our eyes are on you as we turn away from the things of this world to be enthralled with your dazzling beauty. It is true, as Asaph wrote in Psalm 73, that when we gaze upon you in worship, we must say, “Whom have I in heaven but you, and earth has nothing I desire besides you.” As we worship you, learn of you, are drawn to you, what we have and don’t have matters less and less, for you are our all in all. Glory be to your name.

 

Prayer: “Lord God, great Creator and Sustainer, help me today to live in your light, to value and obey your Word, to live for eternity. May your Spirit guide me in making wise and glory-giving decisions. May you be exalted in my life today! Amen.”

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The Good End

“In the beginning you laid the foundations of the earth,

and the heavens are the work of your hands.” Psalm 102:25

 

You, O Mighty God, are the Beginner and Ender of history.

You formed the earth and hung it on nothing.

You breathed the stars, the galaxies, the clusters of galaxies, the farthest reaches of space.

They all belong to you and at the right time you will bring them to an end:

“They will perish, but you remain; they will all wear out like a garment.

Like clothing you will change them and they will be discarded” (Ps. 102:26).

It is hard to think of this great, expansive, majestic, far flung creation ending.

Yet, it is not permanent, for it is a part of time: as it had a beginning,

so it will have an end, an end brought about by you, Lord.

The heavens and earth will come to the conclusion of their purpose and usefulness;

they will “wear out” and you will remove them. All we know is temporary. Only you, Lord God, are timeless.

In your great scheme, you have something else in store to replace them, something perfect, untainted, untwisted by sin.

You have a proposal, a plan, a purpose: a pure and pristine new Heaven and Earth,

far beyond what any man could imagine in beauty, in greatness, in perfection—incorruptible and eternal.

And, because of your plan, there is hope for

and end to sin,

justice for evil done

rewards for obedience to you.

In these we can rest, rejoice and be refreshed.

Help us to have this eternal perspective

To remember this hope we have in heaven

so that faith and love may flow from it continually.

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Second truth

More on what God taught me in answering my prayers with wisdom

Second, the Lord combined this frustration with 2 Corinthians 12:9, “… he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.’” With this, the lights came on. If I am content with my own efforts, growth and accomplishments, I will rely on myself.

However, when God lets His children see more clearly the weakness, failure and sin of our natural side, then we can turn away from ourselves to Him and know Him better. We can embrace this truth of our inadequacy in ourselves, confess our self-reliance, receive forgiveness and revel in His love, saying with Paul, “Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses so that Christ’s power may rest on me” (2 Cor. 12:9b).

God has wanted to use the happenings of 9/11 in this way, I believe, for all of America: suddenly our weakness, our vulnerability was revealed and with that, how much we senselessly have depended on our own strength, cleverness and goodness to protect us from evil. May we turn to God in a new way, realizing our need for Him, and find new strength, new insight, new freedom to serve Him.

 

Prayer: “We pray, God, that you will give us the Spirit of wisdom and revelation that we might know you better, not for our own comfort and advantage, but that you might further transform us so we can be more useful for you in what you plan to do in and through our lives. Amen.”

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Step one to freedom

“…when I am weak, then I am strong.”

2 Corinthians 12:10b

 

The wisdom of God is far beyond anything we can comprehend, therefore His answers to our prayers can be very different from what a human mind would expect. Lately Ephesians 1:12 has been one of my prayers for others as well as myself: “I keep asking that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation so that you may know him better.” As a result, I expected to see more of God’s glory in the Word, to be more aware of His working in the world and to see more of His greatness in creation. That, however, is not what happened.

First God began to point out how much I was relying on my own goodness, my own experience, my own spiritual insight—and then how inadequate these are. It was in just simple things, like my response to a disparaging remark, triggering a sinful attitude of mine: I reacted strongly, defending myself.

At the bottom of each such incident was the same thing: failure to believe the Word of God. On one side, I was rejecting the fact of my natural depravity. And on the other side, I was not resting in the truth that I am a son of the Most High God, chosen before the foundation of the world, cleansed, accepted, assigned to significant work, and dearly loved. Why should I be upset at some mere human being’s insult, especially when it pinpoints an actual sin in my life? The problem is I can’t seem to remember these truths very well at the moment of impact!

But God is faithful to persist ins bringing us to our senses, teaching us the same thing over and over until we grasp the truth needed. I am thankful for his persistence and patince. Helping me to let go of what other’s think was just the first revelation. Step two tomorrow.

Picture: set free

 

The Wonder of His love

You, Lord Jesus,  have brought us out of condemnation into a wide place, a beautiful dwelling, a lovely relationship with you. We are chosen because you loved and wanted us, we are cleansed from our guilt, transformed into a new creature, adopted into your family, made brothers and sisters to Jesus, delighted in and dearly loved.

We can now openly acknowledge to you our sinfulness, our shame, our inner struggles; we can allow you to shine the light of the Holy Spirit deeply within our souls (Ps. 51:6) and to eagerly confess what is revealed, knowing that in the security of your love, in the safety of your satisfied justice, in the warmth of your heart, there is no further condemnation, no reason to fear and hide, for you are a forgiving God.

You, Lord God, are love, you are light, you are life; you are healing; you are good and wise and right. We can revel in your words from Ephesians 1: “In Christ you are forgiven,” and “I love you with an everlasting love,”  “I choose you because it is the good pleasure of my will,” and “I am delighted to have you as my child” (paraphrased).

You are all, Lord Jesus: our Hope, our Savior, our Love, our Transformer. In you is all we desire: acceptance, worth, meaning, security, growth and a future. Glory be to you for sharing these things with us, we who deserve the exact opposite. I lift you up, rejoice in you, exalt you and bow before you in thankfulness, praise and adoration.

 

Prayer: “Be exalted in my life today, Lord Jesus. Help me to live a life worthy of you, freely admitting my sin, joyfully accepting your forgiveness and whole-heartedly reveling in your great love and acceptance. May you be glorified as I am satisfied in you. Amen.”

Picture: Jesus has brought us to warm and wonderful place.

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“I love the LORD, for he heard my voice; he heard my cry for mercy.” Psalm 116:1

 

Praise be to you,

Heavenly Father,

the Great I Am,

the Creator of all

and the Director of Life.

You are the glorious One, worthy of praise, worthy of honor, worthy of love, for your ear always “is open to my cry and your eye is on the righteous.”

There is not a second when you are not focused upon each individual in the world, especially your children. “From heaven, the Lord looks down and sees all mankind” (Psa. 33:13). No event escapes your notice, no happening comes without your permission.

You do not prevent every difficulty or trouble from coming to us, for in your wisdom you know that our growth comes in and through problems and hardships. And each uncomfortable, unwanted situation is another chance to honor you with faith and the sacrifice of praise. It is an opportunity to dance with joy on the stage of life, clothed in grace, energized with truth, surrounded by the light of your love.

When I think back in my own life, there are many examples of your surrounding me with your protection in the midst of difficulty.

  • When we were traveling through Greece, an oncoming car had its left front tire blow out and was drawn into our lane, but you caused me to respond and avoid a head-on collision. The result was minimal damage, and great memories of your provision and grace.
  • When we were expelled from the country, we were able to come right back and stay another 12 years.
  • When I was turned in to the police by a disciple, fired from my job, put on trial, shunned by fellow workers and threatened with the loss of our apartment, you brought acquittal, a statement of greater religious freedom and protection to stay in the country—plus I no longer had to work as a teacher but could work full time to plant churches!
  • In a summer of tremendous stress, you used the pressure to reveal that I needed a stent in my heart, and used the ensuing pain to bring me into contact with my doctor friend in Germany who has poured blessing after blessing over us in his generosity.

With the psalmist, I can shout, “Because he turned his ear to me, I will call on him as long as I live” (Ps. 116:2). You, O God, are faithful, you are good, you are wise, you are wonderful. To come into your presence is a privilege, a joy, a grace

picture: us in our late 40s.

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Christian Heritage Month

June being Christian Heritage month, this is a different post, one looking at the history of the influence of our faith. It is a post from one website I look at.

“It is good to recognize the countless ways in which the teachings of Christ have shaped the fabric of our society and to highlight the many heroes of the faith from centuries past, remembering the impact of Christianity can be seen in every corner of the world. Here are 4 major areas where the influence is clearly seen, a reminder of God’s good working in and for all mankind.

Technology and Science: The foundations of modern science were laid by Christian scholars and thinkers, who believed that the pursuit of knowledge was a sacred calling. Men like Sir Isaac Newton, Johannes Kepler, and Gregor Mendel all made groundbreaking discoveries that have shaped the course of human history, all while remaining faithful to the teachings of Christ.

Healthcare: Christianity has long been at the forefront of efforts to provide compassionate care for the sick and the suffering. From the early days of the church, when Christians opened their homes to care for the ill, to the establishment of modern hospitals and healthcare systems, the influence of Christianity on the field of medicine cannot be overstated.

Education: The development of education as we know it today is deeply rooted in the teachings of Christ. From the establishment of the first universities in medieval Europe to the proliferation of Christian schools and colleges around the world, the Christian commitment to education has been a driving force in the advancement of human knowledge.

Art and Culture: The beauty and richness of Christian art and culture are a testament to the transformative power of the Gospel. From the breathtaking cathedrals that adorn the skylines of cities across the globe to the timeless works of literature and music that have inspired generations, the artistic legacy of Christianity is a testament to the enduring power of faith.”

It is edifying to remember all the good God has brought through the gospel, blessing us all with His kindness. Good reasons to be thankful always.

“I will bless the Lord at all time, His praise shall continually be in my mouth, my soul shall make its boast in the Lord, the humble shall hear it and be glad.” Psalm 34May be an image of 1 person

Putting on the Armor of God

A reminder:  Putting on the armor of God.

Help me to put on this whole armor of God every day so I might be able to stand in the evil day and having done all to stand. Help me to put on the belt of truth, remembering that all I naturally deserve is suffering, failure, punishment, pain and hell, plus eternal separation from you (Rom. 7:18; Eph. 2:1-6). But praise you for your eternal grace in which you chose me, called me, cleansed me, claimed me as your son, commissioned me for special service, and now I stand before you dearly loved, deeply cared for, doted on and delighted in (Eph. 1:1-10; Col. 3:12a).

In the same way, help me to put on the breastplate of righteousness, forgiving, accepting and loving myself as you do me. And to put on the shoes of peace, forgiving others as you have forgiven me.

In addition to all of these, help me to lift up the shield of faith by praising in and for all things so I can quench all the fiery darts of the wicked one.

Help me to put on and keep on the helmet of salvation, remembering/believing that my salvation, significance and security all depend on and flow from you, from your character and your provision, not from my performance or others’ opinions of me and my work.

I also praise you, Lord that you have given us the sword of the Spirit: your living, powerful, transforming Word. Help me to soak in your Word, read it, to think it, pray it, live in it today. And then to pray with all prayer for all the saints continually, making intercessory prayer the foundation of all I do.

Thank you now, Lord God, for how you will answer these requests, for this is praying according to your Word and will (Eph. 6:10-18)

 

Prayer: “Praise you, Lord Jesus, for your presence, your power, your provision prepared for this day. May you be glorified, magnified, lifted up, exalted and honored through your working in me today. Amen.”

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