Motivation is important to God. You know, like, the reason we do things. Although we are sinful creatures by nature, those of us that are being indwelt by the Holy Spirit have a new nature to combat the old nature. We've been "born again" as Jesus says in John 3. Jesus also gives us, the born again ones, a lot of instructions about having the right motives. Matthew 6 lays it out very eloquently.
Matthew 6:1 warns us not to "practice our righteousness" before people to "be SEEN" by them. Jesus goes on to warn us about giving (6:2), praying (6:5,7) and fasting (6:16). All of which, if done with improper motivation, will not receive any response from God. Jesus warns that if our motivation is to please men, then we may as well not even bother. James (James 4:3), the half-brother of Jesus, says it this way in reference to out motives when it comes to prayer: "You ask, and receive not, because you ask amiss, that you may consume it on your lusts." Wow, that's a gut punch!
Why am I writing this? I actually want to talk about our motivation in giving. Many times, giving is misunderstood in the church. Many give to be seen by others and to have their name called during some recognition program. Others give because they feel compelled to. Still, others give in order to obey scripture. I am not even going to get into amounts. 10%, 20% or "as each has purposed in their own heart" (2 Cor 9:7) or even "according to their ability..." (Acts 11:29). Regardless of the amount, the motive MUST be proper.
As I was studying the other night in Deuteronomy 15, I was intrigued by a passage as it relates to giving to those in need. That's something that we should all consider when we think about giving. Many of us put boatloads of money into the church but will refuse to feed a homeless person or part with a dollar or two for fear of "what they are going to do with the money." We really don't think about giving to the poor because there's really no glory in that. Many times, it goes unnoticed, there is no plaque given for being a sliver, gold or platinum level donor. There is no instant recognition or pats on the back and many times, it may only be a one time encounter with the person that we are giving to.
In context, as the Israelites were contemplating their move to Canaan and being taught about the blessings that went along with that, God also taught them about giving to the poor. First of all, God instituted a sabbatic year. Every seven years, the debts of those that owed creditors were remitted. This is carried over into the New Testament with the Lord's Prayer. "Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors." God said that among the Israelites, there would be no poor because of His blessings. This is an interesting statement in light of verse 7. Did God mean that there would not be any poor Israelites? Is this double speak? I don't think so. God doesn't operate in double speak. Let's look at verse 4 first:
"But there will be no poor among you; for the LORD will bless you in the land that the LORD your God is giving you for an inheritance to possess"
So God says here there will be no poor because of His blessings in the Promised Land, the Land in the book of Numbers that was said to be flowing with milk and honey. Why would he say this? Many word-of-faith preachers would use this to prop up their "prosperity gospel" without continuing to read. Now, let's look at verse 7 and 8:
"“If among you, one of your brothers should become poor, in any of your towns within your land that the LORD your God is giving you, you shall not harden your heart or shut your hand against your poor brother, but you shall open your hand to him and lend him sufficient for his need, whatever it may be."
So are we seeing why there will be no poor? Not because there wouldn't technically be any poor, but because there would be those with enough riches to "lend" [please note that it did not say give away, although there is nothing wrong with that- see verse 10] to the poor "brother" (see verse 2 and 3) and MAKE SURE that he has enough for his need, whatever it may be! WOW! Do you see the fact that God has a thing for community and love for one another? James and John also address this concept.
James 2:15 "If a brother or sister is poorly clothed and lacking in daily food, and one of you says to them, “Go in peace, be warmed and filled,” without giving them the things needed for the body, what goodb is that?"
1 John 3:17 "If anyone has material possessions and sees a brother or sister in need but has no pity on them, how can the love of God be that person?"
We see here that giving is ordained by God and being a help to a brother or a sister in need expresses the love of God to that person! Giving is a work that should be an outgrowth of our faith and it does not always have to be in an offering tray. I am not saying don't give to your local church, giving is vital to the survival of the church. What I am saying is that being a giver is being obedient to God.
Although this is centered on monetary giving, it doesn't always have to be money. Maybe there is a young man or young woman that is devoid of a role model. Can you be a role model to them? Maybe the church needs painting or needs some light bulbs to be replaced. Do you have the means to do it? Can you buy the bulbs? Or better yet, can you take some time to put them in?
Can you see my point? Maybe or maybe not. Let's look at something else though. When we give, be it money, time, effort or whatever, we should model God in giving. Jesus said that when we give, we will also receive good measure, pressed down, shaken together ( Luke 6:38). Is the motivation giving to get? No, it shouldn't be. Many do. That's why "sowing seeds" is so popular and why so many people get lassoed into that warped theology. They give with the motivation that the larger the seed, the larger return I can expect. Yes, the measure that you mete our will be meted unto you, yes he that sows sparingly will also reap sparingly (2 Cor 9) but if that measure is based on your own greedy expectations of a huge windfall in return, as James said, don't expect anything! We should give because God gave to us first. The idea of remission of debts in Deuteronomy 15 is based on the fact that God proclaimed remission. God gave the order to remove debts every seven years.
God says this about the motivation to give in verse 9: "Take care lest there be an unworthy thought in your heart and you say, ‘The seventh year, the year of release is near,’ and your eye look grudgingly on your poor brother, and you give him nothing, and he cry to the LORD against you, and you be guilty of sin."
God says give, even if the time of remission is near and there is NO guarantee of a return! Give anyway, because God gave to us. Give because if giving is not done grudgingly, there is a blessing attached to it. See verse 10, give generously and God will bless you in all of your work and undertakings.
Let's take this home. God gave to us first. In creation, He gave of Himself because He wanted to share something of Himself. God also gave in that He prepared EVERYTHING that man needed prior to man's creation. Flowers, vegetables, fruit, animals and God even watered everything and kept it green for man (Genesis 2:6). God gave man the Law to guide us but to also, in a broader sense, to point to man's imperfection and the need for a perfect One to come and fulfill the Law. God is a cheerful giver if there ever was one, and He gives with one motivation, LOVE. John 3:16 says that God so loved the world that he GAVE His only Son. God gave Jesus to be the payment for our debts that we owed because of our sin! God will grant remission of sin upon our acceptance of this payment! Let's finish the verse, ...that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have everlasting life! Give with love as the motivation and God will bless you for it. Grace and peace.
Ephesians 4:20-24 (NASB) But you did not learn Christ in this way, if indeed you have heard Him and have been taught in Him, just as truth is in Jesus, that, in reference to your former manner of life, you lay aside the old self, which is being corrupted in accordance with the lusts of deceit, and that you be renewed in the spirit of your mind, and put on the new self, which in the likeness of God has been created in righteousness and holiness of the truth.
Thursday, June 6, 2013
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
The Certainty of God and the Uncertainty of Man
Driving to work today, I had a thought as I listened to James McDonald (Walk in the Word Ministries- this guy is AWESOME). He was preaching about faith and using Hebrews 11 as a text. The message was great and I caught this scripture reference: Hebrews 11:17 "By faith Abraham, when God tested him, offered Isaac as a sacrifice. He who had embraced the promises was about to sacrifice his one and only son..." This made me think about something that I had never thought about before. We know that Isaac's potential sacrifice was a test of Abraham's faith and was also a foreshadowing of what was to come with Christ. The sacrifice of an innocent life, the request for obedience from God and the ram in the bush all point to Calvary. The bible says that Abraham was willing to go through with the sacrifice because he believed that God could raise Isaac from the dead (see Hebrews 11:19). Abraham's faith in God was so great that he took his obedience to the brink reason and he was willing to sacrifice Isaac even though he was Abraham's only son. He was certain that God could do something miraculous if Isaac was killed.
Let us stay with this line of thinking. God the Father offered up His only Son, Jesus Christ. He chose Jesus from before time began to be the atoning sacrifice for the "sins of the whole world" (1 John 2:2). Ephesians 3 speaks of the mystery, the plan of God, through the church which belongs to Christ, to bring both Jews and Gentiles to Himself. God's reconciliation project involved sending Jesus to do for man what the law could not do, to be the propitiation, the lamb without spot or blemish that would reconcile men back to God and grant forgiveness to those that repent and accept Jesus as Savior.
Jesus even offered Himself up. When He came and wrapped Himself in flesh to reveal grace and truth to man (John 1:17), He came with the expressed intent of going to Calvary. The wise men brought frankincense to Jesus as a newborn baby. Frankincense is a death spice/fragrance! Simeon prophesied to Mary that her soul would be "pierced" (Luke 2:34,35). Christ's mission is no secret! Isaiah prophesied it in Isaiah 53. The Old Testament is filled with references to Christ's crucifixion. Jesus said on multiple occasions that the "Son of Man" must be betrayed into the hands of sinful men, be crucified (or "lifted up") and be raised on the third day (Mark 8:31, Luke 9:22, Luke 24:7, John 3:14). To put it in perspective, Jesus says emphatically in John's gospel: John 12:27 "“Now is my soul troubled. And what shall I say? ‘Father, save me from this hour’? But for this purpose I have come to this hour". Jesus was well aware of His mission, why He had to wrap Himself in flesh in order to die a death "once and for all" (Hebrews 9:28) to defeat the power of death (Romans 6:9) and to grant all those who would receive his gift of salvation a. remission of sin and b. eternal life (1 Peter 3:18). Here is what intrigued me, Jesus did so knowing that the Father gave Him the command to get up on the third day. John 10:18: "No one takes it from me, but I lay it down of my own accord. I have authority to lay it down, and I have authority to take it up again. This charge I have received from my Father.” Jesus could trust that this commandment was sure because it came from the Father, who is eternally co-equal and faithful to the Son and the Spirit.
So where am I going with this? The grace of God is manifested here in very vivid, and certain terms. God offered Jesus up, Jesus offered Himself up in order to do away with death and sin and they did so KNOWING that there would be many that would not accept their offer of salvation! How gracious is that? This is not an endorsement of limited atonement or Calvinisim at all. What I am saying is that God, in His infinite wisdom, knows everything and knows that there are many that will reject the message of the gospel and the saving grace of Jesus Christ. But the plan for salvation did not begin in the manger, it began in eternity- before any man was ever created or born! Before Adam, Eve, Cain, Abel, Noah, Moses, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob or any human being that ever existed, God's plan to reconcile man to Himself existed. It's so amazing and what's more amazing is the number of people that flat out reject that plan and will find themselves in fiery, unrelenting torment- not because the offer of salvation was not presented, but because they turned their backs on that offer.
As a real life example, my son hates to eat breakfast. He does so grudgingly on exam days because we try to stress the importance of having a good breakfast and how it benefits the brain and enhances cognitive abilities for test taking, etc. Although he doesn't like to have breakfast, that doesn't stop me nor does is stop his mother from making breakfast for both of our children every morning...knowing that on most mornings, the food will not be eaten by at least one of the kids. Out of graciousness, there is some offer of food each morning. Whether they eat it or not is a different story. Sometimes I feel that it is wasteful to continue to cook/prepare knowing that there is going to be a lip turned up or a deep sigh followed by an "I'm not hungry" or "Do I have to eat?". I have even said to them and to myself that I would stop getting up to make breakfast because of their ungratefulness. However, this is not God's way. God keeps the offer on the table knowing, that just like that bowl of cheese grits that my son left on the counter this morning, it might not be accepted and some excuse will undoubtedly be made as to why it was not accepted.
It's not as if God wants people to go to hell. God asks in Ezekiel 18:23, "Have I any pleasure in the death of the wicked, declares the Lord God, and not rather that he should turn from his way and live?" We see here that God would much rather the wicked would turn from their ways and repent! That's mercy and grace. But God will not force the wicked to do so, He will present the opportunity, send His Spirit to convict them but the ultimate decision is on the person to whom God is speaking. Did you know that Christ's return is being held because God is still giving people time to repent? 2 Peter 3:9 specifically says that God's "slowness" in returning is indicative of His patience and His desire that men would repent of their sins.
Hell was not even created for humans. It was prepared for Satan and his angels (Matthew 25:41, 2 Peter 2:4, Jude 1:6, Revelation 20:1,2)! However, humans that choose life apart from God are given their wish and will have all eternity to live without him. God loves us so much that He will not force anything on us that we do not want- including Himself. That is a sobering and frightening thought!
Christians should rejoice that we have accepted the salvation of God and we should be thankful that we have become beneficiaries of God's unlimited and unmerited grace. We should also be telling others of this grace. When the door for ministry is opened, take advantage of it and tell someone about the richness of God's grace and God's love for them. Thank you Jesus that although the offer may not be accepted by everyone, the ones that do accept it, You've said that you will never cast away. Let us be in prayer for those that we know, family and friends, that have not made a decision for Christ. Grace and peace.
Let us stay with this line of thinking. God the Father offered up His only Son, Jesus Christ. He chose Jesus from before time began to be the atoning sacrifice for the "sins of the whole world" (1 John 2:2). Ephesians 3 speaks of the mystery, the plan of God, through the church which belongs to Christ, to bring both Jews and Gentiles to Himself. God's reconciliation project involved sending Jesus to do for man what the law could not do, to be the propitiation, the lamb without spot or blemish that would reconcile men back to God and grant forgiveness to those that repent and accept Jesus as Savior.
Jesus even offered Himself up. When He came and wrapped Himself in flesh to reveal grace and truth to man (John 1:17), He came with the expressed intent of going to Calvary. The wise men brought frankincense to Jesus as a newborn baby. Frankincense is a death spice/fragrance! Simeon prophesied to Mary that her soul would be "pierced" (Luke 2:34,35). Christ's mission is no secret! Isaiah prophesied it in Isaiah 53. The Old Testament is filled with references to Christ's crucifixion. Jesus said on multiple occasions that the "Son of Man" must be betrayed into the hands of sinful men, be crucified (or "lifted up") and be raised on the third day (Mark 8:31, Luke 9:22, Luke 24:7, John 3:14). To put it in perspective, Jesus says emphatically in John's gospel: John 12:27 "“Now is my soul troubled. And what shall I say? ‘Father, save me from this hour’? But for this purpose I have come to this hour". Jesus was well aware of His mission, why He had to wrap Himself in flesh in order to die a death "once and for all" (Hebrews 9:28) to defeat the power of death (Romans 6:9) and to grant all those who would receive his gift of salvation a. remission of sin and b. eternal life (1 Peter 3:18). Here is what intrigued me, Jesus did so knowing that the Father gave Him the command to get up on the third day. John 10:18: "No one takes it from me, but I lay it down of my own accord. I have authority to lay it down, and I have authority to take it up again. This charge I have received from my Father.” Jesus could trust that this commandment was sure because it came from the Father, who is eternally co-equal and faithful to the Son and the Spirit.
So where am I going with this? The grace of God is manifested here in very vivid, and certain terms. God offered Jesus up, Jesus offered Himself up in order to do away with death and sin and they did so KNOWING that there would be many that would not accept their offer of salvation! How gracious is that? This is not an endorsement of limited atonement or Calvinisim at all. What I am saying is that God, in His infinite wisdom, knows everything and knows that there are many that will reject the message of the gospel and the saving grace of Jesus Christ. But the plan for salvation did not begin in the manger, it began in eternity- before any man was ever created or born! Before Adam, Eve, Cain, Abel, Noah, Moses, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob or any human being that ever existed, God's plan to reconcile man to Himself existed. It's so amazing and what's more amazing is the number of people that flat out reject that plan and will find themselves in fiery, unrelenting torment- not because the offer of salvation was not presented, but because they turned their backs on that offer.
As a real life example, my son hates to eat breakfast. He does so grudgingly on exam days because we try to stress the importance of having a good breakfast and how it benefits the brain and enhances cognitive abilities for test taking, etc. Although he doesn't like to have breakfast, that doesn't stop me nor does is stop his mother from making breakfast for both of our children every morning...knowing that on most mornings, the food will not be eaten by at least one of the kids. Out of graciousness, there is some offer of food each morning. Whether they eat it or not is a different story. Sometimes I feel that it is wasteful to continue to cook/prepare knowing that there is going to be a lip turned up or a deep sigh followed by an "I'm not hungry" or "Do I have to eat?". I have even said to them and to myself that I would stop getting up to make breakfast because of their ungratefulness. However, this is not God's way. God keeps the offer on the table knowing, that just like that bowl of cheese grits that my son left on the counter this morning, it might not be accepted and some excuse will undoubtedly be made as to why it was not accepted.
It's not as if God wants people to go to hell. God asks in Ezekiel 18:23, "Have I any pleasure in the death of the wicked, declares the Lord God, and not rather that he should turn from his way and live?" We see here that God would much rather the wicked would turn from their ways and repent! That's mercy and grace. But God will not force the wicked to do so, He will present the opportunity, send His Spirit to convict them but the ultimate decision is on the person to whom God is speaking. Did you know that Christ's return is being held because God is still giving people time to repent? 2 Peter 3:9 specifically says that God's "slowness" in returning is indicative of His patience and His desire that men would repent of their sins.
Hell was not even created for humans. It was prepared for Satan and his angels (Matthew 25:41, 2 Peter 2:4, Jude 1:6, Revelation 20:1,2)! However, humans that choose life apart from God are given their wish and will have all eternity to live without him. God loves us so much that He will not force anything on us that we do not want- including Himself. That is a sobering and frightening thought!
Christians should rejoice that we have accepted the salvation of God and we should be thankful that we have become beneficiaries of God's unlimited and unmerited grace. We should also be telling others of this grace. When the door for ministry is opened, take advantage of it and tell someone about the richness of God's grace and God's love for them. Thank you Jesus that although the offer may not be accepted by everyone, the ones that do accept it, You've said that you will never cast away. Let us be in prayer for those that we know, family and friends, that have not made a decision for Christ. Grace and peace.
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
Double Jeopardy
You have undoubtedly heard the phrase "double jeopardy", especially if you are a fan of legal shows like Law & Order or, my favorite show, Matlock. It is a legal term that means simply that a person cannot be tried twice for a crime that they were acquitted of. This is a very important legal concept. Besides the legal definition, the phrase means that a person is placed into harm's way twice.
I submit to you that Jesus faced double jeopardy in that he placed himself in harm's way twice, for our sake! Jesus was not guilty of any crime, He never sinned, He is the Lamb without spot or blemish. But there is evidence in the Bible that Jesus made the decision to face Calvary twice.
Let's look at the first instance which the Lamb, chosen from the foundation of the world, accepted the will of God and was sent here. Hebrews 12:1,2:
I submit to you that Jesus faced double jeopardy in that he placed himself in harm's way twice, for our sake! Jesus was not guilty of any crime, He never sinned, He is the Lamb without spot or blemish. But there is evidence in the Bible that Jesus made the decision to face Calvary twice.
Let's look at the first instance which the Lamb, chosen from the foundation of the world, accepted the will of God and was sent here. Hebrews 12:1,2:
"Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God."
This is an excellent passage in that we see what Jesus gave up in order to come to earth and be the propitiation for the sins of mankind. A literal translation of verse 2 is this " in view of joy lying before Him..." What joy is this speaking of? The word for "lying before" is a Greek word "prokeimenēs" which literally means the "destined joy" or the joy on the other side of the Calvary. With this joy before him, Jesus endured the cross. Let us understand this also, this decision was made in eternity and therefore, in order to endure the cross, Jesus had to be sent from His throne in heaven! He had to leave the angels falling prostrate before Him. He had to leave the constant praise and singing of the heavenly host. He had to leave the beauty of heaven and the presence of the Father and the Spirit to take on flesh and become the Lamb that would take away the sins of the world. He knew full well the agony he would face at the crucifixion and yet, He consented and, although being in the form of God, did not regard equality with God (the Father) a thing to be grasped, but He emptied Himself, taking the form of a bondservant and was obedient to the point of death...even death on a cross (Philippians 2).
There was a second time that Jesus had a chance to remove himself from the line of fire. That time occurred when He was in human form here on earth. He was in a place called Gethsemane. He was under extreme duress as the crucifixion loomed. His sweat was like "great drops of blood". Luke 22:44 says that Jesus was in agony in Gethsemane. The word used for agony is "agonia" which is a word taken from the realm of athletics and competition. It is a word used to describe the feelings of an athlete before a contest. What it literally means is that Jesus was in the "fourth quarter" with seconds left on the clock. He could have dialed it in and called it quits. He asked God (the Father) to remove the cup but remembered that his food (sustenance) was to do the will of His father (John 4:32). Jesus once told the disciples that the reason that the Father was with Him was because he "ALWAYS" did what pleased Him (the Father) (John 8:29). What pleased God was to crush Jesus (Isaiah 53) as the substitutionary sacrifice for the sins of man. This was the only way that mankind could be reconciled back to God!
We see here that, unlike man and the judicial system, Jesus had no problem facing double jeopardy! He did not try to avoid it, He embraced it. He faced it to do the will of the Father. The will of God is that none should perish but all should come to repentance (2 Peter 3:9). The will of God is that "all would come to the knowledge of the truth and be saved" (1 Tim 2:4). While this is the will of God, unfortunately, all men are not obedient to God's will- but Jesus was. The one who knew no sin became sin on our behalf. The righteous died for the unrighteous. He knew what was coming, He momentarily left His seat in heaven, He endured the abuse of man and He drank the full cup of God's wrath...so that ANYONE WHO ACCEPTS HIS PAYMENT is forgiven for their sins! Thank you Jesus for deciding TWICE to go through with God's will. Thank you Jesus for being the Lamb and taking away the sins of the world. If you haven't told Jesus thank you for His payment for your sins, now is a good time to do so. Grace and peace.
Monday, May 13, 2013
Really?
So, I have been noticing a slogan that seems to be catching on and it had me puzzled. We were riding through a rural area today and I saw a church with a nice marquee sitting in front of it. When I read what was on it, it threw me for a loop. The marquee read, "Jesus believes in you." My initial thought was...really? Where did this line of thinking come from? If this is really the case, truthfully, we are all doomed. Why would God "believe" in anything other than Himself? Does God need man? Not really. He's sovereign and does not need any one or any thing. Does God use man in the earth to accomplish His will? Absolutely. Acts 17:24,25 says it this way: "The God who made the world and everything in it, being Lord of heaven and earth, does not live in temples made by man, nor is he served by human hands, as though he needed anything, since he himself gives to all mankind life and breath and everything." It's not God that needs us...we need Him! This twisted theology is part of the reason that the world is on a downward slide and Christianity is on the decline. We are looking for a God that we can control and manipulate- a God that is not sovereign but bound by the limitations that we place on Him.
Let's look through the bible for a second just to show how foolish and illogical it is to believe that God would put His trust in man. If you simply walk with me through these scriptures, it will become evident that this though process makes no sense whatsoever.
From the beginning of time, God gave man free choice/ free will but knew omnisciently that man would ultimately fail. When the bible speaks of the lamb "slain from the foundation of the world" (Revelation 13:9), that blood offering of Jesus Christ had to be made in order to atone for sin. Although chronologically (hours, minutes, seconds etc.), Jesus died around 33-35 AD, kairologically (an opportune moment) His death that was to take place in a fleshly body was arranged in eternity. Peter says that He was "chosen" from the foundation of the world but revealed in the latter times for our sake ( 1 Peter 1:20). Had God the Father "believed" in man or had Jesus had faith in man...the atoning sacrifice of Jesus would not have happened. According to this backward line of thinking, God the Father and God the Son would have "believed" in man to work through that sin problem that began in Eden.
Let's take a look at Genesis 6:5-8: "The LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intention of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. And the LORD was sorry that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart. So the LORD said, “I will blot out man whom I have created from the face of the land, man and animals and creeping things and birds of the heavens, for I am sorry that I have made them.” But Noah found favor in the eyes of the LORD."
Here, we see that man's wickedness was so great and that man's heart was so corrupt because of sin that God was "sorry" that He even created man. But there was one, Noah, that found favor in God's eyes. Why did he find favor? Because he honored God. Does this mean that God "believed" in Noah? No, Noah was flesh just like every other man. The only difference in Noah and those that were to be wiped from the earth was Noah's obedience and his faith. It is quite sobering to me to think that God's heart was grieved with His creation. This puts us in a quandary because it seems as if God had made a mistake and we know that God cannot make mistakes, right? There was no mistake made...sin was running rampant. God's grief was not in the creation, but what His creation had become and WHY they had become that way. Sin dominated every thought of man. Why would a holy God "believe" in sinful man?
Jeremiah 17:9 says that the heart of man is desperately wicked and cannot be understood. God searches the heart. God knows every thought and intention of man (Psalm 139) and God knows that sin has made man imperfect, although Adam and Eve were created in perfection. If God knows what's in the heart of man, and God knows that man's heart is wicked...again, I ask, WHY would He "believe" in us as if we are His God? The bible says in Psalm 100 that we are His people, the sheep of His pasture and it is He that has made us and NOT we ourselves!
Here is the greatest indictment against this "Jesus believes in you" mumbo jumbo. John 2:23-24: Now when he was in Jerusalem at the Passover Feast, many believed in his name when they saw the signs that he was doing. But Jesus on his part did not entrust himself to them, because he knew all people and needed no one to bear witness about man, for he himself knew what was in man." The word here used for "entrust" is from the same root in the Greek language, pisteuo, that we use for faith! In other words, Jesus had NO FAITH in them because he KNEW what was in them! The disciples spent three years with Jesus and they all (with the exception of John) deserted Him when He was arrested. Peter denied Him three times, and he was the "leader" of the disciples.
To say that Jesus believes in man is to reduce Jesus down to a man. It's foolish to believe that God would put faith in anything other than Himself. EVERYTHING that is outside of God is fallible. Man is not always trustworthy, God is immovable, unshakable and does not change. Man is wicked and we have evil intentions but God is the giver of all good and perfect gifts. Man is flesh and will die, God is immortal! Do you see my point? It is very simple. The equation works better the other way around. We need to place our trust in God, we need to "believe" in Jesus! God needs nothing, man needs everything- we can't even breathe without God's permission! Put your faith in God knowing that we are too weak and frail for God to put any trust in us. Does God ENtrust things to us? Yes, but He does so knowing beforehand when we will mess up, when we will blow it and when we will get it right and with the expressed understanding that without His Spirit guiding us, we are totally lost and clueless!
I couldn't serve a god that placed faith in man. I am glad that not only does God not "believe" in us, He changed the game and made "belief" in His Son, Jesus Christ, the ONLY way back to Him. He also let us know that, on our own, we are not trustworthy and we need a way out- once again, salvation through Christ alone is our way out. Renewing of the mind, putting off the old man, receiving a new nature to contend with and combat the old, sinful nature are all a part of the process that God has to sanctify those that believe in Jesus...a process that has everything to do with God's grace and nothing to do with His faith in man. God bless you and may His peace be upon you.
Sunday, May 5, 2013
Praise God Anyhow...
Life is a constant struggle to remain a. faithful b. loving and c. sane. This is not a multiple choice exam, it is the truth. When things come up and seek to dislodge us from God, staying faithful to the same God that we expect to be our protector from those things is difficult. When times are hard, sometimes we don't feel like showing love to others. When I am in a jam, I sometimes feel like pulling my hair out!
I know that I am not the only person that feels this way. My job is not to do a better job at these things, but to do a better job of depending on the Lord. We have to depend on the Lord and know that He is constantly in control. He's at the control panel of the universe and since the world began, He has never made a mistake and hit the wrong button.
Habakkuk 3:17-19 gives us a powerful tool to keep in our arsenal of prayer. Let's look a those three verses:
I know that I am not the only person that feels this way. My job is not to do a better job at these things, but to do a better job of depending on the Lord. We have to depend on the Lord and know that He is constantly in control. He's at the control panel of the universe and since the world began, He has never made a mistake and hit the wrong button.
Habakkuk 3:17-19 gives us a powerful tool to keep in our arsenal of prayer. Let's look a those three verses:
Though the fig tree should not blossom,
nor fruit be on the vines,
the produce of the olive fail
and the fields yield no food,
the flock be cut off from the fold
and there be no herd in the stalls,
yet I will rejoice in the Lord;
I will take joy in the God of my salvation.
God, the Lord, is my strength;
he makes my feet like the deer’s;
he makes me tread on my high places.
nor fruit be on the vines,
the produce of the olive fail
and the fields yield no food,
the flock be cut off from the fold
and there be no herd in the stalls,
yet I will rejoice in the Lord;
I will take joy in the God of my salvation.
God, the Lord, is my strength;
he makes my feet like the deer’s;
he makes me tread on my high places.
To the choirmaster: with stringedd instruments.
We need to understand that Habakkuk was written during a time of turmoil for Israel. Habakkuk prophesied either while the Israelites were under Babylonian rule or Assyrian rule. His writing is peppered with emotional cries to God for salvation of His people. What we witness when reading his prophetic work is this, Habakkuk was very honest with God and he was also very upset with his circumstances. However, he does not allow his circumstances to control him. He closes his prophecy with these three verses here that are a small part of a larger prayer. He says, although things look bad, there is no food, no livestock and no oil..YET, I will rejoice in the Lord.
How is this possible? When we look at the first few verses, we see that before these verses are written, Habakkuk is recounting the deeds of God and remembering that the God that he is able to rejoice in is all powerful and almighty! It's hard to rejoice in a god that can't do all things! But, the God that we serve is mighty and He's strong and He has never lost a battle.
One other thing that we should consider here...this is not just a typical prayer. This particular part of Habakkuk's work is dedicated to God as a praise. The first two chapters are where Habakkuk vents his frustrations but this third chapter is different. In the very first verse, Habakkuk indicates that this prayer is according to "Shigionoth". According to Easton's Bible Dictionary, the word denotes
a lyrical poem composed under strong mental emotion; a song of impassioned
imagination accompanied with suitable music.
J. Lee Grady (Charisma Magazine "When Times Get Tough ")makes the following observations: There is some debate over the exact meaning of this musical term, but scholars translate the Hebrew as “a highly emotional poetic form.” Shigionoth is not slow, whiny or sad, and Habakkuk 3 is not a cry-in-your-beer ballad. Shigionoth is a high form of praise—wild, rhythmic and exuberant. It is praise with pumped-up volume and no limits; it is worship punctuated with exclamation marks!"
So we see Habakkuk praises God through this disappointing time and he wrote an entire chapter as a song of praise to God! Notice this as well, in the chapter, only one verse (verse 17) is dedicated to the problem...but the entire rest of the chapter is dedicated to either 1. glorifying God for his might or 2. praising God for who He is!
I'm not advocating that you go and compose a song, what I am saying is this: remember who we serve, remember His power, remember that He is not on our time (2 Peter 3:9) and if you have to pray to God through your tears...that's OK too! We are programmed with emotions from the very beginning, to deny them is to deny a part of us that God gave us. Should we be led by our emotions, no because they can deceive us. Can emotion be a a response to our issues- yes, when those emotions are guided by God's Spirit!
Cry, shout and rejoice that God is your God! Even when the trees are bare, remember that He can bring fruit back to them (Joel 2:18-25). When the water dries up, He can do a new thing and bring springs up in the wilderness (Isaiah 43:19-21). When the oil runs low, God can take that oil and multiply it (1 Kings 17:16)!
May the grace of God be upon you and may God make His face to shine on you and give you peace.
Saturday, April 20, 2013
God, Science and HIV
Have you ever heard the phrase, "Who woulda thunk it?" If I am not mistaken, the first time that I heard it was on the movie "A Cabin in the Sky". Usually, when something is presented that is beyond belief or too simple to be true, that's a good phrase to use. I went to a seminar yesterday and the speaker was Dr. James Hildreth, Dean of Biological Sciences and the University of California at Davis. His talk centered around the role of cholesterol with respect to HIV replication. Quiet as it is kept, cholesterol drives HIV replication. HIV basically uses cholesterol as fuel. It was amazing to learn this information because I had never heard it before.
As Dr. Hildreth talked about his research, he mentioned a serendipitous discovery. What they found out was that a rather innocuous compound, beta-cyclodextrin, actually shows some activity versus HIV. They were using it to make a different drug soluble but what they found out was astounding. They found out that beta-cyclodextrin actually robs HIV of cholesterol and kills the virus! In some cases, it dropped the levels of the virus to undetectable levels. This is not an antiretroviral drug, it doesn't cost $10,000.00 per year, as HIV/AIDS treatments do (there is very little new data on the cost of treatment and many new therapies are combination therapies that are very expensive- see HIV therapies and The Business of HIV) and it is harmless to everything else in the body besides HIV. I sat awestruck at this discovery. How could something so simple have such a profound impact on one of the most dreaded diseases of the 20th century? Who woulda thunk it?

So, where am I going with this? Discoveries like these have to be divinely inspired! There is simply no way that anyone would ever make that connection and perform the requisite experiments to prove it. Which is where Dr. Hildreth impressed me to the point that I talked about him all the way home to myself and to my wife. When he was studying this compound and its effect on HIV and he noticed that the compound basically rips a hole in the HIV infected cell to remove cholesterol from it, he said that every time he looked into his microscope, he saw God's glory revealed to him. He immediately glorified God for this discovery and for the wisdom and ability to conduct this research. I was floored. He never denied the connection between God and science, which is what many scientists do because science is a humanistic area of study. Scientists want to believe that everything in the world and on the planet is a godless mess that we must figure out. My take, as a scientist and a Christian, is that everything in the world is a God-created miracle that God slowly removes the covers from and slowly gives man the wisdom to understand. Diseases and other harmful things that exist do so, not because of God's creation of defective things, but because of sin's destructive effects on God's once perfect creation. I also believe that the cure for every disease exists in some natural source, many of which we have yet to discover. Put another way, for every medical defect that sin causes, God put a cure in place to defeat it. We just have to find it. They are in the process of phase-I clinical trials which I am certain will be successful because of how benign cyclodextrins are to humans and how safe they have already proven to be. Dr. Hildreth has plans underway to develop a cream containing this compound, which could be literally be produced for $0.10 per tube and given away by the governments in places that have heretofore been devastated by HIV/AIDS.
A scripture that comes to mind is found in 1 Corinthians 1:25 which says simply that God's foolishness is wiser that man's wisdom. God is so infinitely intelligent and wise until man's wisdom could never figure Him out. He knew prior to Adam's sin what would happen and from the foundations of the world had a Lamb (Revelation 13:8; 1 Peter 1:20) prepared to deal with sin and its outworking. Thank God that every solution is in Christ Jesus! It is only by His Spirit that wisdom, that comes from God (James 1:5), is given to man. Thank you Jesus for being the solution and for being the creator and giving us all things that we need. Grace and peace be upon you.
Monday, April 1, 2013
Where Were You on Sunday Morning
Whew! It's been a month since my last post. I can hardly believe that but I've been crazy busy lately. Between my job, two children and a wife, baseball season and a house that can NEVER seem to stay clean, I am up to my neck in stuff to do. I want to share something with you that I actually preached yesterday. The Lord put this into my spirit as I was driving to work last week. I got a text from my pastor asking me if I could preach and I knew that the Holy Ghost was lining things up. The theme for the sermon was "Where were you on Sunday morning". I hope that it blesses you.
Introduction (Texts Luke 4:9-13 and Luke 24:1-6)
Introduction (Texts Luke 4:9-13 and Luke 24:1-6)
In the fourth chapter of Luke, the temptation of Jesus is recorded. Jesus, the son of the living god, the word made flesh, the hypostatic union of god and man is led into the wilderness by the Holy Spirit to be tempted by the devil. Hebrews 4:15 says that he was tempted in every way and he fully experienced the human condition, but was without sin.
How many know that because of this temptation, Jesus is able to sympathize with our weakness! He knows that the spirit is often willing but the flesh is weak! He knows every device the devil uses against us and therefore, we can approach god’s throne and find grace and mercy when we need it!
In the text, Jesus is face to face with our most powerful enemy- the devil himself. When Satan was tempting Jesus in the wilderness, he made three statements all including an “if” (Luke 4: verses 3, 7, and 9). If is a conjunction which is used to suggest that something is being called into question. “IF” is Satan's main weapon. He cannot tell the truth, so he tries to get us to doubt the truth. He did the same thing in the Eden with Eve when he questioned God's instructions to her by asking “did god really say that?”
In the temptation of Christ, Jesus is famished and tired. He’s been in the wilderness with no food or water for 40 days straight! This is a desert: sandy, mountainous terrain with the sun beating down on Him! Add to it the devil’s temptation and you have a recipe for a breakdown! Now, the devil’s motive was the same here as it was in Eden. He brought the sonship and deity of Jesus into question by feigning doubt with his statement of ”if you are the son of God…” He was challenging the validity of Jesus' testimony. 40 days earlier, Jesus had just been baptized and confirmed as God’s Son by the Spirit resting on him like a dove but now he was in the fight of his human life.
Jesus was 100% God and 100% human and the temptation gives us a glimpse into the nature of Satan. His job and intent is to stir up the flesh. Satan says “if” to the flesh in order to stir it up, to suppress the spirit and to make us act contrary to what God has already said.
Satan is a master at trying to create conflict between man and God. He wants to raise doubts and cause us to question the truth, power and faithfulness of god. If he can do that, then he has created a conflict. He did it in Genesis and as a reminder; a flaming sword turning in every direction east of the garden of Eden is there to ensure that no one will ever enter there.
What we have to understand is this: yes, the devil will try to raise doubts and questions but God’s word is truth and we must stand on what god said over any doubts that we might have implanted by Satan
An opportune time:
Luke says here in verse 13 that the devil departed from Jesus until an “opportune” time. The Greek word kairos is used for time in lieu of the word chronos. Chronos describes hours/minutes) but kairos describes the right “moment” or “season”. Opportune times are usually times of high emotion, stress or depression! That’s why Paul tells us not to give the devil a foothold through anger, that’s why Satan is described as a roaring lion, that’s why we must stay sober minded- he is looking for the right moment to attack!
So if we trace the life of Jesus and His ministry, we can see instances where Satan just kept showing up. Let's look at it:
Working through the religious leaders: Jesus was in his hometown and drove out a mute demon! Satan used the Pharisees to accuse Jesus of working with Satan to accomplish his miracles- then- Satan tried to make the people think that Jesus was crazy- it got so bad that his mother and brothers showed up! In Mark 3:21, they said “he has lost his senses…” he’s gone crazy! Jesus straightened them out, Jesus said I don’t work for the strong man; I came to bind him up and rob his house! This is good news because once the strong man is bound up; everything he stole from you is coming back! Jesus said I cast out demons by the finger of God! I’m setting people free by the power of God! I am breaking chains by the power of the Holy Ghost!
The religious leaders couldn’t touch Jesus. Even those closest to the religious leaders were starting to believe! In John 7, the temple police who were sent to arrest Jesus said, “no one has ever spoken like him!” Nicodemus (well-known Pharisee) said, “We should hear from him before passing judgment…
Working through the disciples: When Satan can’t get you, he tries to get close to you? The devil couldn’t trap Jesus using the religious leaders…so, he tried to get to the disciples
At Caesarea Philippi, in Matthew 16:16, Peter confesses Jesus as the Christ and then, 5 verses later, when Jesus is prophesying his death, the same Peter starts to rebuke Jesus saying “…this shall never happen to you”. Jesus turned to peter and said…get behind me Satan! Satan knew that if he could keep Jesus off the cross, he could keep god’s kingdom from being established in the earth! The sacrifice of Jesus on Calvary was God's way doing a new thing! It was God making a way out of no way and giving water in dry places! It had to happen.
The disciples argued over who would be the greatest in the kingdom, not understanding that being the greatest in the kingdom meant being last, washing feet, loving the least of these, loving the poor and the broken hearted!
A little later on, they were sitting at the dinner table and Jesus simply turned to Judas and told him what you do, do it quickly. Satan entered into him right there in the presence of Jesus (John 13:27), and for 30 pieces of sliver Judas sold Jesus out!
Even at the cross: When the disciple angle didn’t work, Satan got bold, he even showed up at the cross! At the cross, Satan was STILL challenging the Godhood of Jesus. There were people standing around the cross saying “If you are the Son of God, save yourself!” The thief on the cross says this: Save yourself then save us - as if they deserved saving! Men walked by wagging their heads and deriding Jesus!
The devil was again trying to raise doubts. What he was saying is this, “hey Jesus, do you really think that you are supposed to die for all these people that hate your guts? Come on down from there and save yourself. Don’t those nails hurt? You can wear a real crown, not a crown of thorns. You can come down and be a king right here on earth!”
He showed up to try to undo what put in motion from the foundation of the earth! Jesus didn’t come to be an earthly king- he said to Pilate (John 18:36) - “my kingdom is not of this world…” Jesus came to establish the KINGDOM of Heaven on earth using earthly subjects! Jesus did not come to save Himself; He came to save those that would trust Him as their savior, through His death.
Friday Evening: A Change has come
Something started to change on Friday evening. The sun went black, there was a great earthquake and the temple veil was torn in two. WHEN Jesus gave up the ghost, even the Roman soldier at the cross started praising God saying “surely, this man must be the Son of God!” [Matthew 27:54; Mark 15:39]- The light bulb came on for Him…he had an epiphany!
This is what the Lord spoke to me: SOMEONE HERE IS STRUGGLING TO BELIEVE…STRUGGLING WITH BELIEVING THAT JESUS IS REAL: When we begin to understand that God is real, cannot lie, cannot make a mistake, that Jesus is real and that He really came – and hold on to the truth…WE CANNOT BE TOUCHED!
The physical may get touched but FAITH SAYS “WE KNOW WHAT WE KNOW!” Faith says “GOD IS FAITHFUL!” and WE HOLD ON TO THAT!
No matter what anyone says, we have unspeakable joy that comes from God and when you’ve held on to Jesus for a while, you have evidence that Jesus will do everything that He said! Yes we still make mistakes BUT WE SERVE A GOD THAT HONORS OUR FAITH! GOD IS REAL, and if we confess our sins God is faithful and just to forgive us! He’s full of lovingkindness, slow to anger and He rewards those that diligently seek Him.
The Million Dollar Question: Satan, where were you on Sunday Morning?
The bible says that it was early in the morning when Mary came to the (Luke 24:1-6) and the stone was rolled away BUT THERE WAS NO ONE INSIDE! There were two angels there that asked, “Why are you looking for the living among the dead? He is not here but He is risen.” Remember he told you all these things?"
Here is the million dollar question…”SATAN, WHERE WERE YOU ON SUNDAY MORNING?” Yes you were in the wilderness, in the synagogue with the Pharisees, among the religious leaders, inside of Judas, you were even at the foot of the cross…BUT where were you on Sunday Morning?
Where were you when Jesus, after the humiliation of the cross, got up in glory? When the stone was rolled away? When the Living God got up with ALL POWER?
The empty tomb was one place that the truth could not be denied! This is the CORE of ALL Christianity. God had to protect it! On Sunday morning, the same way that God has Eden guarded, He guarded the tomb of Jesus with two angels SO THAT Satan had NO chance to say, “IF”, “Maybe”; or “listen to this” when the witnesses showed up. He did not give the devil the opportunity to confuse the witnesses.
I will tell you where Satan was…He was DEFEATED! Hebrews 2:14 “Therefore, since the children share in flesh and blood, He Himself likewise also partook of the same, that through death He might render powerless him who had the power of death, that is, the devil,” Sunday morning meant that the only weapon that Satan had, death, was taken away from him! Sunday morning meant that ALL power, even the power over death belonged to Jesus!
Thank God for Sunday Morning!
Death was defeated, the power and penalty of sin was defeated, peace was made with God through Christ's blood, the lost were found through His blood, the far off were brought near through His blood and God was satisfied because just as promised (John 10:18), Jesus got up from the dead!
God bless you and keep you. Sorry for the long delay! Grace and peace be upon you.
God bless you and keep you. Sorry for the long delay! Grace and peace be upon you.
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