Wednesday, April 18, 2012

FLEE AND PURSUE


For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil.  Some people, eager for money, have wandered from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.  But you man of God, flee from all this, and pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, endurance and gentleness.

-          1 Timothy 6:10-11

“The love of money is the root of all evil.”  Although this is one of the most misquoted passages of the Scripture, it is true that becoming consumed with quest for material luxuries can sidetrack even the most well-meaning Christian.  Paul adamantly warns his friends not to allow greed to distract them from the things that are really worth going after: righteousness, godliness, faith, love, endurance, and gentleness.

So how do we acquire all these great things?  We must ask God to build them into our lives.  Then be ready for the way He does so!  For example, is God allowing you to go through hard times?  Now is a great time to learn endurance! Don’t quit.  Don’t give up hope.  Endurance is learned by enduring, not by avoiding hardship at all costs.  What about pursuing love?  Maybe God has linked us in some way with a person who is very hard to love.  Love that person anyway!  Pray for her.  Do something kind for him.  Love grows the most when it’s the hardest, and the person who is hardest to love probably needs love the most.

Pursuing riches takes a lot of effort.  So does pursuing godliness.  Each will take us in a different direction.  One leads to grief; the other, to joy.  So choose your path wisely.


Thursday, April 12, 2012

NEAR TO GOD


Come near to God and He will come near to you.  Wash your hands, you sinners, and purify your hearts, you double-minded. – James 4:8

Do we sometimes feel that God is right there with us, and at other times he seems thousands of miles away?  When we pray, is there close communion with God some days, and other days it’s as though our prayers go unheard?  Why does God seem so far away at times?  Is He preoccupied with running the universe?  Is He busy doing battle with Satan or tied up attending to the needs of more important people?  Jesus promised that He would never leave us (Matthew 28:20), yet why are there times when we don’t sense His presence?

James gives the answer to these questions.  “Come near to God and He will come near to you.”  When we’re separated from God, we’re the ones who have strayed, not God.  There may be sin in our lives that we need to confess and then ask for His forgiveness.  Or we may have been distracted by other things, so we’ve neglected to spend time in prayer and Bible study.  When we realize this has happened, we should immediately seek God with all our strength.  We need to keep seeking after Him, until once again, we enjoy close fellowship with Him.


If our relationship with God is cold and distant, examine our life to see if there are sins or attitudes that we need to ask God to remove.  Spend time in prayer and in God’s Word; go to Him with a humble heart and confess our sins. Always remember, God is not the one who changes (Malachi 3:6).  It is us who wander, and it’s our responsibility to return to Him.  He stands ready to love us, to forgive us, and to restore our relationship with Him.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

IN FULL VIEW


A man’s ways are in full view of the Lord, and he examines all his paths.  – Proverbs 5:21


This is a proverb that can either terrify or comfort.  Everything we do and think shows up on what amounts to God’s big screen TV.  The Lord sees all, knows all, observes all, and hears all!

This can terrify us if it means that what shows on the screen is something we don’t want God to see.  But it can comfort us if we realize that we are never alone.  It’s not so much that in God’s eyes we cannot get away with anything; it’s more that if God’s eye is on the sparrow, we know he cares for us.

Let’s think about living this day in that perspective – living and working and conversing under God’s watchful eye.  We remember with joy that we are never out of his sight.  God keeps his loving eye on us – always.  What comfort!  What inspiration – to make each moment count.  To live each moment with Almighty God always available to help, to guide, to give us the right words to say – even to find us when we’ve wandered and are lost.

“Nothing in all creation is hidden from God’s sight,”  Hebrews 4:13 reminds us.  “Everything is uncovered and laid bare before the eyes of Him to whom we must give account.”

Live each day knowing that the God to whom we must give account is the One who enables us to give a good account.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

WHICH WAY TO LEAN




Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. 
-          Proverbs 3:5
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Proverbs 3:5-6 is a commentary on our journey toward “wisdom.”  The “trust” here is something that gets us to “lean” – and not on our own understanding.

You see, it’s impossible to live without leaning.  We “lean” either on our own human ideas and misunderstanding – or on God.  And the writer of these Proverbs is counseling us to lean on God.

Leaning on God, not if but when it goes far enough, will find us falling. But will not be falling on our faces; we’ll be falling on our knees – the posture of trust.  On our knees is where we ought to be – surrendering to God and following God’s leading in wisdom each day.

“In all your ways,” the writer encourages, “acknowledging Him.”  Lean on Me, God says. Trust Me.  Confide in Me.  Consult Me.  Ask Me.  Tell Me your plans for today.  Let Me know the issues you are dealing with.  Share with Me your hopes and dreams, your fears and failures.  In other words, PRAY!

Read Proverbs 3:5-6 again.  Listen to this invitation from God – to you – to come and give yourself to Him so that God can lead you through this day and to Himself.

Jesus put this invitation this way. “Do not let your heart be troubled.  Trust in God; trust also in Me.” (John 14:1).  Please accept this invitation without delay.

www.ChristianBloggersNetwork.com

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

LOOKING AT OURSELVES FIRST (3)


You are condemning yourself, because you who pass judgment do the same things.
– Romans 2:1


Paul wrote the letter of Romans to Jewish Christians who thought they were superior to Gentile Christians.  The Jewish Christians had been raised on God’s holy law, and they looked down their noses at Gentile brothers and sisters whose lives were still pretty rough around the moral edges.  In a blistering argument, Paul nails them to the wall with this simple fact:  having higher standards doesn’t automatically make you better people.  Look at your behavior – that’s what counts.  And, down deep, your behavior is not better than theirs.  You do the same things they do.  Having the laws in your head doesn’t mean they automatically rule your heart.

I read a book on writing the natural way. But having that book doesn’t automatically make me a better writer.  It’s the skill that counts, not how-to manual.

Without the grace of God, we are all on a level playing field when we find ourselves in conflict.  And if we shut God out of our heart, we can be just as mean spirited and selfish as the next person.

God’s kindness leads all of us to repentance.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

LOOKING AT OURSELVES (2)


“Why do you…..pay no attention to the plank in your own eye?” – Matthew 7:3


I think people must have smiled when Jesus spoke these words.  Picture it: a person with fencepost jutting out of one eye while trying to see straight and to poke away at a piece of sawdust in someone else’s eye.

When we get involved in conflicts, it seldom seems to us that we have a fencepost in our own eye.  Most of us will admit to having a speck of sawdust in our eye.  After all, nobody’s perfect.  But the other party is obviously the one with the problem.  Look at them!  Anyone can see that they’re narrow-minded, rude, insensitive, unreliable, inconsistent, and more.

Perhaps they are.  Perhaps they are clearly in the wrong.  But then why would Jesus warn us with such a powerful picture to keep a close eye on ourselves?  Because He said that we will be judged as severely as we judge ourselves.

What should we watch out for?  Well, it’s obviously subtle enough to miss, or we wouldn’t be focused on specks in others; yet it’s also clear enough to detect, because it’s huge.  Here’s a clue.  Had somebody ever said to you, “It’s not what you said; it’s the way you said it,” or even worse, “You seem pleased to be showing me my fault”?

It’s easy to spot, really.  It’s that plain old spirit of judgmentalism.  It’s a condemning spirit.  With that infection present, there’s no way through conflict.

Monday, March 26, 2012

THE TRUE MEANING OF GREATNESS


“Instead, whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wants to be the first must be your slave-just as the Son of Man did not come to be served but to serve, and to give His life as a ransom for many.” Matthew 20:26-28


Wanted : Male or female to be model of success for the world. 
Qualifications : Must be attractive, charming, bright, and physically fit.  Only the wealthy need apply; money can be either earned or inherited but not stolen.  May be required to show evidence of greatness, such as how many persons are serving you.  Good dose of luck helpful but not essential.  Fame definitely an asset.  Send resume’, full-length picture, medical records, and list of important friends.

Wanted : Male of female to be model of success for Christians.
Qualifications : Must be kind, patient, and generous.  Good dose of humility essential.  Selfish applicants need not apply.  May be required to show evidence of greatness, such as how many persons you are serving and how you have been persecuted for your Christian lifestyle.  Only servants will be considered.  Send resume; no picture or medical records or list of influential friends necessary.  It doesn’t matter you look like or how healthy you are or who you know.

If anyone had a right to be served, it was Jesus.  Yet He didn’t come to be served.  He came to serve.  If we are looking for a genuine model of success, we will find it in Jesus.  If we want to have the success Jesus had, we will have to live like He did, as a servant.  Who are we serving right now?