Sunday, February 28, 2021

The Art of Silence

 


I feel like I am forever telling people to, “know your own bent.”

And what I am really saying is - know yourself well enough to know when to walk away… when to know when you’ve had enough of worldly living, and you’re ready to surrender to a Kingdom mindset.

And part of it is also knowing when to speak… and when silence would serve us so much better.

I was reading in a commentary the other day and the words that leapt off the page were these, “there is art of silence.”

And I would add… there is great wisdom in speech that is edifying, and also great wisdom in silence that is necessary.
For both you and for the hearer.

Because whether we believe it to be true of not… everything does not require our commentary.  Just because something enters my mind, doesn’t mean it has to exit my mouth.

Some things are better left alone.
Because misfiring ungodly words as a Jesus-follower ends in a far more serious result,  “I tell you, on the day of judgment people will give account for every careless word they speak.”  (Matt 12:36)

And so I ask Him again today… God, take control of my mouth.  Keep a tight reign over my tongue.  Fill me with wisdom to know when my speech would contribute good, and when my words would only add more noise and distract from Your glory!

Amen?

Amen!

Friday, February 26, 2021

Free From Mixture


 

James 1:6 says this, “But when you ask Him, be sure that your faith is in God alone. Do not waver, for a person with divided loyalty is as unsettled as a wave of the sea that is blown and tossed by the wind.”

And then in verse 8 it says this, “Their loyalty is divided between God and the world, and they are unstable in everything they do.”

And I would say it to a zoom class I was teaching, “Read until you hear His voice.”

And I had.
Right here.
In the repeated patterns.  

I see it twice there tucked ever so neatly among the combination of words.

Divided.

A person divided.
Loyalty divided.

And it’s interesting that this word - only found in the book of James - here and again in chapter 4, doesn’t just mean a mind that is divided… it means the “soul” of the man is divided.

It’s a picture image that I conjure up in my mind of a person standing with one foot in the world, and one foot in the Kingdom.

And scripture tells us that it’s dishonoring to God, discrediting to the “Christian”, and damaging to their salvation.  

In fact, it’s James that says, “friendship with the world makes you an enemy of God.”  James even realized it’s importance, and places emphasis on it by saying, “I say it again: If you want to be a friend of the world, you make yourself an enemy of God.”  (all this in one verse, 4:4)

One of the commentaries I was reading concerning this bit of text said this, “The ground of this instability is the diversity fo those principles upon which he acts; his heart is not pure and free from mixture, and therefore his actions are thus repugnant.”

It was the word, “mixture”, that got to me.
Because I had been reading it in several others places, including Number 11, which talks about the Israelites being among the “mixed multitudes” in their journey through the wilderness into their promised land.  (verse 4)

These “mixed multitudes” were the remnant of Egyptians that traveled with them in part of their escape from captivity.  And they served no good purpose to the people of God.

In fact, it was their evil influence that led God’s people down a slippery slope of complaining about what they described as their frustrating circumstances since leaving Egypt.

They were negatively impacted by their grumbling companions.

And so an investigative look into the word "mixture" reveals this = "any combination or blend of different elements, kinds, qualities.  Two or more substances that aren’t chemically united and exist in no fixed proportion to each other.  Different ingredients blended without order."

And even further, in chemistry, the word “mixture” means this = "where two or more substances unite by chemical attraction and losing their distinct properties, they form a compound differing in properties from either ingredients."

WOW.

So could it be that by mixing with the wrong crowd, I could risk losing my unique and God-given property altogether?  Could it be that mixture with bad elements could permanently damage my purity, and render me, as verse 7 in James 1 tells us, “such people should not expect to receive anything from the Lord.”

It is the most frightening prospect we could meet with.

And so I beg God to help me stay undivided in my pursuit of Him.
To maintain purity as best I can.
And to refrain from the mixture that serves to divide me further from my first love.

Thursday, February 25, 2021

Pray For Strength

 

We have to pray for strength.


It doesn’t mean we are weak.  

Acknowledging our need for Jesus and the power of the Holy Spirit is strength!


I had this thought the other day.  Because I hear people say it all the time.  “I thought once I started following Jesus, everything would be so much better.  But instead, I feel like things got more and more difficult.”


While the heart of the new believer is open and receptive to hearing the voice of God, I think it’s also just as painfully and equally opened and receptive to an enemy intrusion.


Before your life was changed, you were no real threat to the enemy.


And now you are.


In fact, you are a perfect target.


And trust me when I tell you he DOES NOT want to see you following Jesus with your full heart.


And he will do anything he can do distract you, disarm you, and disable you.


We must pray for the strength to stay in love with Jesus.
We must pray for the strength to follow Jesus wholeheartedly.
We must pray for the strength to step out of darkness and into light.

James 4:7 says this, “So humble yourselves before God, resist the devil and he will flee from you.”

Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Dear Christian Friend... Please Stop

 


I would write it in an Instagram post a few months ago.
And it seems still appropriate to say again.

To my Christian friends on social media: Please… please stop arguing on your platforms.  Stop defending yourselves against “fools.”  (Prov 9:7, 23:9, Mt 7:6)

You might not believe this - but you are are not changing minds.
You’re not winning souls to Jesus.

Instead you’re compromising your reputation, my reputation, and forgetting all of that - HIS reputation.
You’re damaging the effectiveness of the Gospel going forward.
You’re confusing the would-be believer.
You’re celebrating division and making friends with the world.  
You’re linking arms with the ruler of the world.

You’re setting the church back, rendering us useless, and making it more difficult every day for those who make sacrificial choices to, “pick up their cross and follow Him.”

This is holy ground, friends.
This is precious time we’ve been given.

Ezra says it best, “We have been given a brief moment of grace.”  (9:8)
One He didn’t have to allow.

Be transformed by the renewing of your minds.
Be Jesus with skin on.
The battle belongs to the Lord.

Tuesday, February 23, 2021

Come Out!

 

Our assignment is clear according to 2 Cor 6:17.
“Come out from them and be separate.”
“Touch no unclean thing.”


His promise, when we do, is also clear.
“And then {He} will receive you.”

The time has never been more critical.
To separate from the world.
To be different from the ones who love the world.

Because James is pretty straightforward in his words, “friendship with the world makes you an enemy of God.”  (James 4:4)

It was James who also echoed his brother, Paul, in the faith, “Wash your hands, you sinners; purify your hearts, for your loyalty is divided between God and the world.”  (James 4:8)

We must remain clean.
Especially in this season.  
We are not people of God… we are not belonging to Him… if we cannot learn to rise above, to be set apart, and keep clean from all filthiness that seeks to defect our very souls; all the while damaging our witness, and destroying our effectiveness.

Come out from the rest of them.
Live like you have been redeemed.
Touch no unclean thing.

And then… He will receive you as His.

Monday, February 22, 2021

Offend To Expose


What I have painfully learned over the course of my life is that God will often offend my mind to expose my heart.

In John, chapter 6, we see this sobering thought that the men who had hopped on a boat in search for the One they called, “Rabbi” (verse 25), were only looking for Him to be fed.  Jesus had just performed the miracle of food multiplication, and the band of so-called “students" were, once again, hungry and looking for provision.  

Jesus tells them, “I tell you the truth, you want to be with Me because I fed you, not because you understood the miraculous signs.  But don’t be concerned with perishable things like food.  Spend your energy seeking the eternal life that the Son of Man can give you.”  (verses 26-27)

But there was more to their inquiry: they wanted to perform the miracles too.

And Jesus responds, “The only work God wants from you is to believe in the One He sent you.”  (verse 29)

But they pressed Him further, “Show us a miraculous sign IF You want us to believe in You.  What can You do?” (verse 30)

Oh the stubbornness of the hard-hearted people.
It’s almost unbelievable to read.

We see Jesus explaining that He is the bread of life, and whoever comes to Him will never be hungry again.

And they still couldn’t accept His words.

Scripture tells us that they made several mistakes here:
they began to “murmur” in disagreement.  (verse 41)
they were “complaining” about what He had said.  (verse 43)
they began “arguing” with each other about what He meant.  (verse 52)
they were “offended” over His odd teaching.  (verse 61)

And it would ultimately be the things that blinded their eyes, and made them unable to receive Him as Lord.  Sadly scripture tells us that, “At that point many of His disciples turned away and deserted Him.”  (verse 66)

And so we see here such a great example of the way these “followers” of Jesus fell away.
It was by their murmuring, their complaining, their arguing, and their well preserved offense.

Offense in the bible is not the same as the word offense is in our English language today.  The biblical definition for offense is “stumbling block.”
Ultimately we see that Jesus was less concerned about “feelings” (what we associate with the word offense today), and more concerned about the inevitable injury sustained by sin-filled choices.

These men used the words of Jesus… the ones who were, “spirit and life” (verse 63), to offend their minds… to put a stumbling block between their flesh and righteous Kingdom-living… and it ultimately caused a rejection that exposed their true heart and resulted in untimely spiritual death.

Jesus seems to have been more willing to work with unbelief than He was willing to work with offensive spirits who were filled with murmuring, complaints, and arguing.  The very stumbling blocks they erected with contaminated hands.

God will often offend our minds to expose my heart.
What will He find?

Saturday, February 20, 2021

A Heartfelt Open Letter To The Relevant Church

 


Jeremiah 7:8-11.

The Lord was speaking through the prophet Jeremiah when he told the people this, “‘Don’t be fooled into thinking that you will never suffer because the Temple is here. It’s a lie! Do you really think you can steal, murder, commit adultery, lie, and burn incense to Baal and all those other new gods of yours, and then come here and stand before Me in my Temple and chant, ‘We are safe!'—only to go right back to all those evils again? Don’t you yourselves admit that this Temple, which bears My name, has become a den of thieves? Surely I see all the evil going on there. I, the Lord, have spoken!’”

The truth was this was not a temple God had asked them to build.
It was man-centered, man-created temple.

And the mistake was made that God valued the temple for itself.

It represented the heart of David, who we KNOW had a heart after God, and so it was accepted as the best he could do… but there was no fundamental sacredness in this particular temple.

It was the improper focus that served as the error of the people.
We see that even some of the older priests, Levites, and other leaders who had seen the first temple, “wept aloud when they saw the new temple’s foundation” being built.  (Ez 3:11-13)  

Perhaps it was because the focus had shifted from being a God-centered sanctuary to a man-centered shrine.

Their focus was simply misplaced.

I have been saying it for a number of years now.  
I think we have lost our awe and reverence for the Lord.

No, we haven’t forgotten altogether how wonderful He is, but we have simply allowed worldliness to diminish our continual adoration and devotion to the King.

We sing songs in worship on Sunday about how good He is and how faithful He is, and then complain on Monday morning when our car won’t start.
We experience a personal encounter with Jesus in our quiet time so rich it’s power should carry us for months, but then we walk away and appear as James warns us about, “it is like glancing at your face in a mirror, you see yourself walk away, and forget what you look like!”  (James 1:23-24)

Oh that we would return to our first love.
That we would shift our focus on Jesus.

And that our churches would forget all about being relevant and remarkable.
It’s not our church, anyway… it’s the Lord’s.
And He isn’t concerned with glitz and glamour.  
He isn’t concerned with temple worship that competes with worldly entanglement.

He’s concerned that hearts aren’t right.
He’s concerned that we haven’t learned to praise Him past a Sunday service.
He’s concerned that we’re more fixated on gathering around a sermon than we are about gathering around the dirt-stained sandals of the Savior.

This is the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords.  
The one who will share His glory with no other.  (Isaiah 42:8)

Oh dear church… are we too focused on being “relevant” and ever so “remarkable” while the people within it’s temple walls are becoming more alienated in heart from the God of the Temple??

Friday, February 19, 2021

Praying For Spiritual Leaders

 


Do you pray for your pastor regularly?
Do you pray for spiritual leaders?

Oh how we should be.
The battle they face daily is far heavier than we realize.

Isaiah was a spiritual leader who was called to serve people who’s hearts he would have to harden, and who’s eyes he would have to shut. (Isaiah 6:10)

Jeremiah was called to spiritually oversee and minister to people without expectation that they would listen, to a nation who refused to be taught, and to people who allowed truth to vanish from among them.  (Jeremiah 7:27-28)

And Ezekiel was a prophet called to the exiled people who were serving time already in a punishment they deserved, yet a place that broke God’s heart to see them there.   He was ordered to give his warnings to the people, “whether they listened or not” (Ezekiel 3:11) and was led by God into bitterness and turmoil for the sins he felt the people had committed against their faithful Father.  (3:14)

In fact, Ezekiel had such a strong assignment as the Watchman for the Lord, that God held him personally responsible for the disobedience of those he was called to if he failed to communicate the appropriate message to them.  (3:16-21)

It was a weighty responsibility.
And all three of these faith-filled, God-fearing men took seriously their call, and yet at the same time felt the burden the duty carried with it.

It has never been a more urgent time to pray for our pastors and those who are in ANY sort of spiritual leadership.

They carry with them every day the weight of responsibility for the people they are entrusted to.  

While the hearts of hearers are fickle… theirs must remain strong.
While the faithless stumble… they must remain steady.
While the doubtful fade… they must remain stable and certain.
All while hurting themselves.
All while often experiencing rejection and exclusion.

Ephesians 6:18-20, “Pray in the Spirit at all times and on every occasion. Stay alert and be persistent in your prayers for all believers everywhere. And pray for me, too. Ask God to give me the right words so I can boldly explain God’s mysterious plan that the Good News is for Jews and Gentiles alike. I am in chains now, still preaching this message as God’s ambassador. So pray that I will keep on speaking boldly for Him, as I should.”

Colossians 4:3, 4, “Pray for us, too, that God will give us many opportunities to speak about his mysterious plan concerning Christ. That is why I am here in chains. Pray that I will proclaim this message as clearly as I should.”

2 Thessalonians 3:1, “Finally, dear brothers and sisters, we ask you to pray for us. Pray that the Lord’s message will spread rapidly and be honored wherever it goes, just as when it came to you.”

Let’s be praying boldly and bravely for all of our leaders everywhere.

It really really matters!

Thursday, February 18, 2021

Return To The Lord


In Hosea, chapter 4, the Lord speaks through the prophet to the people of Israel with an explanation for why they find their nation in ruin.

“You make vows and break them; you kill and steal and commit adultery. There is violence everywhere— one murder after another. There is no faithfulness, no kindness, no knowledge of God in your land. That is why your land is in mourning, and everyone is wasting away…” 
(4:1-4)

They made vows and broke them.
They killed.
They stole.
The committed adultery.
There was violence everywhere.
There was no faithfulness.
There was no kindness.
There was not real knowledge of God.

And that was why they found their nation in mourning, and people were passing away.

It is a very bleak portion of scripture.

He goes on to say in verse 6, “My people are destroyed because they don’t know Me.”

And that seems to be the most intolerable of all, as the emphasis here is on their lack of recognizing the importance of relational connection with their first love.

And the call was for the repentance of those living in the sin-filed, heart-sick nation.
“Return to the Lord your God, for your sins have brought you down.  Bring your confessions and return to the Lord.  Say to Him, ‘forgive all our sins and graciously receive us, SO THAT we may offer you are praises.’”  (6:1-2) (Emphasis mine)

Praise wouldn’t even be accepted if their heart wasn’t right.

And so the call for national repentance was … and is… the only way to prevent national ruin.  It is the only way to restrain the hand of God from striking in sovereign response to self-imposed catastrophe.

Joel 2:13, “Don’t tear your clothing in your grief, but tear your hearts instead. Return to the Lord your God, for He is merciful and compassionate, slow to get angry and filled with unfailing love. He is eager to relent and not punish.”

Zephaniah 2:1-3, “Gather together—yes, gather together, you shameless nation. Gather before judgment begins, before your time to repent is blown away like chaff. Act now, before the fierce fury of the Lord falls and the terrible day of the Lord’s anger begins. Seek the Lord, all who are humble, and follow His commands. Seek to do what is right and to live humbly. Perhaps even yet the Lord will protect you— protect you from His anger on that day of destruction.”


Wednesday, February 17, 2021

Responsibility Over Our Speech

 


We have a responsibility over our speech.

The bible is clear about the issues of the tongue.

First Peter 3:10 says, “If you want to enjoy life and see many happy days, keep your tongue from speaking evil and your lips from telling lies.”

Colossians 4:6 says, “Let you conversation be gracious and attractive, so that you will have the right response for everyone.”  The KJV uses the word ‘salt’ for attractive.  Our words are to salted…properly preserved.

Ephesians 4:29 says, “Don’t use foul or abusive language. Let everything you say be good and helpful, so that your words will be an encouragement to those who hear them.”

Proverbs 10:19 says, “Too much talk leads to sin. Be sensible and keep your mouth shut.”

And these are just to name a few of the places where we are warned against the words we speak.

The time has never been more crucial for us to live like Jesus.
The One who only did what He saw the Father do, and only said what He heard the Father say.

And we have a responsibility to not only keep pure and clean the words we speak, but also to keep in check the words we see our sisters and brothers in Christ saying.  Those who are inside the faith.

Why?

 Because our words are spirit - and in them are the powers of heaven and hell… light and darkness… life or death.  “Words kill, words give life; they’re either poison or fruit—you choose.”  Proverbs 18:21, MSG

And the words of others can shift the very atmosphere we’re living in and affect our the reputation and credibility of an entire body of Christ.

Isaiah 56:3 says this, “Don’t let foreigners who commit themselves to the Lord say, ‘The Lord will never let me be part of His people.’ And don’t let the eunuchs say, ‘I’m a dried-up tree with no children and no future.’”

“Don’t let them SAY.
It would appear here that there was responsibility given to the servants of the Lord to carefully watch over and protect the spoken word of another in the family of God’s grace.

“Foreigners” here were those previously carefully regulated.  Deut 23:3 says of these, “No Ammonite or Moabite or any of their descendants may be admitted to the assembly of the Lord.”  “…. they are to live as foreigners among the Egyptians.” (verse 7)

“Eunuchs” were those in the past who had been emasculated and excluded from the community.  (Deut 23:1)

Both had no share in Israel’s holiness and were considered marginal to God’s kingdom.

But this was a new season they were entering upon.
In the age to come, King Jesus would bring into the fold those who had been previously marginalized, discounted, or forgotten.  “So those who are last now will be first then, and those who are first will be last.” (Matt 20:16)

Here we see this beautiful image of restoration.
And moreover, a call for the body of believers to rehabilitate the speech of those once overlooked.

The promise is found in Isaiah 56:6-8, “I will bless the foreigners who commit themselves to the Lord…. I will bring back them to my holy mountain of Jerusalem and will fill them with joy in my house of prayer.  I will accept their burnt offerings and sacrifices…the sovereign Lord… brings back the outcasts of Israel.”

But we must remind them who they are.
We must remind them Who’s they are.
And we must not let them SAY out loud the words that keep them in their season of painful separation.

Holding others accountable for the spoken word is critical in these shifting seasons.
Because there is life found in the conversation of the cleansed, and as true, death found flowing from an irresponsible mouth that has momentarily forgotten their rightful place in the kingdom of God!

Be careful that your speech doesn’t confine you to the imprisonment of your old lifestyle dear child of God.  “…. if anyone is in Christ, the NEW creation has come: The old has gone, the new is here!”  (2 Cor 5:17)

Tuesday, February 16, 2021

We Can't Prevent, But We Can Forbid


 

I hear it a lot, actually.
“I can’t help it - this is just the way I am!”

God help us if we use The Father to excuse irrational behavior.
“God made me this way!”

And we justify it often by cute Pinterest quotes relating to a self-love movement that is damaging souls and we don’t even realize it.

Jeremiah tells us that this suffering prophet… the one God would call to be a, “Tester of Metals” (6:27)… was appointed to a stubborn and rebellious nation.

Verse 28 describes these people (in God’s words), “They are the worst kind of rebel, full of slander… and they lead others into corruption.”

Take a look at the word slander.  By simple definition it means this = “oral utterance of defamation; to utter or to circulate defamation.”

There seems to be this significance in the spoken word of it all.  An “utterance” or improper, uncontrolled, unrestrained speech.  Some versions call these people, “stubborn talebearers”, and one biblical definition defines them as, “scandal-mongers.”

And God calls them, “the worst kind of rebels.”

Ouch.

It would seem as though the enemy was working hard against these… the ones called by God to be His own children… His own worthy remnant saved by the power of the Almighty.  And by their sinful actions and destructive words - they were wreaking havoc on themselves.

Jeremiah would give a message in the next chapter to these rebels begging them to, “not be fooled by those who promise safety because the Lord’s Temple” was among them.  (7:4)

Though given freedom from sin, they were not at liberty to excuse wrongful living any longer.

It’s interesting how we behave when we see the potential for illness to invade our lives or our home.  

A couple weeks ago a friend of mine was going to make a visit to our house for a couple days, but ended up messaging me that she hadn’t been feeling well the last few days.  While she was certain it was, “just a cold”, we decided to play it safe and reschedule our visit.

You can’t be too cautious these days.

When we become aware of disease or sickness do we say, “Well… it’s just fate that it would run it’s course through me!  I guess I will just get sick!”  
No.  Of course not.
At least I don’t.
We take care to keep the infection away from us.  
We disinfect, and we distance ourselves from the effect of that intrusion.

By nature, we humans are inclined to sinfulness.  Even Paul said, “I don’t really understand myself, for I want to do what is right, but I don’t do it. Instead, I do what I hate.”  (Rom 7:15)

But we have the ability to condition ourselves against the schemes of the enemy.
We cannot, “be fooled by those who promise safety”, or make excuses that, “this is just how I am” - admitting my nature is simply uncontrollable.

You have the power of the resurrected Christ living inside you.  (Rom 8:11)
You have far greater power than you realize!

“Resist the devil and he will flee from you” is what James tells us!  (James 4:7)
But the command goes on... and it just might be the part that our flesh wants to forget, “Come close to God and He will come close to you.  Wash your hands, you sinners, purify your hearts, for your loyalty is divided between God and the world.”  (4:8)

We CAN help it.
And we must.

While we may not have the power to prevent an enemy attack, we do have the power to forbid its evil intention.  The same way we have the power to create distance from the damaging capability of the infectious disease.



When we know and feel the evil in the physical world, we must take every precaution against its effects and its recurrence.

Monday, February 15, 2021

Refrain From Criticism

 

Numbers, chapter 12.

My bible calls this chapter, “The complaints of Miriam and Aaron.”

Miriam and Aaron were the siblings of Moses.  And they most certainly should have been the ones with whom Moses was safe with.  The ones who supported him and encouraged all that God was doing in and through his life.

But it wasn’t.
Not now.

Scripture tells us that, “While they were at Hazeroth, Miriam and Aaron criticized Moses because he had married a cushite woman.”  (verse 1)  While we can’t be certain why this was the case, we can surmise that perhaps these siblings perceived Moses’ marriage as a threat to their status and ambitions.  It is certainly possible that Miriam and Aaron disapproved of this marital union with a non-Israelite, or that they were somehow intimidated by her influence over Moses.

Either way - they allowed their anger to get the best of them, and retaliated against him.

Again, scripture tells us that they, “criticized him.”

And it’s strange to me that their “come back” to Moses for what they were inciting as a “disgraceful union”, was to say out loud, “Has the Lord spoke only through Moses?  Hasn’t He spoken through us, too?”  (verse 2)

Then the bible tells us that, “The Lord heard them.”

It’s interesting to note, that in verse 3 in my bible (the NLT), it adds this side note about Moses, (“Now Moses was very humble - more humble than any other person on earth.)”  Wow.

Scripture continues, “So immediately the Lord called to Moses, Aaron, and Miriam and said, 'Go out to the Tabernacle, all three of you!’ So the three of them went to the Tabernacle.”  (verse 4)

Here is what the Lord said, addressing only Miriam and Aaron in the presence of Moses, “‘Now listen to what I say: ‘If there were prophets among you, I, the Lord, would reveal myself in visions. I would speak to them in dreams. But not with My servant Moses. Of all my house, he is the one I trust. I speak to him face to face, clearly, and not in riddles! He sees the Lord as He is. So why were you not afraid to criticize my servant Moses?’”

I can’t imagine.

And there would be punishment for Miriam (likely because she was older and likely was the instigator in the feud.)

And scripture tells us that God might have destroyed her completely had it not been for the graciousness of Moses to beg her to be pardoned.

And she was.

But I am still so struck with that one line… “why were you not afraid to criticize my servant Moses?”

It should have felt like an abomination.
It should have scared them to even think of condemning another so loved by God.
It should have broke their hearts at the mere thought of belittling of disrespecting one appointed by God.

In fact, it sounds painfully familiar here in a tough political season.

And if nothing else… if we can’t fathom an ounce of consideration for a God-appointed servant, then should it not be the fear of God alone that causes us to never criticize another?  Simple, yet powerful reverence for the Father?

It should.

And if it doesn’t, we should ask why not.

Sunday, February 14, 2021

Sad Day When Would-Not Turns To Cannot

 

In Jeremiah 2:2, the prophet is told, “'Go and cry in the hearing of Jerusalem, saying, ‘Thus says the Lord: ‘I remember you, The kindness of your youth, The love of your betrothal, When you went after Me in the wilderness, In a land not sown.’’”  (NKJV)

Other translations use the word, “proclaim” in the hearing, or even, “shout” the message to Jerusalem, but here we see the order is to, “cry.”

“Cry” in the ears of those in Jerusalem.

We get the idea here that God is inviting his servant, Jeremiah, to engage in the intimacy of the people he was called to.  To bend down with grave concern over the condition of God’s people.

It appears to be a tender image of speaking firmly, yet compassionately, for the people who had forgotten their first love.

The image is of Jeremiah stooping low, ears to the hearers, and with divine exertion to make them listen.

Because they once knew Him… intimately.
They once experienced His presence in the wilderness.
They once longed for His guidance.
And they certainly obtained unwarranted favor by our Gracious God, who had not only relentlessly pursued those He called “His own”, but radically forgave them for the grievances that included idol worship, ingratitude, and altogether abandonment.

The Lord said it in Jeremiah 6:10, “To whom can I give warning? Who will listen when I speak? Their ears are closed, and they cannot hear. They scorn the word of the Lord. They don’t want to listen at all.”

They weren’t listening.
Their ears were intentionally closed.
Some commentaries use this word to describe Israels forsakenness, “desertion”, which means. “willful abandonment, the act of leaving military service ‘without the intention to return.’”  And look at a phrase the dictionary considers as a “word nearby” desertion… “desert fever.”

Their total departure… their willful abandonment… their calculated recklessness, caused a “desert fever” of sorts, now causing the loss of all physical sense including vision and hearing.

The God of the universe was not only ignored, we see Him treated almost as though He were completely unknown.  And they would sorely pay a price for the disownment.  

The overarching call on Jeremiah’s life as a prophet to the stubborn and rebellious people was sobering, at best.  And might have caused him to put a halt to his going out.  “Tell them, all of this,”  said the Lord to Jeremiah, “but do not expect them to listen.  Shout out your warnings, but do not expect them to respond.”  (7:27)

I cannot imagine.
But yet we might be able to see that times are no different for some even now.  
Today.

And it is worth thinking deeply about.
Because the saddest judgement to ever consider is that because of our “would not” attitude in hearing God, we one day discover we “cannot” hear Him.

Amos 8:11-12, “‘The time is surely coming,’ says the Sovereign Lord, ‘when I will send a famine on the land— not a famine of bread or water but of hearing the words of the Lord.  People will stagger from sea to sea and wander from border to border searching for the word of the Lord, but they will not find it.’”

Saturday, February 13, 2021

Separation


 

The order in scripture is clear.
“Be separate.”

Second Corinthians 6:7 says, “Therefore, come out from among unbelievers, and separate yourselves from them… don’t touch their filthy things and I will welcome you.”

The Message version says it, in part, this way, “Don’t link up with those who will pollute you.”

John 17:14 says, “…the world hates them because they do not belong to the world, just as I do not belong to the world.”

Jesus didn’t belong to the world.
It was not His home.
He lived separate.
He was heavenly-focused.

And He called His followers the same.
“They do not belong to this world any more than I do.”  17:16

We don’t belong to this world.
It is not our home.
We are to live separate.
We are to be heavenly-focused.

And the bottom line is that there should be some plain differences between the life of a Christ-follower and of people who’s portion is in this world.

The Jesus-people ought to look different.
And be completely unrecognizable from those whose eyes are earth-centered.  Those who are swayed by circumstances, disturbed by disobedience, and consumed with evil and negativity.



Can we say it of ourselves?


And if not, why?



It’s worth asking the hard questions if it serves to make us more like Jesus.

Friday, February 12, 2021

Keep Above Indifferenece!

 


In the book of Numbers, we see that the Levites had distinct privileges, but they also had significant responsibilities.

They were in charge of carrying the precious treasures that adorned the Ark of the Covenant.  And another important task they had was guarding the Tabernacle from any unauthorized entry.

We find in chapter 18, God even gave strict order to Aaron that he was not to allow the Levites to go near the sacred items at the Alter.  The punishment if they did?  Death to them - and to Aaron.

It was an incredible task.

My commentary suggests that, “The Levites, however reverently they might at first bear the Ark and holy vessels, would gradually and insensibly contract a sort of indifference.  The burdens would become like other burdens, thoughtlessly and mechanically borne.”  It goes on to say this, “It is no easy matter for such as to have to exhibit God’s truth to an indifferent world to keep above indifference themselves.  All the more reason, therefore, that they should be on their guard.”

Wow.

Indifference.
Their burden… their assignment… their God-given responsibility… caused indifference the people of God.

Indifference means this = “lack of interest or concern; unimportance; mediocre; apathy; insensibility.”

And I wonder if we, the Jesus-people, need to be reminded of this?

And guard fiercely against indifference.

To refuse to be lukewarm for Jesus.
To soldier on in the purpose He has for us.
To labor against mediocrity and formality that destroys our spiritual progression.

The Christian profession requires guarding against anything that causes declination.
It demands ongoing oversight, continual attention, perpetual concentration, self-denial, and patience.

The Gospel advancement is dependent upon our remaining steadfast and guarding against anything that would render our witness ineffective.

Keep above indifference, friend.

Thursday, February 11, 2021

It's A Heart Issue

 


The Israelites wanted a king.
In an effort to be like the rest of the nations, they wanted what they thought they needed.

“Give us a king to judge us like all the other nations have.”  (1 Sam 8:5)

They were His people… and God was to be their King.
“I will walk among you; I will be your God, and you will be my people.”  (Lev 26:12)

And it stops me in my tracks when, just after Samuel lists out all the reasons the people didn’t actually want a king, he says this, “When the day comes, you will beg for relief from this king you are demanding, but then the Lord will not help you.” (1 Sam 8:18)

“But the people refused to listen to Samuel. ‘No!’ they said. ‘We want a king over us.’”  (1 Sam 8:19)

So the Lord gave them what they wanted.

And King Saul was the result.
Saul was God’s response… the answer to the plea of the people.

All along God was to the their King.
And it has been a slow fade from this beginning… of living removed from the desperate necessity of His Kingship.

Often as the very punishment for rebellion and ingratitude, we get what we ask for and suffer significant consequences that linger for thousands of years to come.

We saw it with the complaining and ungrateful rebels in the wilderness.
They wanted food.
God gave them manna.
They rejected the provision.
They longed to return to the discomfort if it meant better meals.
And so God answered them.
He brought them quail.
So much of it that it made them gag.
And then a plague was their reward.  (Numbers 11)

Isaiah says it.
“I will make boys their leaders, and toddlers their rulers.”  (Is 3:4)
“People will oppress each other— man against man, neighbor against neighbor. Young people will insult their elders, and vulgar people will sneer at the honorable.”  (Is 3:5)
“In those days a man will say to his brother, ‘Since you have a coat, you be our leader! Take charge of this heap of ruins!’”  (Is 3:6)
“In that day he will cry out, ‘I have no remedy for this mess!  Don’t make me your leader!”  (Is 3:7, TPT)

They invited disaster upon themselves.

They ignored the One who was their true Leader… the Sovereign Lord… and because of that they were left with those who had no remedy.

They wanted a king.
They needed the Lord.

When Moses was the leader in charge of the Israelites and by the command of God, leading them out of their captivity in Egypt, they were dissatisfied with whom they received.  Ahh… and it wasn’t Moses they were rejecting, it was God Himself.
“Let’s choose a new leader and go back to Egypt” they said. (Numbers 14:4)

When they didn’t receive the delicious food they craved, and didn’t get the report from Canaan they were expecting, they dishonored the one God had appointed, and in anger demanded their “right” to a new leader.  Ahh… but leadership change would mean nothing as long as their hearts weren’t right.

And it won’t now.  
It’s not a leadership issue.
It never has been.
It’s a heart issue.

Oh how much has changed and yet how much has simply remained the same.

God help our unbelief.
And our abandonment of our One True God… the only King we’ve ever needed.

Guard Well!

 


Ezra, chapter 8.
The Temple had been rebuilt.
The exiles were returning to Jerusalem, and Ezra had appointed leaders and priests to be in charge of transporting expensive items to be presented for the temple.

And he says this to them, “I weighed the treasure as I gave it to them.”  (vs 26)

I almost cry when I read those words.

And I read it again.

“I weighed the treasure as I gave it to them.”

And it was a significant requirement.
The treasure was of great value.
24 tons of silver.
7,500 pounds of silver articles.
7,500 pounds of gold.
This… just to name some of the treasures.

And we, too, you and me, are priests.
According to 1 Peter 2:9, “But you are not like that, for you are a chosen people. You are royal priests, a holy nation, God’s very own possession. As a result, you can show others the goodness of God, for He called you out of the darkness into his wonderful light.”

And we, too, have an expensive and valuable treasure we carry.

And that’s Jesus Christ.

And it matters how we carry it.  Him.

My commentary says this, “Through this world, unseen by mortal eye, a procession is passing, treading its way across continents of time. It bears holy vessels. Testimony to God's truth, the affirmation of things unseen and eternal, the announcement of the facts of redemption — such are our sacred charge. What manner of persons ought we not to be, to whom so high a ministry is entrusted!”  - F.B. Meyer

Paul would tell his son in the faith, Timothy, that he is to, “Guard the good deposit.”  2 Tim 1:14

To guard, well, what has been entrusted to him.
Just like those priests carrying the precious materials to honor the Lord.
“You and these treasures have been set apart holy to the Lord.  Guard these treasures well until you present them to the leading priests.”  Ezra 8:28-29.

Guard well what you have been entrusted with, friend.
His presence.
His reputation.

The value has been weighed and you have been deemed worthy to carry Him to the nations with bravery and confidence!

Guard the precious treasure you’ve been entrusted with!

Wednesday, February 10, 2021

Living Unaffected!


It is one of the words I have been mulling over in my head now for almost a year. And one of the words I have kept a log on in two journals I have been adding to for over 10 months.

Why?

Because God is saying something.

And He's using this word to draw me into the deeper waters with Him.

The word is purify.

And we see it all over scripture.

Joshua told the Israelites that it was going to be necessary to "purify yourselves, for tomorrow the Lord will do great wonders among you." (Joshua 3:5)

Jacob told everyone in his household to, "Get rid of all your pagan idols and purify yourselves, and put on clean clothing", because they were going in to occupy Bethel, where they would build an alter to the Lord, their God, in remembrance of all He had done for them. (Gen 35:2)

After their rescue from their slavery in Egypt, Moses was called to help them to remember the Lord their God and was told to tell them to, "purify themselves and wash their clothing." (Ex 19:10) He tells them this so that they will, "Be sure they are ready on the third day, for on that the Lord will come down on Mount Sinai as the people watch." (Ex 19:11)

Paul even reminds us, the New Testament saints, this, "Therefore, since we have these promises, let us purify ourselves from anything that contaminates." (2 Cor 7:1)

And James warns us the same, "Wash your hands, you sinners; purify your hearts, for your loyalty is divided between God and the world." (James 4:8)

It's all over the bible.

We must purify ourselves.

Purify ourselves from sin.
Purify ourselves from contamination.
Purify ourselves from the world.

But what does that mean realistically in our world today?

Take a look at the word, itself.
Purify means this = "to make pure from anything that pollutes; to make clean; to be unaffected."

Wow.

That puts it into perspective!

To be unaffected.
Unaffected by what seems popular or acceptable in the worlds eyes.
Unaffected by the naysayers.
Unaffected by our sin-filled society.
Unaffected by the gross behavior we see round about us.

To live unaffected means simply that we will insist on not allowing "it" (fill in the blank) to control us any more, and resisting the urge to let it govern our lives or worse yet impact our pursuit of righteousness.

The time has never been more important, friends, to purify yourselves from anything that seeks to pull you in another direction than straight to the Father.

Tuesday, February 9, 2021

Relentless Gratitude

 

We owe Him a life of relentless gratitude.
 
An entire remnant of wilderness walkers, who had once been freed from their captivity in Egypt, died before seeing the land God had promised them. 
 
All because of their sin-filled ingratitude.
 
What might we be forfeiting ourselves from our attitude of ungratefulness?
 
Oh Father, that we would never forget to praise like David.
 
"O my Strength, to You I sing praises, for You, O God, are my refuge, the God who shows me unfailing love." Psalm 59:17
 
"I will praise You forever, O God, for what You have done." Psalm 52:9
 
"Let all that I am praise the Lord; with my whole heart, I will praise His holy name." Psalm 103:1
 
"How kind the Lord is! How good He is! So merciful, this God of ours!" Psalm 116:5

Monday, February 8, 2021

Disapproved Duties


Numbers, chapter 14.
A man named Caleb.
The one who would accompany Joshua to spy on the land of Canaan and report back to Moses what was there.

And of all the men who returned to bring back a devastating report, Caleb was different.
Scripture tells us that he had, “a different attitude than the others had.”  He, “remained loyal” to the Lord.  (verse 24, NLT)

The NKJV says it this way, “But My servant Caleb, because he has a different spirit in him and has followed Me fully, I will bring into the land where he went, and his descendants shall inherit it.”

Caleb had a “different attitude”… or a “different spirit” in him.

And so the promise was that God would, “bring him into the land he explored.”  (verse 24b)

We know from a look into the chapter that the same could not be said of the others who brought back only bad news and a bleak outlook.

And a peak into the commentaries leads us to familiarize ourselves with what it means to, “follow Him fully.”

And the willing, hungry heart of mine must know.

One line jumps out at me from the commentary.  “One that follows God fully will follow Him in discountenanced duties.”

That’s an interesting word… “discountenanced.”

By definition it means this, “rejected, opposed, disapproved.”

And I’m offended at first glance.
Because in my humanness, I refuse anything that might suggest I reject, oppose, or disapprove of my duties as they relate to God’s purposes for my life.

But another thought creeps in.
I might.

I remember the time I found out the discouraging lies that were being spoken about me by someone from my past.
I prayed for the right thing to do… maybe call them out?  Retaliate against injustice?  Defend in argument?
But God gave me a clear directive to pray for her to be blessed for one full year.  Every day, for one full year.  And even though it didn’t feel good, and even though I disapproved of His methods (yikes!), I did it.  And the internal peace and revelation God gave in that season blew me away!
 

I remember the time when a friend was facing insurmountable challenges with a rude neighbor.  Daily they were being verbally harassed, mocked, and misunderstood.
When we prayed I felt so strongly that she was to offer a meal to them while praying for God to use it to bless them in significant ways.  And even though it felt “wrong” almost, and even though both of us slightly rejected the idea at first (yikes!), she did it.  And the results, though slow at first, did open a doorway to peace and unity that might never have been found.

So the question becomes… will I follow Him even when I disapprove of the duty He is calling me to?  Even when I question His motive and challenge the manner in which I am sent?

Isaiah could’ve rejected in disapproval of his duty to be sent to a people who wouldn’t listen and never understand.  But he went bravely and boldly anyway.  (Is 6)

Abraham could’ve rejected in disapproval of his duty to go and then God would show.  But he went anyway and became the father to many nations as a result.  (Gen 12)

Peter could’ve rejected in disapproval of his duty to trust God and walk on the water.  But he attempted it for Jesus anyway and became the student who would receive some of the greatest lessons the Savior ever personally imparted to His followers.  (Matt 14)

Will we follow Him when it doesn’t make sense?


When the duty is too difficult?
When the path seems all uphill?


When fear of rejection is at an all time high?

Will we follow Him in disapproved duties?



It really, really matters!

Sunday, February 7, 2021

Stay Amazed!

 


There’s a connection in Jeremiah 5, verses 21 and 24.

Verse 21 says this, “Listen, you foolish and senseless people, with eyes that do not see and ears that do not hear.”

Verses 24 says, “They do not say from the heart, ‘Let us live in awe of the LORD our God, for He gives us rain each spring and fall, assuring us of a harvest when the time is right.’”

The people here are labeled foolish and senseless because they did not see with their eyes and had ears that refused to listen.

And the accusation pointed to a heart issue.
Hearts that had lost their love of God.
Hearts who’s zeal had diminished.
Hearts that no longer maintained an “awe” of God.

The people had forgotten.
Forgotten what the Lord had done.
And lost sight of what He was still doing among them.

Oh may we never lose sight of that friends.

His hand is still working!
His voice is still speaking!
And you and I cannot afford to live any less than amazed by all we see, hear, and remember!

Let’s remain the Jesus people who point to Him with our very lives.
And to do that we must remain amazed by what He is doing and what He has done!


Saturday, February 6, 2021

What Spirit Consumes You?

 


I have been studying the life of Caleb in the Old Testament.

Although much is not known of this wonderful man, there is MUCH to learn in his character that light is shed upon.

In Number 14:24, the Lord describes Caleb as being different from the others he lived among.  God says this, “But my servant Caleb has a different attitude than the others have.  He has remained loyal to Me so I will bring him into the land he explored.”  (NLT)

In the NKJV it says it this way, “But My servant Caleb, because he has a different spirit in him and has followed Me fully, I will bring into the land where he went, and his descendants shall inherit it.”

Caleb was said to have a, “different attitude”… but it was truly because he had a, “different spirit” in him.

He was not only strong and courageous and bold and heroic… all those were true of him… but he also had the Spirit of the influence of God in His life, which took his character to a WHOLE other level!

Because the truth is that we will always radiate on the outside what we are filed up and consumed by on the inside.

If we are filled up with junky foods… our poor diet will eventually radiate outwardly.
If we are filled up with fear… our anxiety and dread will eventually radiate outwardly.

But when you and I insist on being filled with the word of God… filled with His promises… filled with His abiding Spirit in all that we do and all that we say … it, too, will eventually radiate outwardly for all to see.
 

It’s just like our words.  "But the words you speak come from the heart—that’s what defiles you.”  Matthew 15:18

What we choose to be FILLED with and FUELED by is so important to our spiritual lives.

Proverbs 4:23 says this, "Guard your heart above all else, for it determines the course of your life.”

What are we filling our hearts with?

Can it be said of us like it was of Caleb who had a “different attitude” and a, “different spirit in him.”?

What you are feasting upon?
We will always act according to what spirit consumes us!

 

Friday, February 5, 2021

I Belong To The Lord


 

I was sitting quiet in my prayer time the other day and I said the words I know were prompted by the Spirit to say.

“I belong to the Lord.  I am covered by the blood of Jesus Christ.”

And some days we must say the words out loud.
Multiple times.

Because there is truly an enemy who’s very purpose is to kill, steal, and destroy.

And also to distract and disable.

Because if he can successfully distract us for long enough, we become disabled from the work we were created to do this side of eternity.

And the call on the body of Christ has NEVER BEFORE been as important as it is in this hour.

In order to breathe the life of Jesus into the world… in order to offer hope to the hurting nation… in order to offer a different way and bring redemptive solutions… we must know that WE belong to the Lord and that we are covered by the blood of Jesus Christ!

And once we know this… really know this in the marrow of our bones… than we are unstoppable.

Unstoppable for Him!

Say it today.
Repeat it again and again.
Go to bed claiming it.
Wake up tomorrow restating it.
Until you feel the victory of enemy resistance begin to rise!

“So humble yourselves before God.  Resist the devil and he will flee from you.”  (Jam 4:7)

I belong to the Lord.  I am covered by the blood of Jesus Christ.
YOU belong to the Lord.  YOU are covered by the blood of Jesus Christ!

Thursday, February 4, 2021

God's Voice

 


Are you daily in His Word?
Did you know - THAT is His voice?
And apart from His voice we can do nothing.
 
Without His Word we are lifeless and lost.
 
His voice is found in the pages of your bible.
 
And we cannot afford to miss what He's saying.
 
Dive in to it.
And find life abundant!
 

Wednesday, February 3, 2021

Full Response To His Rescue

 


I heard it in my spirit one day when I was praying.
 
And I knew in an instant they weren’t my own words.
 
They were the words of the Holy Spirit.
 
“My life is to be lived in FULL response to His rescue!”


 
Because as a follower of Jesus I am to live the life of a grateful recipient.
 

Because all is grace.
 

This breath is grace!
This moment is grace!
The sunrise - grace!
My family - grace!
 

It’s all grace!
 
And each day I have a choice to make.
 
To live in response to all He has done… live grateful and filled with joy.
Or live like the one who knows not the fire from which she was pulled from!
 
I choose gratitude.
I choose joy.
I choose to live every breath in full response to His rescue!
 

Because He didn’t have to.

Tuesday, February 2, 2021

Purify!

 


It is one of the words I have been mulling over in my head now for almost a year. And one of the words I have kept a log on in two journals I have been adding to for over 10 months.
 
Why?
 
Because God is saying something.
 
And He's using this word to draw me into the deeper waters with Him.
 
The word is purify.
 
And we see it all over scripture.
 
Joshua told the Israelites that it was going to be necessary to "purify yourselves, for tomorrow the Lord will do great wonders among you." (Joshua 3:5)
 
Jacob told everyone in his household to, "Get rid of all your pagan idols and purify yourselves, and put on clean clothing", because they were going in to occupy Bethel, where they would build an alter to the Lord, their God, in remembrance of all He had done for them. (Gen 35:2)
 
After their rescue from their slavery in Egypt, Moses was called to help them to remember the Lord their God and was told to tell them to, "purify themselves and wash their clothing." (Ex 19:10) He tells them this so that they will, "Be sure they are ready on the third day, for on that the Lord will come down on Mount Sinai as the people watch." (Ex 19:11)
 
Paul even reminds us, the New Testament saints, this, "Therefore, since we have these promises, let us purify ourselves from anything that contaminates." (2 Cor 7:1)
 
And James warns us the same, "Wash your hands, you sinners; purify your hearts, for your loyalty is divided between God and the world." (James 4:8)
 
It's all over the bible.
We must purify ourselves.
 
Purify ourselves from sin.
Purify ourselves from contamination.
Purify ourselves from the world.
 
But what does that mean realistically in our world today?
 
Take a look at the word, itself.
 
Purify means this = "to make pure from anything that pollutes; to make clean; to be unaffected."
 
Wow.
 
That puts it into perspective!
 
To be unaffected.
 
Unaffected by what seems popular or acceptable in the worlds eyes.
Unaffected by the naysayers.
Unaffected by our sin-filled society.
Unaffected by the gross behavior we see round about us.
 
To live unaffected means simply that we will insist on not allowing "it" to control us any more and resisting the urge to let it govern our lives or worse yet impact our pursuit of righteousness.
 
The time has never been more important, friends, to purify yourselves from anything that seeks to pull you in another direction than straight to the Father.

Monday, February 1, 2021

 


There’s a season for rest.
A season for quiet.
A season for stillness.

But there’s also a season for action.
A season when God is mobilizing His army and stirring His students.

And it’s this season that I find myself in.

The remnant is rising.
And I would say it on more than one single occasion…
“The remnant is rising and I will not be part of the debris.”

Ezra was taught this.
And Joshua learned it too.

Solomon in His great wisdom long before his eventual fall, would tell us, “There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens.”  (Eccl 3:1)

And the season has never been more pregnant with opportunities to arise than now!

Ezra.
The scribe who would be called to serve the people who had greatly sinned.  The nation that had allowed pagan influences to creep in and take over.
This one would pray for the fallen nation… the nation God had called His own.
We find his prayer for the people in chapter 9, verses 5-15.
And as scripture tells us about this prayer we read, “At the time of the sacrifice, I (Ezra) stood up from where I had sat in mourning with my clothes torn.  I fell to my knees, and lifted my hands to the Lord my God.”  (vs 5)

Ezra had been mourning.
And while there wasn’t shame in his posture of sadness, the season was passing.  
There was still work to be done.
And Ezra did the thing He knew would bring the answer for his depressed soul.
He stood up.
He fell to his knees.
He lifted his hands.
And he prayed.

Joshua.
The warrior leaer who’s call was to march the Israelites into their promise.
Had become overwhelmed.
Not in the assignment, but the conditions in which the assignment required.
And his conversation with God marked clear his fear after a defeat that nearly wiped them out.
And while there wasn’t unholiness about this panic that’s very nature stemmed from the dishonor that was happening to God’s great name, the season was passing.
There was still work to be done.
And God saw Joshua’s concern and reminded him of his calling.  “Get up!  Why are you lying on your face like this?”  (Josh 7:10)
And he mustered his courage.
And he stood against the injustice being done in the hearts of God’s very own people.

It’s time to rise capital “C” Church.
It’s time to fall to our knees.
Time to lift our hands.
Time to pray like never before.
Time to muster the courage.
And use the strength He graciously arms us with.

There’s still so much work to do!

** YouTube Teaching Here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=677A4DeWUlE&t=68s