Categories
John Devotionals

Truth

Back in John 10:26-27, Jesus said to the Jews,

But you don’t believe because you are not of my sheep. My sheep hear my voice, I know them, and they follow me.

We see Jesus saying something similar to Pilate in chapter 10.

Everyone who is of the truth, listens to my voice. (John 10:37)

We live in a world that is becoming increasingly hostile to the truth. A world of people who, like Pilate, ask, “What is truth?”

To the world, truth is relative. They think humans decide for themselves what truth is.

If they want to believe in Buddha, that’s truth for them. If they believe that Biblical moral values are out of date and that modern cultural values are truth, that’s truth for them.

But when Jesus prayed to the Father, he prayed,

Your word is truth. (17:17)

Do we believe that?

Christ’s sheep listen to his voice and follow him. If we don’t do those things, we don’t truly belong to him. We don’t belong to the truth.

When the Bible contradicts what you believe, what do you do? Do you change your thinking to match God’s? Or do you try to change the Bible to match your thinking?

Do we say with Jesus, “Father, your Word is truth”?

Who is your shepherd?

The culture we live in?

Or Jesus?

Who are you following?

Categories
Mark Mark 7 Matthew Matthew 15

The standard for our lives

On what do you base your values? This is an important question because your values will influence your decisions.

For the Pharisees, the Law of Moses and the words of the prophets were very important.

But for them, something else superseded even these, though they might not have admitted it. That thing was their tradition.

And in some cases, they completely let go of the commandments of God in order to follow their religious traditions, as we saw in the last blog. Jesus condemned them for this, saying,

You nullify the word of God for the sake of your tradition. (Matthew 15:6)

Unfortunately, there are a lot of Christians who live that way today. They let go of the commands of God in their lives in favor of something else.

For some people, it’s their culture and traditions.

I know of some Japanese Christians that still offer incense at the Buddhist altar. Some make the excuse, “Well, it’s just a cultural thing. It really doesn’t mean anything. It’s just something we Japanese do.”

But in doing so, they are letting go of the commands of God for the sake of tradition, much as the Pharisees did.

But culture can shape us in other ways.

Nowadays, we see a strong homosexual movement in the United States, where even people who say they believe in Christ say it’s okay.

What’s happened? They are bowing to a culture that is becoming more and more godless every day. They are conforming their values to meet the standards of the culture, and in doing so, they again let go of the commands of God.

Other people let go of the commands of God for their own personal opinions.

They know, for example, that God has said Christians should not marry unbelievers. But they think, “How bad can it be? I love this guy. I’m sure it will work out.”

But by marrying the unbeliever, they let go of the clear teaching of God.

How about you? What is the standard for your life? Culture? Traditions? Your own personal opinion?

There can only be one standard for our lives, and that is the Word of God. Cultures change. Traditions change. Opinions change. But God’s word never changes.

As Isaiah said,

The grass withers and the flowers fall, but the word of our God stands forever. (Isaiah 40:8)

So let us not base our values on things that change. Let us base our values on the word of God which never changes. And if we do, we will find blessing.

Categories
Genesis

It may be normal, but is it right?

I was chatting with a middle-aged English student recently, and he talked about how he met his daughter’s boyfriend recently.

While they were chatting, the boyfriend mentioned that he and the daughter would be going off on an overseas trip together.

My student said, “I was surprised, but I said okay.”

I guess he thought he was being an understanding father by saying this.

I suppose that the couple might actually reserve separate rooms, but I wouldn’t bet my life on it.

In our culture today, it just seems like a “normal” thing for couples to sleep together even though they’re not married.

Recently my sister mentioned overhearing a mother talking about her kid’s 16th birthday party at a hotel, saying, “Well, I took away the vodka from them, but I let them keep the rum.”

I suppose this mom thought it was just “normal” that teens drink at their parties.

A lot of things seem “normal” in our cultures, but the big question is not if it’s “normal,” but if it’s right.

Abram faced the same problem in his day.

God had promised him a son, but after 10, perhaps even 20 years of waiting, Abram still had no children. Sarah was getting up in age, she was already 65 by this point, and there seemed to be no way for her to have children.

Culturally, this was a terrible situation.

In those days, it was considered the worst thing in the world for a family name to die out.

But in their culture, it was perfectly natural for a wife with no children to offer her servant to the husband. The servant would sleep with the husband, have a baby, and that baby would become the heir.

So, going along with the culture, Sarai did just that. And it was considered perfectly normal in that day. But was it right?

No. God had promised to give Abram a child through Sarai, but instead of believing God’s promise and waiting for his timing, they got impatient and tried to force things to happen on their own.

They succeeded. Abram and Sarai got the child they wanted. But their choice also brought about problems they didn’t anticipate.

When Sarai’s servant Hagar got pregnant, she started mocking Sarai and despising her.

That led Sarai to get upset and caused marital strife with Abraham. “This is all YOUR fault!”—totally ignoring the fact that it was her own idea in the first place.

Their decision had long-term consequences as well, as the descendants of Hagar’s son Ishmael (the Muslims) have had a long-standing feud with the descendants of Sarai’s son Isaac (the Jews).

But that’s what happens when we stray from God’s way to follow the way of our culture.

Cultures change. What was normal in our culture 100 years ago is not normal now. And what is normal now will probably not be normal 100 years from now.

But God’s ways and his Word never change. And when we stray away from his ways and his Word, we do so at our own risk.

Unwanted pregnancies. Abortion. Teenage moms without husbands. Poverty. Alcoholism. Drunk driving accidents. Marital strife. Divorce. The list goes on and on.

So we have a choice. Are we going to follow culture? Or are we going to follow God?

Sometimes, there’s no difference between the two. But when the two come into conflict, which do we follow?

When Joshua led the people into the promised land, he said this:

Now fear the LORD and serve him with all faithfulness. Throw away the gods your forefathers worshiped beyond the River and in Egypt, and serve the LORD.

But if serving the LORD seems undesirable to you, then choose for yourselves this day whom you will serve, whether the gods your forefathers served beyond the River, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land you are living.

But as for me and my household, we will serve the LORD. (Joshua 24:14–15)

The Israelites had to decide whether to leave behind the cultural practices that they and their ancestors had followed in Egypt, or to continue in them.

They had to choose whether to follow their culture or to follow God.

And we have the same choice today.

May we make the same choice Joshua did: “But as for me and my household, we will serve the Lord.”

Categories
Genesis

Get out!

Generally speaking, I like reading out of the NIV, but today I happened to read out of the New King James, and two words jumped out at me. “Get out!”

Somehow, it sounds much stronger than “Go from” (NIV) or “Leave” (NLT) or even “Go forth” (NASB). It just seems like there is more urgency when you say it that way.

Why did God tell Abram to get out from his country, his family, and his father’s house?

Probably because these things were having a bad influence on him. The culture they were living in wasn’t honoring God, and it was having an effect on Abram’s family, as they were serving false gods along with the one true God. (Joshua 24:2)

Already, Abram’s and his wife Sarai’s way of thinking had been affected as you could see from some questionable decisions they made even after deciding to follow God. So God said “Get out.”

What is influencing us? What is shaping the way we think or act? Is it our culture? Is it our friends? Is it our family?

God tells us the same thing. Get out from under the influence of a world that would shape our minds and our lives in a way displeasing to him.

In Romans 12:2, the apostle Paul wrote,

Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.

All around us, there are pressures trying to influence us. Some of them even have benign intentions. But benign or not, they can take us away from God and his way of thinking if we’re not careful.

And if there are people or things in our lives that are shaping us in a way that pulls us away from God, God calls us to get out from under their influence.

It doesn’t mean necessarily that we need to cut them off. But when we need to pour out our problems, when we’re seeking advice, we need to do so with people whose values come from God.

Too often, we seek comfort and advice from people whose values come from the world, and though they may care for us, they’re still leading us away from God and the life he has for us.

“Go ahead and date that guy. I know he’s not a Christian, but I’m sure things will be okay. Maybe he’ll even become a Christian later.”

“Go ahead and sleep with your boyfriend. You love him right?”

“Go ahead and marry that woman. It doesn’t really matter that she’s not a Christian. You love her right?”

“Go ahead and divorce your husband already. He’s making your life miserable, right?”

“Go ahead and take the job. So what if it means you have to work Sundays and can’t go to church anymore. God will understand.”

“It’s okay if you offer incense at the Buddhist funeral. You don’t really mean anything by it, right?”

All of the advice is well meant. But all of it is wrong. And if we are under the influence of these people, it will lead us away from God.

So what does God say?

“Come out from them and be separate, says the Lord. Touch no unclean thing, and I will receive you.”

And,

“I will be a Father to you, and you will be my sons and daughters, says the Lord Almighty.” (2 Corinthians 6:17–18)

Again, this doesn’t mean you have to cut these people out of your lives. But it does mean that you need to take yourself out from under their influence.

Do you want to know God’s will in your life? Do you want to live a life pleasing to him?

Then let his Word be the transforming influence in your life. Make sure that the advice you get comes from people who also have made the word of God the transforming influence in their lives.

If you do, you’ll find his good, pleasing, and perfect will, and a life as sons and daughters to a Father who loves us more than any other.