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Galatians Devotionals

Abba, Father

And because you are sons, God sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, “Abba, Father!” So you are no longer a slave but a son, and if a son, then God has made you an heir. (Galatians 4:6-7)

Father.

You are God, and so you could demand that I simply call you “God.”

You are my Lord, and so you could demand that I call you “Lord.”

You are my Creator, and so you could demand that I call you “Creator.”

But you’ve made me your child, sealing my adoption papers with your Spirit.

And your Spirit tells me to cry out, “Abba, Father.”

So though I’ll sometimes call you “God,” or “Lord,” or “Creator,” I’ll choose most times to call you what your Spirit teaches me to say.

“Abba, Father.”

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Luke Devotionals

If you want to live the Christian life

Living the Christian life is not always easy. If fact, most times it is not. We face all sorts of trials, temptations, and hard choices every day.

People sometimes reject us because we are Christians. And sometimes, they place all kinds of unreasonable expectations on us.

In this passage, you see Jesus experiencing all these things.

How was he able to handle it all?

You might say, “Well, of course, he was God. That’s how he did it! It was easy for him.”

But don’t forget, when Jesus came to this earth, he became a man in every way. And that means he wasn’t relying on his own divine knowledge and power to overcome all his problems. (Just look at verses 2-3 for example).

Instead, he looked to his Father for guidance and relied on the power of the Holy Spirit.

Note what it says about Jesus in this chapter. Jesus was “full of the Holy Spirit,” “led by the Spirit,” and did ministry “in the power of the Spirit.”

If Jesus, the Son of God, needed to do that, how much more do we need to?

How often, though, do we do things in our own wisdom? In our own strength? And then we wonder why we struggle every day.

Father, lead me today as you led your Son. Fill me with your love each day. Help me to see what you’re doing. Help me to join in with your work.

Holy Spirit, fill me, lead me, and empower me as you did with Jesus when he was on earth. I need you today and every day. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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2 Corinthians Devotionals

My God. My Father.

Whenever you look at this kind of passage, particularly 2 Corinthians 6:16-7:1, it’s easy to focus on the commands:

Be separate.

Touch no unclean thing.

Cleanse yourself of every impurity.

Bring holiness to completion.

But before those words draw your attention, look at the promises of God:

“I will dwell among you.”

“I will walk among you.”

“I will be your God.”

“You will be my people.”

“I will welcome you.”

“I will be a Father to you.”

“You will be my son and daughters.”

To put things simply, meditate on these words:

“My God.”

“My Father.”

Think about what that means.

The God who created the entire universe with a word, he is your God.

The God who reigns as king and will one day judge the nations, he is your God.

He’s not just your pastor’s God. He’s not just my God. He’s not just the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. He is your God.

More, he is your Father.

He is not someone way out there who gives little to no thought to you.

He sees you. He knows you. He loves you. Because you are his child.

So focus on those two truths.

“He is my God.”

“He is my Father.”

Let those words sink into your heart.

HE is my God.

He IS my God.

He is MY God.

He is my GOD.

And again,

HE is my Father.

He IS my Father.

He is MY Father.

He is my FATHER.

And only after that, turn your attention to the commands.

For if the words “My God,” and “My Father” are written in your soul, if you stand in awe of those two truths, his commands are not burdensome. (1 John 5:3)

More, they become your joy. And your joy will be full. (John 15:11)

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Ephesians Devotionals

A God-centered salvation

One thing I have been doing the last couple of days as I have read Ephesians 1-2 is noting all the “him’s” and “his’es” that are there, and really thinking through, “Who is this talking about, the Father, the Son, the Spirit, or God in Trinity?”

Sometimes it’s a little hard to tell. For example, in chapter one, three times Paul uses the phrase “to the praise of his glorious grace” or “to the praise of his glory” (Ephesians 1:6, 12, 14).

In the first, it’s certainly talking about the Father.

In the second, it’s probably talking about the Father, but you could see how it could also be talking about the Son.

In the third, it’s talking about the Spirit’s work, with no apparent reference to the Father, but with a definite reference to the Son in verse 13.

But with verses 6 and 12 referring to the glory of the Father, it’s hard to say that Paul isn’t thinking about the Father’s glory here too.

All that said, I think it would be safe to say that our salvation is to the glory of God in Trinity: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

And that I think is my main point for today. I really encourage you to take the time to highlight each reference to God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit (including the “his’es and “him’s) in these two chapters.

You’ll be stunned to see how they permeate Ephesians 1 and 2.

Read Paul’s words and think about how each person in the Trinity is involved in our salvation.

And when you do, I think you’ll start to appreciate the power of Ephesians 2:8-9 even more.

For you are saved by grace, through faith, and this is not from yourselves, it is God’s gift–not from works, so that no one can boast.

So as we meditate on these two chapters, let us praise God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, for his glorious grace which he has granted to us.

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1 John

As we mature

As I read John’s words here to his different readers, it strikes me that there are different stages that we go through in our Christian lives.

First, as children.

John writes,

I write to you, dear children, because your sins have been forgiven on account of his name. (1 John 2:12)

And again,

I write to you, dear children, because you have known the Father. (13c)

I think that when we first become Christians, two things strike us above all things.

First, that God has forgiven us.

So many of us come to God weighted down by our sins. We see what a mess we have made of our lives because of our choices, and in our desperation we turn to God. And John tells us, “Your sins are forgiven.”

I think of the woman who came to Jesus, a woman who had been burdened by her sins, weeping and wetting his feet with her tears. And Jesus said to her gently, “Your sins are forgiven.” (Luke 7:36-50)

That’s the joy that all new Christians know.

Second, we come to know God as Father. It’s a theme that John will come back to later in this letter. (3:1-3)

The thing is, we don’t come to know God first as the awesome other-worldly being that transcends the universe. As the great King of all kings. As someone so far removed from us that we couldn’t possibly draw near to him.

Rather, we come to know him as Father. As someone who is approachable because he truly loves and cares for us. As someone who is never too busy for us, but will stop whatever he is doing when we come to him because he delights in us as his children.

But as we grow as Christians, we don’t remain mere children. We become mature and strong.

So John says,

I write to you, young men, because you are strong, and the word of God lives in you, and you have overcome the evil one. (14b)

In other words, as the word of God lives in us, as we get beyond the milk of the gospel and take in the solid meat of the word, and by our constant use of it train ourselves to distinguish good from evil (Hebrews 5:12-14), we overcome the evil one and all his attempts to destroy us.

We learn to recognize the false teaching he throws at us to lead us astray from God. And we learn to overcome the temptations to sin that would destroy us. We will see more of these themes throughout the rest of this letter.

Finally, as we become mature in our faith, we start to see God as he truly is. John writes,

I write to you fathers, because you have known him who is from the beginning. (2:13a, 2:14a)

As C.S. Lewis put it, the more we grow, the bigger God becomes to us. Not because he actually grows bigger. But because we see him more clearly as he truly is.

We see that he is not just our loving Father, but the creator of all things and ruler of the universe. That he is the eternal one, with no beginning or end. And we bow down at awe of him.

But we will bow, not just because of his greatness. But because of the fact that as awesome as he is, he still loves us and calls us his children.

Because at the end of the day, no matter how much we may grow and mature as Christians, we will never outgrow our Father or our need to see him as such.

So each day, let us grow in the grace and knowledge of him who loves us and calls us his children.