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1 Samuel Devotionals

A God who is to be honored

I’m in serious trouble,” replied Saul…”God has turned away from me. He doesn’t answer me anymore, either through the prophets or in dreams…”

Samuel answered… “You did not obey the Lord…” (1 Samuel 28:15, 18)

Father, you are not a genie to do my bidding. You are not a God who can be manipulated.

You are a God who is to be honored and obeyed.

Saul never learned that. He closed his ears and, more importantly, his heart to you.

And so in the end, you stopped speaking to him.

Let me never get to that point. Help me to always have a soft heart and open ears to you.

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Joshua Devotionals

Leaving nothing undone

Just as the Lord had commanded his servant Moses, Moses commanded Joshua. That is what Joshua did, leaving nothing undone of all that the Lord had commanded Moses. (Joshua 11:15)

There are several famous verses in the book of Joshua, including chapter 1, verses 5-9, and chapter 24, verse 15.

But this is also one of my favorites. “Joshua left nothing undone of all that the Lord commanded.”

I want to be that way too. Especially when it comes to sin.

I don’t want to make excuses for my sins. I don’t want to treat them lightly. I want to wipe them out as thoroughly as Joshua and the Israelites wiped out the Canaanites and their evil from the land. (See Leviticus 18, especially verses 24-25).

Father, help me to do just that. Let me leave nothing undone of all that you command.

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Joshua Devotionals

Whether hard or pleasant

Joshua read aloud all the words of the law—the blessings as well as the curses…There was not a word of all that Moses had commanded that Joshua did not read. (Joshua 8:34-35)

Those words struck me today.

Joshua didn’t just read the parts of God’s word that he liked. He read the parts that were hard to read too.

Not all places in the Bible are pleasant, talking about God’s love and mercy.

Some places are hard, talking about God’s justice and judgment.

Forgetting that can lead us to treat sin, and more importantly, God, lightly as Achan did (Joshua 7).

But beyond that, whether hard or pleasant to hear, all God’s words are for our good.

So let’s not just read the parts of the Bible we like and which are easy to read. Instead, like Joshua, let’s read all of it, not failing to read a single word.

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Acts Devotionals

Three questions

When Philip ran up to it, he heard him reading the prophet Isaiah, and said, “Do you understand what you’re reading?” (Acts 8:30)

Phillip’s question is very striking.

Imagine you’re having your daily devotions, reading God’s word. Phillip walks up to you and asks, “Do you understand what you’re reading?”

How would you answer?

It’s perfectly okay to answer, “No.”

But do we care enough to seek understanding of the parts we don’t understand?

The Ethiopian eunuch did, inviting Phillip to sit with him, and humbly asking him to explain what he was reading.

Perhaps the most important question, though, is, “What do I do with what I do understand?”

Through Phillip’s teaching, the eunuch came to understand, “I need to put my faith in Jesus. And the first step is to get baptized.”

So immediately, he asked Phillip to baptize him.

Jesus said,

Therefore take care how you listen. For whoever has, more will be given to him… (Luke 8:18)

Put another way, if we not only seek understanding, but also act on what we do know, Jesus will enlighten his word to us even further.

That’s what happened with the eunuch.

How about us? Sure, there may be many things that we don’t understand in the Bible. And yes, it’s important to seek understanding.

But what do we do with what we do understand? Are we saying yes to Jesus and obeying him?

So here’s the challenge. The next time you read your Bible, ask yourself these three questions:

  1. Do I understand what I’m reading?
  2. Do I care enough to seek understanding?
  3. What am I doing with what I do understand?
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Bible Original Luke Devotionals

Authority

Jesus, you are my King, But do I fully acknowledge your authority in my life?

The centurion recognized the authority of your Word. (Luke 7:7-8).

Do I?

Your word has the power to raise the dead. (Luke 7:14-15)

And one day, by your word, all the dead will be raised, and you will judge them. Including me. (John 5:25-29)

What will you say to me on that day? Will you be amazed at the faith I had? Will you rejoice that I so totally trusted and obeyed you?

Or will you say, “Why did you call me Lord, Lord, and not do what I said?” (Luke 6:46)

Lord, I do believe in you. But increase my faith and help me to obey you in all things.

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Luke Devotionals

Digging deep

“Why do you call me ‘Lord, Lord,’ and don’t do the things I say?

I will show you what someone is like who comes to me, hears my words, and acts on them: He is like a man building a house, who dug deep and laid the foundation on the rock. (Luke 6:46-48)

Father, let me be one who digs deep. Who doesn’t just skim over your words, but thinks on them and meditates on them. Who seeks to understand them. Who seeks to really know what you’re telling me.

Let your words be the foundation of my life.

Jesus, don’t let be be like those who call you “Lord, Lord,” but don’t do what you say.

You are my King. And I believe you are a good King. So give me ears to hear and a heart to obey you.

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Luke Devotionals

An open ear, a soft heart

I don’t know this for sure, but I’ve felt for a long time that when Jesus prayed at his baptism, he probably prayed Psalm 40:6-8.

You…open my ears to listen…Then I said, “See, I have come; in the scroll it is written about me. I delight to do your will, my God…”

Why do I think he prayed that? Because the writer of Hebrews has Jesus praying that psalm. (Hebrews 10:5-7)

But whether he prayed that or not at his baptism, I think we can safely say that Jesus had open ears and a soft heart to God.

Those were things Herod didn’t have, especially when confronted with his sin. (Luke 3:19-20)

The people John baptized, on the other hand, came with open ears and a soft heart. And we see it in their response.

“What should we do?” (Luke 3:10, 12, 14)

That’s the question of open ears and a soft heart.

That’s the heart Jesus had.

That’s the kind of heart I want.

Is it the kind of heart you have?

Whenever we read or hear God’s word, let that be our response to him.

“What should I do? I delight to do your will.”

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Deuteronomy Devotionals

Choose life!

I call heaven and earth as witnesses against you today that I have set before you life and death, blessing and curse.

Choose life so that you and your descendants may live, love the Lord your God, obey him, and remain faithful (literally, “cling”) to him.

For he is your life… (Deuteronomy 30:19–20)

I’ve been thinking about our relationship with God lately, and I got the image of a cut flower and a potted flower.

Both are beautiful.

But one is already dead because it’s cut off from its source of life. It’s cursed, so to speak, because it’s cut off from its roots.

It’s the same with us and God.

Cut off from him, we are cursed and already dead.

But if we are connected to him, drawing life from him daily, we flourish.

How then do we remain connected to him?

When Paul quotes this passage in Romans 10, he points us to Jesus, admonishing us to trust in him and make him our Lord. (Romans 10:6-13).

So let’s choose life.

Choose Jesus, loving him, obeying him as our Lord, and clinging to him each day.

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Deuteronomy Devotionals

Listen to him!

The Lord your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among your own brothers.

You must listen to him. (Deuteronomy 18:15)

According to Peter, Moses was pointing to Jesus. (Acts 3:19-26)

Perhaps Peter was also remembering the Father’s own words to him, James, and John:

This is my beloved Son; listen to him! (Mark 9:7)

Honestly speaking, learning to listen to Jesus better is something I’m still working on.

But as Jesus’ disciples, we are not to simply go with the flow of the world.

That’s something Moses specifically warned the Israelites against. (Deuteronomy 18:9-14)

Rather, we are to listen to and follow Jesus.

As you live your life each day, as you make your decisions, who are you listening to?

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Numbers Devotionals

Breaking faith with God

Because you did not believe in me, to uphold me as holy in the eyes of the people of Israel, therefore you shall not bring this assembly into the land that I have given them. (Numbers 20:12)

I was thinking on those words God spoke to Moses and Aaron this morning.

“You did not believe in me.”

Instead of believing God’s instructions and doing things God’s way, Moses did things his own.

In doing so, he showed the same lack of honor to God that the people had with all their complaining and rebelliousness.

Later Moses paraphrased what God had told him. “You broke faith with me. You betrayed my trust. You were unfaithful and disloyal to me.” (Deuteronomy 32:51)

Here was a man that God had spoken to face to face, as a man does with a friend. (Exodus 33:11).

And Moses had betrayed that trust.

How much did that pain the heart of the Father?

Father, how often am I like Moses? How often do I fail to believe in you? Instead of believing your instructions and doing things your way, I do things my own?

By your grace, you saved me. By your grace, you made me your own and call me “friend.”

I never want to look into your eyes knowing that I have betrayed your trust.

Help me to always honor you as holy in my life. To give you the honor you are so worthy of in everything I say and do. And when other see me, let them see you.

In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Exodus Devotions

Finding God’s rest and peace

Yet on the seventh day some of the people went out to gather, but they did not find any.

Then the Lord said to Moses, “How long will you refuse to keep my commands and instructions? Understand that the Lord has given you the Sabbath…” (Exodus 16:27-29)

“The Lord has given you the Sabbath.”

Those words struck me. God wanted to give the Israelites rest. It was a gift to them.

But they couldn’t find that rest as long as they refused to trust and obey him.

It’s so amazing how quickly they forgot God’s goodness. One moment, they’re singing,

Lord, who is like you among the gods?
Who is like you, glorious in holiness,
revered with praises, performing wonders…

With your faithful love, you will lead the people
you have redeemed;
you will guide them to your holy dwelling
with your strength. (Exodus 15:11, 13)

The next moment, they’re complaining and wishing they were back in Egypt.

I don’t want to be like that, crying out, “How great is our God!” on Sunday, but failing to trust and obey him the rest of the week.

Not only does it sadden my Father, but I lose out on the gift of rest and peace he wants to give me.

Father, I want to know your rest and peace. And the thing is, you want me to experience your rest and peace. So help me to trust you and obey.

You are good. You are trustworthy. And you deeply love me.

Help me to always remember that. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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2 John Devotionals

The mark of a true disciple

This is love: that we walk according to his commands…Anyone who does not remain in Christ’s teaching but goes beyond it does not have God. The one who remains in that teaching, this one has both the Father and the Son (6, 9).

As you read John’s letters, you can see that he spent a lot of time reflecting on Jesus’ words because a lot of what John writes is based on Jesus’ words.

And what John writes in this letter reflects what Jesus taught about loving him and truly being his disciple. What did Jesus say?

If you continue in my word, you really are my disciples. You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free (John 8:31-32).

The one who has my commands and keeps them is the one who loves me. And the one who loves me will be loved by my Father. I also will love him and will reveal myself to him…If anyone loves me, he will keep my word. My Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him (John 14:21, 23).

What is the mark of a disciple of Jesus? What shows that we truly love him?

We trust him enough to obey him.

In doing so, we find freedom. But more importantly, our fellowship with God deepens. He reveals more of himself to us, and we understand more deeply his love and goodness toward us.

I can honestly say that I’ve tasted these things in my life, and I have found that God is good. And because of that, I want more of him.

How about you? As you have followed Jesus’ words, have you come to taste the love and goodness of God in your life?

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2 Kings Devotionals

Before we can believe and obey

The high priest Hilkiah told the court secretary Shaphan, “I have found the book of the law in the Lord’s temple,” and he gave the book to Shaphan, who read it…

Shaphan read it in the presence of the king.

When the king heard the words of the book of the law, he tore his clothes. (2 Kings 22:8, 10-11)

This week, I’ve been reflecting on John 15, and thinking about what it means to have God’s word “remain in us.”

Of course, part of that means to believe and obey God’s words.

But it struck me that there is one more component that must come before we can believe and obey.

We need to know what God has said.

That is clearly seen in today’s story.

It’s amazing to think that things had gotten so bad in God’s temple. How can God’s words get lost…in the temple?

Josiah had a soft heart towards God. That showed in his response once he heard God’s word. He believed God’s words and he would obey them.

But you can’t believe and obey what you don’t know.

Do you know God’s word?

Ignorance is not an excuse before God. Disaster was coming on Judah because of their ignorance.

And we can make a big mess of our lives, in our families, in our relationships, in our finances, in everything, if we don’t believe and obey God’s words.

But again, before you can believe and obey God’s word, you need to know it.

Are you putting the time into knowing God’s word each day?

Or is it “lost” in your house (or smartphone) like it was in the temple?

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2 Kings Devotionals

The root issue

This disaster happened because the people of Israel sinned against the Lord their God… (2 Kings 17:7)

I was listening to a message once, and the pastor asked a very interesting question.

I’m paraphrasing, but he essentially said, “There may be many reasons for the problems we face, but which reason is most fundamental?”

That’s what I thought of when I read the above scripture.

There were many reasons Israel fell.

Assyria was a powerful nation at the time. Israel was much weaker.

King Hoshea had a treaty with the king of Assyria. He broke that treaty.

Both reasonably explain Israel’s fall.

But which reason was most fundamental?

The answer is neither.

We’ll read it in the next two chapters, but King Hezekiah would also break a treaty with Assyria, and Assyria besieged Jerusalem.

But when Hezekiah humbled himself before God, God delivered Jerusalem even though Assyria was much stronger militarily than Judah.

There were also many other times that Israel faced stronger enemies, but because they trusted and served God, they overcame their enemies.

The fundamental reason that Israel fell to Assyria was that the people had sinned against God, turning their backs on him to follow other gods.

Instead of following God and his ways, they followed the ways of the nations around them.

It made me think of the problems I’m facing in life.

There may be many reasons for them. But what is the most fundamental reason?

Is my heart truly right before God?

Am I following him, doing things his way?

Or am I doing things my own?

When God points out my disobedience, am I repenting, or am I making excuses?

Father, search me and know my heart. You know the problems I’m facing. Show me what the fundamental issues are.

And if there’s something I need to do, something I need to repent of, show me what it is.

Help me to trust and obey you. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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1 Kings Devotionals

Making excuses for our disobedience

…you are to appoint over you the king the Lord your God chooses…

However, he must not acquire many horses for himself or send the people back to Egypt to acquire many horses, for the Lord has told you, ‘You are never to go back that way again.’

He must not acquire many wives for himself so that his heart won’t go astray.

He must not acquire very large amounts of silver and gold for himself. (Deuteronomy 17:15-17)

Those were the instructions God gave the Israelites through Moses concerning their kings.

Solomon broke every single one (1 Kings 9:28; 10:14-21, 26-29; 11:1-3).

Why did Solomon break God’s instructions?

I don’t know.

Maybe it was because he thought they weren’t so important.

We can make all kinds of excuses for our disobedience to God’s Word.

We can say to ourselves, “Hey, I still love the Lord. I still worship him. Besides, everyone else lives this way.”

I’m sure that’s what Solomon thought. He continued to worship God. That wasn’t the problem.

The problem was that he “was not wholeheartedly devoted to the Lord his God (1 Kings 11:4).”

And that ultimately led him to do what was utterly evil in God’s sight (1 Kings 11:6).

It’s so easy to deceive ourselves and come up with all kinds of “good reasons” for our disobedience.

But when we do, at best, our hearts are no longer wholly God’s. At worst, we start to do things that are downright evil in his sight.

Jesus, you said that if I love you, I will obey you. I do love you. Help me throw away all my excuses for disobedience. I want my heart to be completely yours in everything.

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John Devotionals

Living by every word that comes from your mouth

Jesus, you said, “Man must not live on bread alone but on every word that comes from the mouth of God.” (Matthew 4:4)

And that’s how you lived. You lived on every word that came from your Father’s mouth. Everything your Father commanded, you did. (John 14:31)

Now let me live by every word that comes from your mouth. Because everything you said came from your Father’s mouth. (John 14:10, 24)

Don’t let me lean on my own wisdom and understanding.

Nor let me lean on the “wisdom” of this world whose thinking has been so corrupted by sin.

Instead, let your words shape the way I think. Let them shape my values. Let them shape my priorities. For your words are truth. And they give me life.

Thank you for giving me your Spirit to teach me your truth and to remind me of all you’ve said. (John 14:26)

Help me to each day keep in step with him.

In your name, I pray, amen.

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2 Samuel Devotionals

Choosing obedience

This is a difficult passage on a lot of levels.

Apparently, Israel had sinned in some way. What that sin was, we don’t know, but perhaps it was their rejection of David, God’s appointed king, and following Absalom and later Sheba.

At any rate, because of their sin, God decided to bring judgment on them.

That is important to note, by the way. Contrary to what David thought, Israel was not innocent and was worthy of judgment. (2 Samuel 24:17)

But how to account for God stirring up David against them? Did God cause David to sin?

Also, in 1 Chronicles 21, it says Satan was the one who incited David to count the people of Israel. So who was responsible?

It’s a difficult question.

But here are some things to remember.

First, Satan always stands against God’s people. And he would destroy us if he could.

But as we see in Job, God puts definite limits on what Satan can and cannot do to us. (Job chapters 1-2)

Second, for purposes of judgment or for testing, God will loosen those limits.

We see examples of judgment with Saul and King Ahab. (1 Samuel 16:14; 1 Kings 22:19-23).

We see examples of testing with Job and Jesus (Matthew 4:1).

Third, regardless of whether God loosens those limits or not, people do not have to sin. They can choose to do right. Job and Jesus chose to do right. Saul and Ahab didn’t.

So ultimately, while for purposes of judgment God loosened the limits on Satan, David still had his choice. And David chose to sin.

David himself accepted responsibility for his own sin. (2 Samuel 24:10, 17)

David didn’t sin because God made him sin.

Nor did the devil “make him do it.”

David sinned because of what was in his heart. (James 1:14)

And what seems to have been in his heart was his pride in his military strength, which may be why he wanted the people counted.

Two further points.

First, this side of the cross, as children of God, we no longer need to fear God’s judgment (1 John 4:14-19).

Like the Israelites, we are deserving of God’s judgment, but Jesus took that judgment upon himself on the cross.

So while God may discipline us at times, we will never face his judgment. (Hebrews 12:5-11; Romans 8:1)

Second, though God may loosen his limits on Satan and let us go through times of testing, we always have the choice to obey or not.

But as Paul wrote,

No temptation has come upon you except what is common to humanity.

But God is faithful; he will not allow you to be tempted beyond what you are able, but with the temptation he will also provide the way out so that you may be able to bear it. (1 Corinthians 10:13)

So let us remember the words of James, trusting in God’s goodness and faithfulness toward us, following after him.

Blessed is the one who endures trials, because when he has stood the test he will receive the crown of life that God has promised to those who love him. (James 1:12)

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Matthew Devotionals

Listen to Him!

This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well-pleased. Listen to him! (Matthew 17:5)

Christmas is now past us, and for many people if they even thought of Jesus during the Christmas season, those thoughts are long past.

It’s so easy to do too. The Jesus most people think of at Christmas is the baby in the manger. A Jesus that makes no demands. Certainly not a Jesus that is to be obeyed.

But that is exactly what the Father commands. Jesus is not just a man of history born 2000 years ago.

He was and is God’s Son, his beloved Son with whom he is well-pleased.

And so though Christmas is past us, let us keep in mind each day the Father’s words and listen to his Son. And not only listen to him, but obey.

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1 Peter Devotionals

Sprinkled by his blood

To those chosen…to be obedient and to be sprinkled with the blood of Jesus Christ. (1 Peter 1:1-2)

Peter’s words seem to come from Exodus 24:7-8. At that time, the Israelites were agreeing to the covenant God had written out.

At that time, they said,

We will do and obey all that the Lord has commanded. (Exodus 24:7)

After they said that, Moses took the blood of the bulls, sprinkled it on the people, and said,

This is the blood of the covenant that the Lord has made with you concerning all these words. (Exodus 24:8)

Just like the Israelites, we have been chosen to be obedient to Jesus Christ.

Just like the Israelites, we often vow to God that we will be obedient.

And just like the Israelites, we often fail to keep that vow.

But while the Israelites were sprinkled with blood that could not truly cleanse them (Hebrews 10:4), we have been sprinkled with the precious blood of Christ, a lamb without blemish or defect (19).

And by his blood we have been cleansed and forgiven (Matthew 10:28, 1 John 1:7).

Because of that, we have grace and peace with God. And not just grace and peace, but grace and peace in abundance. (2)

Are you always feeling guilty for failing to measure up as a Christian?

Set your hope not on your ability to be perfectly obedient to God.

Instead, set your hope on the grace that will be given you when Jesus Christ comes back. (13)

And until that day, keep on walking, following after our Lord.

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Exodus Devotions

Doing things God’s way

Let’s be honest: chapters 36-39 can make for a lot of dry reading. Especially when you consider that much of it is a repetition of what was written about in chapters 25-30.

Chapters 25-30 were the instructions.

Chapters 36-39 were the Israelites following those instructions.

That seems to be the main point in chapter 39.

Again and again, we see the words, “just as the Lord had commanded Moses.” (1, 5, 7, 21, 26, 29, 31, 32, 43)

God had given the Israelites all the wisdom, understanding, and skill necessary to do the job. (Exodus 35:31-36:2)

But they didn’t just do things as they saw fit. They didn’t do what simply seemed expedient.

They did things God’s way.

No shortcuts. No compromise.

Can we say the same about ourselves in our work? In our ministry? In everything we do?

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Exodus Devotions

Give us this day our daily bread

Then the LORD said to Moses, “I am going to rain bread from heaven for you. The people are to go out each day and gather enough for that day.

This way I will test them to see whether or not they will follow my instructions.” (Exodus 16:4)

I couldn’t help but think that Jesus was referring to this passage when he told his disciples to pray,

Give us today our daily bread. (Matthew 6:11)

It never really struck me before what we’re really saying when we pray that.

Not only are we asking God to provide our needs. But we are praying, “Lord teach me to trust you daily. Teach me to trust you enough that I will obey you in everything.”

Lord, thank you for rescuing me from slavery to sin. Each day, may I know you more deeply, seeing your glory. (6-7)

And as I do, teach me to daily trust and obey you…in everything.

Give me today my daily bread.

In Jesus’ name, amen.

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Genesis Devotions

Our obedience, our hearts

The scepter will not depart from Judah
or the staff from between his feet
until he whose right it is comes,
and the obedience of the peoples belongs to him. (Genesis 49:9-10)

This is the first prophesy that points to a ruler coming from the line of Judah, a ruler who would reign over the whole earth.

Ultimately, this was fulfilled in Jesus, the Lion of Judah. (Revelation 5:5)

But the words that strike me are those last: “the obedience of the peoples belongs to him.”

That includes ours. We owe Jesus our obedience. Why? Because he is our rightful King and Lord.

But Jesus doesn’t want a mere obedience of rules.

He wants our hearts. Hearts that love and trust him. Without that kind of heart, even our “obedience” is not pleasing to him. (Hebrews 11:6)

How about you?

Does God have your heart?

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Proverbs Devotionals

Fearing the Lord

The fear of the Lord is a fountain of life,
turning people away from the snares of death. (Proverbs 14:27)

As I read that this morning I couldn’t help but think of something similar Solomon said a chapter earlier.

A wise person’s instruction is a fountain of life,
turning people away from the snares of death. (13:14)

What does it mean to fear God? Part of what it means is to listen to his word and obey it.

How often, though, do we act as if we know better than God? We look at his word, and say, “I don’t agree with this. This way of thinking is outdated.”

But as Solomon said,

There is a way that seems right to a person,
but its end is the way to death. (14:12)

Satan is a dishonest witness. He is the father of lies. The world around us is buying his lies and is trying to get us to buy them too.

But we can’t afford to listen to them when they speak contrary to God’s word.

Jesus, on the other hand, is a true and faithful witness. He never lies. More, his words of wisdom turn us away from the snares of death and give us life. (Proverbs 14:5, 25, Revelation 3:14)

In fact, it is because of his guilt offering offered on the cross for our sins, that we now are accepted by our Heavenly Father. (Leviticus 5:6; Proverbs 14:9)

So let us fear God, trusting and obeying him. And let us teach our children to do the same so that they may find strong confidence in him too. (14:26)

God is a fountain of life. Let us fear him and drink in his words of life every day.

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Judges Devotionals

What your faith is leaning on

What is your faith leaning on?

On your pastor’s faith? On your spouse’s? On your friends’?

Or do you yourself truly trust in God?

For Barak, his faith rested on Deborah’s. He was confident God was with Deborah. He wasn’t confident God was with him. He certainly wasn’t confident enough to obey God without Deborah by his side.

How about you?

Let us not rest our faith on another’s. Rather, let us all mature, learning to trust in God and obey him ourselves.

As Peter said,

But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. (2 Peter 3:18)

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Mark Devotionals

Responding to God’s Word

In a lot of ways, this passage is connected to what I talked about yesterday: our response to Jesus’ authority.

Today, the question is, “How do we respond to His word?” You see this in the parable of the soils, but also in these words:

Consider carefully what you hear…With the measure you use, it will be measured to you— and even more.

Whoever has will be given more; whoever does not have, even what they have will be taken from them. (Mark 4:24-25)

In short, if you hear God’s word, and it bears fruit in your life, God will give you more and more wisdom and understanding.

But if you harden your heart to his word, if you abandon it when trials and hardship come, or if you let it get choked out by other things, you’ll lose the wisdom and understanding God had previously given you.

How about you? Does God’s word bear fruit in your life?

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Acts Devotionals

But I did what you told me!

According to verses 6-10 of this chapter, the Holy Spirit led Paul and his companions to Macedonia, and so that’s where they went.

At first, things went well, but eventually they were tossed into prison for casting out a demon from a girl.

If you had been Paul and Silas, what would you have done?

“God! What are you doing? You told us to go to Macedonia, didn’t you? We did what you said! Why are we suffering like this?”

Probably many people would react in just that way. But what did Paul and Silas do?

Without a word of complaint, they spent their time in jail praying and singing songs of praise to God.

What happened then? An earthquake hit breaking not only their chains, but the chains of the prisoners around them.

Not only that, when the jailer saw all this, he put his faith in Jesus and was saved.

God never promises us an easy life. He never says, “If you follow me, you’ll never suffer.”

In fact, he promises the exact opposite. (John 14:18-21, 16:1-4, 33; 2 Timothy 3:12)

But in all your suffering, remember this: Jesus is with you. And your suffering will not last forever. (John 16:33)

So don’t complain in your suffering. Rather, like Paul and Silas, sing songs of praise to God.

If you do, not only will your bitter chains fall off, but when others see you, like the jailer, they too may believe and be saved, their chains of sin falling to the ground.

But if you don’t believe God is good, you won’t ever do this.

How about you? What do you believe?

Categories
1 John

To have fellowship with God

In a lot of ways, the word “Christian,” is applied to far too many people. Many people claim to be Christians, but by their lives show themselves to be anything but.

At this point, many people may scream at me for being judgmental. But Jesus himself said,

Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only he who does the will of my Father who is in heaven.

Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, and in your name drive out demons and perform many miracles?’ (Matthew 7:21-22)

In a modern context, people might say, “Lord, Lord, didn’t I go to church? Didn’t I put money in the offering basket? Didn’t I do this good thing and that good thing?”

But Jesus will say to them,

I never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers! (Matthew 7:23)

In short, your life cannot be divorced from your actions. And your actions prove who you are.

That’s what John is saying in this passage.

He says,

This is the message we have heard from him and declare to you: God is light; in him there is no darkness at all.

If we claim to have fellowship with him yet walk in darkness, we lie and do not live by the truth. (1 John 1:5-6)

Too many people live in their sin, explaining away scripture in some cases, blatantly ignoring it in others.

But John tells us that God is light. There is no sin in him at all. And so if we live in utter rebellion to what he has taught in his Word, explaining it away or blatantly ignoring it, and we still claim to have fellowship with him, we’re liars.

John is very straight here. He says, “You are a liar. Truth is not  in you.”

But then he says,

If we walk in the light as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus, his Son, purifies us from all sin. (1:7)

If God is in light, then if want to have fellowship with him, we need to walk in light too. Because God certainly isn’t going to join us in the darkness of our sin. But if we will step out of our rebellion to him and submit to him as Lord, then Jesus’ blood will purify us from all our sin.

But we need to step out of that rebellion. To stay in rebellion against God and to claim fellowship with him is pure impossibility.

In case there is any doubt as to what John is saying, he goes on.

We know that we have come to know him if we obey his commands. The man who says, “I know him,” but does not do what he commands is a liar and the truth is not in him.

But if anyone obeys his Word, God’s love is truly made complete in him. This is how we know we are in him: Whoever claims to live in him must walk as Jesus did. (1 John 2:3-6)

In short, we can tell if a person has a relationship with God by their attitude toward Him.

Is God’s love so complete in them that they respond with loving obedience? That they desire to be more like their Lord and to walk as he did? That they mourn over their sin when they fail and repent?

If not, then there should be serious doubt as if they are truly saved or not.

How about you? What does your attitude toward God show about your relationship with him?

Categories
Acts

Obedient to the call

As we look at this passage, we see Paul’s appearance before Festus and Herod Agrippa II.

This last of the Herods that we see in the New Testament was the son of Herod Agrippa I who had killed James and had attempted to kill Peter.

At any rate, the Jews once again tried to get Paul to be brought to Jerusalem so that they could kill him, and when Festus tried to convince Paul to appear in Jerusalem (not knowing the Jews’ plot), Paul appealed to Caesar.

That left Festus in a bit of a quandary because he wasn’t sure how to present the charges that were made against Paul, which were purely religious ones.

So when Herod came by for a visit, Festus consulted with him, and Herod agreed to hear Paul’s defense.

And so for the final time in the book of Acts, we see Paul give his testimony. Each time he spoke, we see a bit more of his story.

One of the most interesting things here was the mission Jesus gave to Paul on the road to Damascus.

I am sending you to them to open their eyes and turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan to God, so that they may receive forgiveness of sins and a place among those who are sanctified by faith in me. (Acts 26:17-18)

The same mission that Jesus gave to Paul, he gives to us.

We are to share the gospel with those around us that they might see their own bondage to sin and the darkness that they’re in.

We do this so that they might be set free from the kingdom of Satan and brought into the kingdom of God, forgiven of their sins and adopted as his children through faith in Christ.

Concerning this mission given to him in the vision, Paul told Festus and Herod,

I was not disobedient. (Acts 26:19)

How about you? God has told us to go and spread his gospel to those around us.

Are you? Are you fulfilling the mission he has given you?

Categories
Matthew Matthew 28

Making disciples

Somehow in 35 years of reading scripture, it never really occurred to me that the events in Matthew 28 and Acts 1 were two separate events. One happened in Galilee and the other on the Mount of Olives.

It was perhaps here in Galilee that Jesus appeared not only to the 11, but to 500 other followers of Jesus as well, as mentioned in 1 Corinthians 15:6.

It would also perhaps explain why “some doubted,” not the 11 disciples who had already seen him before, but the others who had come and who had yet to see the risen Lord.

Whatever the case may be, there was no doubt remaining once Jesus appeared and started speaking to them. He said,

All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.

Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. (Matthew 28:18-20)

It’s significant to me that Jesus didn’t simply say to go out and preach the gospel, although they were to do that too.

He told them to make disciples. Not of themselves, but of Jesus.

How were they to do that?

They were to baptize new believers first, as a sign of their commitment to Jesus.

What is baptism? What does it mean? It basically identifies you with Christ.

It’s saying, “Just as Christ died and rose again, I am dying to my old way of life, and rising up as a new person. And one day, after I die here on this earth, I will rise up and be with Christ forever.”

I think it’s very interesting that here in Japan, in some sense, even the non-Christians have a stronger idea of the implications of baptism than believers in the States do.

I have heard many stories of how parents have told their (adult) children, “Well, you can go to church, but don’t get baptized.”

That’s one of the biggest struggles that young believers face here. Will I take that step of baptism at the risk of alienating my family?

I think for many of the Jews, they faced the same kind of pressure from their families.

But if we are going to become true disciples of Christ, we need to get to the point where Jesus is more important to us than anything else. And baptism is a very visual and public way of proclaiming that.

Jesus also told his disciples that they were to teach people everything that he had taught them. And not only that, to teach them to obey.

A lot of Christians feel uncomfortable with that idea. After all, doesn’t it smack of legalism? And aren’t we saved by grace?

Yes, we are saved by grace. And no, we shouldn’t be presenting Christianity as a series of dos and don’ts.

But what we should be doing is reminding people that God really does love us. That he desires the very best for us.

And if we trust him enough for our salvation, shouldn’t we also trust him enough to believe that his way is best and to follow that way?

More, if we truly love him, shouldn’t we do the things that we know will please him?

In short, we need to be teaching people to draw closer to God in a relationship where they learn to love and trust him more every day.

It is, unfortunately, an area that the church all too often fails at.

As a result, we have a bunch of baby Christians that never really grow up. Christians who though they say they love God, nevertheless never really learn to trust God.

And because of that, their lives remain an utter mess.

Let us not make that mistake.

Let us not just preach the gospel, but teach young believers to be disciples of Christ, so that they will become people who love, trust, and obey him, growing in the grace and knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.

Categories
John John 14

If we truly love Jesus

This is one of those passages that would probably make many people turn their heads if they really thought about it.

Jesus says to start off,

If you love me, you will obey what I command. (John 14:15)

Think about that a minute. If your husband, wife, boyfriend or girlfriend said to you, “If you love me, you will obey what I command,” what would your response be?

Most probably, “I’m outta here. Forget this relationship.”

I think there are certain things to keep in mind, however.

First, Jesus is not only our Savior, but our Lord. Yet he’s not some tyrant looking to make our lives miserable just for his own pleasure. Rather, he genuinely loves us and is looking out for our good.

More than that, he’s our creator, and he knows exactly how our lives were designed to work.

And so this idea of obedience is not so much a matter of, “Do what I say!”

Rather, Jesus is telling us, “Trust me. If you really love me, trust me. I truly know what is best for you, and I truly want what is best for you.”

Our problem is that we’ve seen so many people trying to order us around not because they’re looking out for our best, but because they’re looking out for their own interests.

That’s why when God tells us, “Trust me, I want what’s best for you,” we tend to look at him with a jaded eye.

This is not a new problem. It goes all the way to the garden of Eden.

God told Adam and Eve, “Trust me, I want what’s best for you. So stay away from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Believe me, you don’t want to know what evil is.”

But Satan caused Eve to become jaded to God’s intention. To start thinking, “God doesn’t really want what’s best for me. He’s holding something back from me.”

And to this day, people hold that same way of thinking.

The other thing to remember is that our sin really hurts God. He is so pure, and righteous, he can’t even stand the sight of sin.

Do we really want to do something that hurts him? Rather, wouldn’t we want to do things that please him?

If you love your wife or husband, for example, will you purposely do things that hurt them? “Yes, I know it will hurt them, but I’ll do it anyway.” Of course not.

Rather, we do things that we know will bring a smile to their faces.

And that’s what our relationship with God should look like.

We love him so much that we do the things that please him, and we stay away from the things that we know will hurt him.

Jesus modeled this with his own life while he was on earth.

He loved and trusted his Father so much, he always did what his Father said, even though it meant going to the cross.

Why? Because he believed his Father knew what was best.

How about you? What does your relationship with God look like? Do you trust him enough to do what he says?

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Luke Luke 9 Mark Mark 9 Matthew Matthew 17

Afraid to ask

In this passage, we see the second time in which Jesus speaks plainly to his disciples about what was going to happen to him in Jerusalem. He couldn’t have been more clear.

He said, “Listen carefully to what I am about to tell you.” (Luke 9:44).

And he told them specifically that he would be betrayed, killed, and raised to life on the third day.

The way Luke records the disciples’ response strikes me.

But they did not understand what this meant. It was hidden from them, so that they did not grasp it, and they were afraid to ask him about it. (Luke 9:45)

Looking back as Christians, it’s very difficult for us to understand why the disciples would have trouble grasping this. It wasn’t like he was speaking in parables. He told them in a very straightforward manner, “This is what is going to happen.”

Why couldn’t they understand something that Jesus said so plainly? Luke says the reason was that it was hidden from them.

Why was it hidden from them? I think the main reason is they weren’t ready to hear the truth. They were still totally focused on the idea that he would be setting up his kingdom in Israel soon, setting the Jews free from Roman rule.

We’ll see this in a couple of blogs from now.

But because their minds were so focused on their way of thinking, they couldn’t understand the plain words of Jesus. What’s more, they were afraid to ask what Jesus meant.

Why were they afraid? I don’t think they were afraid of Jesus’ rebuke. I think they were afraid that he was speaking plainly.

And they were so focused on the negative parts, that he would be betrayed and die, that they couldn’t see the positive, that he would rise again.

What does this mean for us?

I think that sometimes, we get so set in our way of thinking, that we can’t see what Jesus is saying to us, even when he is speaking plainly.

What he says goes so contrary to the way we’re thinking or feeling, that we think, “He can’t really mean what I think he’s saying, can he?”

Yet we’re afraid to ask because if he tells us that he means what he says, it means we need to change. We need to change our way of thinking, our behavior, or both. And that can be scary.

For example, God says “Don’t be yoked with unbelievers.” (2 Corinthians 6:14)

In other words, we shouldn’t be in relationships where we are tied to people in such a way that they pull us away from God and his ways.

But when many Christians who date non-Christians, or are even engaged to non-Christians see this passage, it scares them.

“It doesn’t really mean what I think it’s saying, is it?”

And they are afraid to ask God, because it might mean they have to break up with that person, when they don’t want to.

Or when God says, “Flee sexual immorality.” (1 Corinthians 6:18), some people think, “Does this mean sleeping with a person before marriage is wrong?”

And they’re afraid to ask because they are sleeping with their partner.

Let’s be frank. Truth can be painful. And change can be excruciating. But sometimes we get so focused on the negative, that we forget the positive.

The same passage that says that we should not be unequally yoked, says that God will be a Father to us, and we his sons and daughters.

The same passage that says that we should flee sexual immorality says that Christ has given us his Holy Spirit to dwell in us. That we are his temples.

These are the things we should focus on.

So let us not be afraid to ask what a scripture means. Let’s embrace it. Let’s live it. And while there may be pain in the short run, in the long run, we will find blessing.

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Luke Luke 9 Mark Mark 9 Matthew Matthew 17

Listen to Him!

This is one of the more interesting passages in the Gospels, and it comes at an interesting time.

Jesus has just shattered his disciples’ ideas of what Messiah is supposed to be, and they’re wondering what in the world does all this dying and being raised from the dead is all about.

For the most part, it seems, all the way until the cross, they kind of shoved it to the back of their minds and tried not to think about it.

Perhaps they convinced themselves they heard Jesus wrong. Or perhaps they thought he was speaking in some kind of parable.

Whatever they thought, they never really came to grips with what Jesus was telling them.

And so about a week later, Jesus tries to drive it home to three of his closest followers.

One quick note: Matthew and Mark say this event happens 6 days later, Luke says it happens about eight days later. Which is correct?

There are two explanations that I’ve seen. One is that the Greek expression “about eight days later” that Luke used was a common expression that meant “about a week later.”

The other is that Luke was counting partial days. He counted the day that Jesus spoke and the day of the transfiguration, while Matthew and Mark only counted the full days in between the events.

We’ll see more of this when we come to the resurrection.

Anyway, Jesus takes Peter, James, and John up to a high mountain, and while he’s praying, they either fell asleep or were on the verge of it. Because of that, they nearly missed what happened next.

Jesus suddenly shines in all his glory, and Moses and Elijah both appear. And as the disciples listen in to their conversation, they hear them talking to Jesus about his impending death and resurrection. (Luke 9:30-31)

By now, the disciples are fully awake, and as usual Peter speaks up first asking if they should build shelters for Jesus and his two visitors.

But at that point, a bright cloud surrounds them, and they hear a voice saying,

This is my Son, whom I love. Listen to him! (Mark 9:7)

Hearing this, they fell down on their faces in terror, but then they hear another voice, the voice of their beloved Master who tells them,

Get up…Don’t be afraid. (Matthew 17:7)

And when they look up, only Jesus is there, the glory that had been shining from him faded. And as they went down the mountain, Jesus warned them not to tell anyone what they saw until he had risen from the dead.

Why did Jesus show them all this? Again, I think one reason was to impress to them that his mission was to die.

But I think another reason was to impress to them that death was not the end. They had just seen Moses and Elijah. One had died, the other had been taken away in a chariot of fire, never seeing death. But both were still alive and talking to Jesus.

Even so, the disciples still didn’t understand. And as they continued down the mountain, they continued discussing among themselves what “being raised from the dead” was all about. (Mark 9:10)

But as I look back at this, the words that impress me most were the Words of the Father. “This is my Son whom I love. Listen to him.”

Sometimes, like the disciples, we don’t always fully understand the things that Jesus is trying to teach us.

Later, as with the disciples, we will understand. But though there may be some time between when we hear what Jesus says and when we understand everything completely, Jesus is our Lord, sent from the Father, and we are to hear him, follow him, and obey.

How about you? Inasmuch you understand the things he’s told you, will you trust Jesus enough that you’ll hear him, follow him, and obey him in everything he says?

Categories
Luke Luke 11

To find blessing

Everyone wants to find blessing in their lives from God. But how do we find blessing?

As Jesus was speaking to the crowd, a woman called out,

Blessed is the mother who gave you birth and nursed you. (Luke 11:27)

But Jesus answered her,

Blessed rather are those who hear the word of God and obey it. (Luke 11:28)

Obedience is not a popular word, even among Christians sometimes. We like to focus on the grace of God.

And certainly, apart from the grace of God, none of us would ever find his blessing because none of us ever deserve it.

Nevertheless, the key that unlocks that blessing in our lives is the obedience that comes from faith.

We can say, “I believe in God. I believe in his Word,” all day long, but if it doesn’t result in obedience, our words are meaningless. If we truly trust him, if we truly believe in him, we’ll do what he says.

The question is, do you trust him? Do you trust that if you obey him, that you will find blessing?

Do you trust, for example, that if you put off sex until marriage, that your sex life and your marriage will be better for it?

Do you trust that if you learn the “grace of giving,” (2 Corinthians 8:7) that your finances will not suffer for it, but instead be blessed by God?

Do you trust that if you submit to your husband as to the Lord, and that you love your wife as Christ loves the church, sacrificing yourself for her, that your marriage will flourish?

Or do you think this is all fluffy words with no real substance to it?

If you want to find blessing, you need to learn to trust God. That he knows what is best. That his way works.

And then you need to obey.

Is it easy? No. But the same grace that God extends to help us believe, is the same grace that gives us the power to obey. All you have to do is ask. As Jesus said,

Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you.

For everyone who asks receives; he who seeks finds; and to him who knocks, the door will be opened. (Luke 11:9-10)

How about you? Will you trust God, and obey?

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John John 5

Desiring wholeness

Sometimes I wonder if people really desire wholeness in their lives.

They often complain about their marriage or relationships, they complain about their jobs or their health, but they never seem to do anything about it.

They almost seem to like complaining about their problems. They seem to enjoy receiving sympathy from others.

But Jesus doesn’t want us to be that way. He doesn’t want us to wallow in our brokenness. He wants to bring healing in our lives. We see this in this passage.

A man was an invalid for 38 years, and probably had to make his living begging.

When Jesus found out about his situation, he asked a simple question: “Do you want to get well?” (Or “be made whole” — KJV)

One would think it’s only natural that the person would want to be healed. But perhaps he was happy not working and just begging for a living. Maybe he enjoyed having people wait on him. It was in that sense, an easy life.

But we see from the man’s answer that this was not the case. He wanted to be healed.

Apparently, there was a belief (true or not, it’s not clear from the passage) that the first person that got into the pool of Bethesda when the water was stirred would be healed.

He always tried to get in, but with no help, someone always got in first.

When Jesus heard his reply, he said, “Well then, get up, pick up your mat, and walk.” (John 5:8)

One wonders what this man was thinking. Apparently, he hadn’t heard of Jesus before, or if he had, he didn’t recognize him, as we will see later in the story.

But here is this total stranger telling him to do something he hadn’t been able to do in 38 years.

Whatever he was thinking, he tried it, and immediately, he was healed.

Later at the temple, Jesus came up to him, and said,

See, you are well again. Stop sinning or something worse may happen to you. (John 5:14)

What can we get from this?

Lots of us experience hurts in our lives. Many of us are broken, and we see no way that we can ever be made whole. But Jesus asks us the same question he asked the man.

“Do you wish to be made whole?”

If you do, you need to do what the man did and obey what Jesus tells you. Don’t question what he says. Don’t complain that it’s impossible. Make up your mind to obey him.

Now this is not to say that wholeness will come as quickly or easily as it came to this man.

When it comes to issues of broken relationships, broken hearts, bitterness, and many other things, it takes time.

You’ll need the help of the Holy Spirit working in you, and the help of Christ’s body, the church. (That’s one reason why going to church is so important).

But wholeness will never come unless number one, you truly want to be made whole, and number two, you make the decision to trust Jesus and do what he says.

And when you do, as he did with this man, Jesus will give you the power to obey him and bring wholeness into your life.

But if you choose not to trust him and continue going your own way, in short, if you continue to live in sin, you’ll find as Jesus warned this man that your life will only get worse. (John 5:14)

What will you choose?

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Luke Luke 4 Mark Mark1

Authority

What makes Jesus different from all the other great religious leaders that started major religions?

There are many things, of course, first and foremost the fact that Jesus is God, and that he rose from the dead. All the others have this one thing in common: they’re all dead. Which proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that they weren’t God.

But as we look at this passage, we see another difference between Jesus and them: authority.

It was the thing that struck the Jews immediately when they started listening to him teach from God’s word.

All the other teachers they heard would preface their remarks with phrases like, “So-and-so said this about this passage.”

Or “According to so-and-so, this passage means…”

Jesus never said that. Instead, he would repeatedly tell them, “I say to you…” or “I tell you the truth…”

The people marveled at this. “This man speaks with authority. It sounds like he actually knows and is confident about what he is teaching.”

As a teacher myself, I think I would marvel myself. While I of course do my own studies and ask God for insight, nevertheless, I wouldn’t pretend to have a fraction of the authority that Jesus Christ has. It must have been marvelous to hear him speak.

He then backed it up with his works, casting out a demon from a man in the synagogue. Is it any wonder that word about him spread like wildfire throughout Israel?

But what does it mean for us?

I suppose the question you need to ask yourself is, “Do I accept the fact that Jesus does indeed speak with authority? Or do I just think he was giving his own opinion, and my opinion is as good as his?”

Too often, though we may give lip service to Christ’s authority, nevertheless we do not obey him. Either because we think it’s too “pie-in-the-sky,” the ideals of a man who didn’t have a grasp of “real life,” or because we simply don’t want to do what he has said.

But if we claim Jesus as our Lord, we can’t think this way. And we certainly can’t live that way. Jesus said,

Why do you keep calling me ‘Lord, Lord,’ but don’t do what I tell you? (Luke 6:46)

If there are two words that are oxymoronic, they are “No” and “Lord.”

How about you? Do you accept Christ’s authority in your life?

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Psalms

The way to understanding

All of us would like to grow in wisdom and understanding.  And in this passage, we see how we can do so.

The psalmist writes,

Your commands make me wiser than my enemies,
for they are ever with me.

I have more insight than all my teachers,
for I meditate on your statutes.

I have more understanding than the elders,
for I obey your precepts.  (Psalm 119:98-100)

How did he become wise?  By not only knowing God’s word.  By not only meditating on God’s word.  But by obeying God’s word.

So many people know God’s word and yet show no understanding.  They know what God has said, but they insist on living their own way, and because of that, they end up getting in trouble.

But the psalmist wasn’t that way.  He treasured God’s word in his heart and let it change him.  He started to love the things that God loves and hate the things God hates.  (103-104, 127-128)

More than that, he made God’s word the standard for his life.  It was the lamp to his feet and the light for his path (105).

In contrast, he stayed away from the advice of those who were evil, and tried to avoid them altogether (113, 115)

And as I’ve mentioned before, he kept a humble attitude before God, both striving to learn from him (125, 133, 135, 144) and leaning on his strength that he might obey what God had commanded (133-134).

Why did he do all this?  Because of what he found.  What did he find?

Your promises have been thoroughly tested, and your servant loves them…

Your righteousness is everlasting and your law is true. (140, 142).

In other words, when the psalmist put God’s word into practice, when he tested the promises and commands of God, he found God and his word to be true.

How about you?  Are you a person of understanding?  Have you put into practice the things God has commanded?  Have you found God to be true in your life?

Only when we do so will we find true wisdom.

Categories
Jeremiah

No genie

We now shift scenes from Babylon, where Ezekiel was, back to Jerusalem, where Nebuchadnezzar had started his siege against Jerusalem.

When he came, Zedekiah panicked and immediately sent messengers to Jeremiah, asking him to pray for them.  This, after years of ignoring Jeremiah’s warnings of judgment.  His messengers said,

Inquire now of the Lord for us because Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon is attacking us. 

Perhaps the Lord will perform wonders for us as in times past so that he will withdraw from us (Jeremiah 21:2).

Reading this, I very much get the impression that Zedekiah treated God like a genie. 

You stick him in a bottle, stashed away somewhere you can ignore him.  Then when trouble comes, you pull out the bottle, pop the cork, and expect that the genie will rescue you.

But God is no genie.  And basically, he told Zedekiah, “Forget it.  I myself am fighting against you.  I’m giving you into the hands of Nebuchadnezzar, and he will show you no mercy, pity, or compassion.” (3-7)

Still, God did offer them one last chance.  He told them that they could not escape judgment, but they could escape death.  All they had to do was one thing.  Trust him.  And obey him.

He said,

“Furthermore, tell the people, ‘This is what the Lord says:  See, I am setting before you the way of life and the way of death. 

Whoever stays in this city will die by the sword, famine or plague.  But whoever goes out and surrenders to the Babylonians who are besieging you will live; he will escape with his life. 

I have determined to do this city harm and not good, declares the Lord.  It will be given into the hands of the king of Babylon, and he will destroy it with fire.’” (8-10)

In other words, “For once in your lives, believe me.  Believe me when I say judgment is inescapable.  And trust me.  I know it’s scary giving yourselves up and surrendering to your enemies.  But if you do, you will be saved.”

He went on to tell king Zedekiah, “Bring justice to your people as you’re supposed to.  And put away your pride.  It is these things that are bringing judgment upon you.”

But as we will see later, Zedekiah refused to do so.  When God refused to be his genie, Zedekiah walked away.  As a result, everything came crashing down around him.

How about you?  How do you regard God?  Do you regard him as your genie, expecting him to perform at the snap of your fingers? 

Or is he your God?  Do you trust him?  Do you put your faith in him to the point that you actually obey him?

So many people think that happiness comes from having your own way.  They think they’d be happy if only God would do what they wanted. 

But the truth is we’ll only be happy if we make him our God, trusting him and following him no matter what.

As the old song goes,

Trust and obey

For there’s no other way,
To be happy in Jesus,
Than to trust and obey.

Categories
Jeremiah

The blessing that comes from obedience

So many times we know what God says, but don’t obey him. 

One reason is that we feel like we’ll “miss out on all the fun.”  Or that we’ll find more happiness if we do things our way instead of God’s. 

That’s how the people of Judah were.  But here God shows them and us the blessing that comes from obedience.

God told Jeremiah to invite a family to the temple.  They were all descendants of a man named Recab. 

They must have been looked upon by their neighbors as a bit strange.  They still lived in tents when everyone else had built their own homes, and they refused to drink wine like everyone else.

When this family came, they went to the one of the rooms in the temple where the sons of a man named Hanan lived.

Jeremiah then offered them wine to drink, but they replied,

We do not drink wine, because our forefather Jonadab son of Recab gave us this command:  ‘Neither you nor your descendants must ever drink wine. 

Also you must never build houses, sow seed or plant vineyards; you must never have any of these things, but must always live in tents.  Then you will live a long time in the land where you are nomads.’ 

We have obeyed everything our forefather Jonadab son of Recab commanded us.  Neither we nor our wives nor our sons and daughters have ever drunk wine or built houses to live in or had vineyards, fields or crops. 

We have lived in tents and have fully obeyed everything our forefather Jonadab commanded us.  (Jeremiah 35:6-10)

Even when Nebuchadnezzar came against Judah, and they were forced to flee from their land to Jerusalem, they continued to keep the command of Jonodab.

God then spoke to Jeremiah, saying,

This is what the Lord Almighty, the God of Israel, says:  Go and tell the men of Judah and the people of Jerusalem, ‘Will you not learn a lesson and obey my words?’ declares the Lord. 

‘Jonadab son of Recab ordered his sons not to drink wine and this command has been kept.  To this day they do not drink wine, because they obey their forefather’s command. 

But I have spoken to you again and again, yet you have not obeyed me.  (13-14)

In other words, “These men obeyed their forefather Jonadab, even though he was a mere man.  But here I am your God, and you don’t obey me.  Why not?”

But then he said of the Recabites,

This is what the Lord Almighty, the God of Israel, says:  ‘You have obeyed the command of your forefather Jonadab and have followed all his instructions and have done everything he ordered.’ 

Therefore, this is what the Lord Almighty, the God of Israel, says:  ‘Jonadab son of Recab will never fail to have a man to serve me.’ (18-19)

Because the Recabites were faithful to their forefather, and to God, they found blessing in their lives at a time when judgment was falling on the land they were living in.

What about you?  Do you truly believe that if you follow God and do things his way that you’ll find blessing? 

This is not to say that your life will be easy.  But you will find joy and contentment in your life as you follow him, no matter your circumstances.

Categories
Exodus

As the Lord commanded

The last 5 chapters, as I mentioned before, are basically reiterations of all the instructions that God gave Moses for the construction of the tabernacle. 

The key difference, of course, is that in these chapters, it’s not just being talked about, it’s actually being made. 

The phrase, that you see repeatedly in these passages is that Moses and the Israelites did everything the Lord commanded. 

It’s more or less summed up in chapter 39 where it says,

The Israelites had done all the work just as the LORD had commanded Moses.

Moses inspected the work and saw that they had done it just as the LORD had commanded. So Moses blessed them. (Exodus 39:42-43)

But even in chapter 40, you see this phrase eight more times.

There was no cutting of corners in following the Lord’s instructions. 

No one said, “I’m tired of all these detailed instructions.  I’m going to do it my way.” 

Instead, every single thing that the Lord commanded, the Israelites did. 

And when the work was all done, it says in verses 34-38,

Then the cloud covered the Tent of Meeting, and the glory of the LORD filled the tabernacle.

Moses could not enter the Tent of Meeting because the cloud had settled upon it, and the glory of the LORD filled the tabernacle. 

In all the travels of the Israelites, whenever the cloud lifted from above the tabernacle, they would set out; but if the cloud did not lift, they did not set out—until the day it lifted.

So the cloud of the LORD was over the tabernacle by day, and fire was in the cloud by night, in the sight of all the house of Israel during all their travels. (Exodus 40:34-38)

Do you want to see God’s work in your life?  Do you want God’s leading in your life? 

I think the point God is making here is crystal clear:  obey him. 

Not just in the big things.  But in the “little” things as well. 

And as we obey him, our lives are filled with his glory, and we will know his leading in our lives.

Categories
Exodus

Bitterness, healing, and obedience

As I mentioned in my last blog, it’s amazing how quickly praise can turn into grumbling. 

The Israelites were only three days away from the Red Sea when they started complaining about a lack of water. 

You’d think that after passing through the Red Sea, that they’d believe God could do anything, even provide water in the desert.

Finally, they find some water, but it turns out to be bitter, so they complain even more. 

But God directs Moses to throw some wood in the water, and it miraculously becomes sweet. 

He then tells the Israelites, if they’ll just follow him and obey him, he will be their healer, just as he “healed” the waters at Marah.

Sometimes as we follow Christ, we go through some bitter times. 

Sometimes it’s through no fault of our own.  Maybe it’s an attack of Satan, or perhaps it’s just the result of a broken world. 

Other times, though, we go through bitter times because of our own bad decisions. 

Whatever the reasons, God promises to be our healer during the bitter times. 

But at the same time, he does require our obedience.

We don’t like to hear that sometimes.  After all, we’re saved by grace, right? 

But as I’ve mentioned before, blessing most often comes as we obey him.

Do you want healing in your marriage? 

It’s not enough just to pray for healing.  You need to do the things God has told you. 

You need to love your wife.  You need to sacrifice for her.  You need to honor her. 

You need to respect your husband and submit to him. 

And as long as you don’t do these things, you’ll never find healing in your marriage.

Do you want to healing in your finances. 

It’s not enough to pray for it.  You need to work.  You need to make financial plans.  You need to use your money as a faithful steward. 

Remember that your money is not really your own.  It was given to you as a trust by God. 

If you don’t remember that, you won’t find healing in your finances.

The bitter waters would never have been made sweet unless Moses had obeyed God and thrown that piece of wood into the water. 

It was a command that didn’t seem to make sense.  Moses probably thought, “How is throwing wood into the water going to make it sweet?” 

But though he didn’t understand, Moses obeyed. 

Sometimes we say the same kind of thing to God.  

“How can I give a tithe, and actually save money?  It doesn’t make sense.” 

“My husband doesn’t show love to me.  Why should I show respect?” 

“My wife doesn’t submit to me. Why should I show her love?” 

But only through obedience, can we find God’s healing and blessing in our lives.

If we live in disobedience, God will allow troubles to come into our lives, just as he did with the Egyptians. 

But unlike the Egyptians, where he willfully afflicted them, God doesn’t need to actively curse us to bring troubles in our lives. 

Usually, all he does is let us reap the consequences of our actions.  We curse ourselves by our own actions.

What about you?  Are you going through tough times in your life and are looking for some healing? 

Then do the things that God has commanded. 

Even if it’s hard. 

Even if it sometimes doesn’t make sense. 

And God will bring healing.