Monday, February 28, 2022

The Spirit’s Work - Scot McNight

 “We don’t grow in holiness accidentally or simply because we want to. We grow if we have a vision to be more holy, if we are open to the grace of God’s Spirit being unleashed in our innermost being, and if we surrender to the Spirit’s work in our hearts.” Excerpt, Open to the Spirit by Scot McKnight

Every Man’s Devo - Before his departure, Jesus pulled His men in tight to tell them His message – it is the same for us. Blending in with the world is not the mark of a follower of Christ. All of God’s men truly know that at the deepest part of their heart. We are definitely in a battle. Why are these battle tools specifically mentioned in His Word: the helmet, the breastplate, the sword, the shield, the belt, and the sandals? Before we get the idea that this Christian Life is just blessings and comfort as the world delivers, it’s not! It’s the peace that passes all understanding that only the Lord can offer as we honor truth as it is.

“There are four wings to the evangelical movement in the United States: the Reformed, the Anabaptist, the Restorationist, and the Holiness.4 In the Reformed wing, there is an emphasis on theology, preaching, and social engagement at the level of culture. The Anabaptists emphasize local church, discipleship, justice, and peace. The Restorationists stress the courage to return to the Bible and start all over again. And the Holiness tradition brings an emphasis on surrender, turning from worldliness, and deepening one’s personal spiritual life.”

“Here’s another way to say it: anything that is not loving—of God and of others and of self and of all God’s creation—is unholy. But every act of loving God, others, self, or creation is holiness. Love is not an alternative to holiness. Holiness becomes visible when we love God, others, self, and creation.

“Let’s begin with the big-picture in view: we are designed by God to live by faith in Christ, and that faith generates in us a love for God, self, and others. When we have that faith-love dynamic, we are set free. To have faith means to be open to turn ourselves toward God, to gaze upon the face of Christ, and to surrender to God’s gift of the Spirit.”

Prayer by John RW Stott: “Heavenly Father, I pray that this day I may live in your presence and please you more and more.

Lord Jesus, I pray that this day I may take up my cross and follow you.

Holy Spirit, I pray that this day you will fill me with yourself and cause your fruit to ripen in my life: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control”

Strategy for Temptation 03

 ‭‭The apostle Paul was clear about the need to run from temptation. Our culture is full of all sorts of temptation that are tied to our possessions, passion or quest for power. Good and worthwhile goals can have temptations to be the wrong person and do wrong things, disguising our self glory. Let’s pray that we are skilled at recognizing these temptations for selfish gain or recognition. 1 Timothy‬ ‭6:11-12‬ (‭MSG‬‬)

“But you, Timothy, man of God: Run for your life from all this. Pursue a righteous life—a life of wonder, faith, love, steadiness, courtesy. Run hard and fast in the faith. Seize the eternal life, the life you were called to, the life you so fervently embraced in the presence of so many witnesses.


Oh that believers would become eternity-conscious! If we could live every moment of every day under the eye of God, if we did every act in the light of the judgment seat, if we sold every article in the light of the judgment seat, if we prayed every prayer in the light of the judgment seat, if we tithed all our possessions in the light of the judgment seat, if we preachers prepared every sermon with one eye on damned humanity and the other on the judgment seat—then we would have a Holy Ghost revival that would shake this earth and that, in no time at all, would liberate millions of precious souls.” - Leonard Ravenhill, Why Revival Tarries



Delayed Obedience 02

 Delayed Obedience Is Disobedience Is a sobering headline. I hope that is not the caption for my life but I wonder if it isn’t if I’m honest. I’ve had moments when I’ve felt His prompting to do something and I followed through. But how many times have I been blind or too deaf to His call that I was unaware or indifferent? I want to do better and be more skilled at following through!


A quote worth considering: “When you are exhausted, discouraged, overwhelmed, and barely holding on to hope, it’s tempting to work yourself into thinking that things are not as bad as they seem or that you’re better off than you actually are. But because denial doesn’t deal with reality but avoids reality, it never goes anywhere good. It will never give you what you need or help you be what you need to be when the unthinkable enters your door. But because Jesus walked in your shoes and faced what you now face, you’ve been forever liberated from the trap of denial. You’re free to be weak and to cry out in weakness and free from ever having to put on a spiritual act.” - Paul David Tripp, Suffering: Gospel Hope When Life Doesn't Make Sense

Leonard Ravenhill Quotes


There are three persons living in each of us: the one we think we are, the one other people think we are, and the one God knows we are.


Oh that believers would become eternity-conscious! If we could live every moment of every day under the eye of God, if we did every act in the light of the judgment seat, if we sold every article in the light of the judgment seat, if we prayed every prayer in the light of the judgment seat, if we tithed all our possessions in the light of the judgment seat, if we preachers prepared every sermon with one eye on damned humanity and the other on the judgment seat—then we would have a Holy Ghost revival that would shake this earth and that, in no time at all, would liberate millions of precious souls.

Leonard Ravenhill, Why Revival Tarries

Today God is bypassing men—not because they are too ignorant, but because they are too self-sufficient. Brethren, our abilities are our handicaps, and our talents our stumbling blocks!

Leonard Ravenhill, Why Revival Tarries

But you know if God should stamp eternity or even judgment on our eyeballs, or if you’d like on the fleshy table of our hearts I am quite convinced we’d be a very, very different tribe of people, God’s people, in the world today. We live too much in time, we’re too earth bound. We see as other men see, we think as other men think. We invest our time as the world invests it. We're supposed to be a different breed of people. I believe that the church of Jesus Christ needs a new revelation of the majesty of God. We’re all going to stand one day, can you imagine it- at the judgment seat of Christ to give an account for the deeds done in the body. This is what- this is the King of kings, and He’s the Judge of judges, and it’s the Tribunal of tribunals, and there’s no court of appeal after it. The verdict is final. 

 

Prayer does not condition God; prayer conditions us. Prayer does not win God to our view; it reveals God’s view to us.
There are two kinds of people in the world—only two kinds. Not black or white, rich or poor, but those either dead in sin or dead to sin.


The greatest miracle that God can do today is to take an unholy man out of an unholy world and make him holy, then put him back into that unholy world and keep him holy in it.

No man is greater than his prayer life. The pastor who is not praying is playing; the people who are not praying are straying. We have many organizers, but few agonizers; many players and payers, few pray-ers; many singers, few clingers; lots of pastors, few wrestlers; many fears, few tears; much fashion, little passion; many interferers, few intercessors; many writers, but few fighters. Failing here, we fail everywhere.
Leonard Ravenhill

Unraveling blog

 Looking at the news today, I could feel the heartache and fear creeping in.


I turned off the TV with a pit in my stomach.


I laid my head back as I became overwhelmed with the thoughts:


This world is freaking scary.

Having kids in this world is terrifying.

There is so much heartache everywhere, it’s like I can feel it seeping into me.


It’s heavy, here on earth.


Boulders sitting on our chests kind of heavy.


it’s so easy to sink into the hopelessness and darkness of it all. 


When I find myself going into that pit, there is one thing that helps me:


Recognizing that this world is not our home.


Knowing that this is not our final stop. 


If I don’t fix my eyes on eternity, I very easily become consumed by the terror of this world.


If I don’t set my mind on things from above, I feel the wave of darkness sucking me in.


But when I remember that this is not where I am going to be forever; and that life doesn’t actually end with death, I feel a sense of freedom from all the scariness.


The world is full of fear, but God is not.


The world is full of heartache, but eternity is not.


The world is temporary, but heaven is not.


We will suffer here, and we will need to grieve that.


But we won’t always suffer. 


Don’t forget about what comes next.


Don’t forget that even if death comes knocking on your door, it could be closely followed with you going to the best place you ever could.. eternity with Jesus.


The heartache is SO real. But it’s not forever.


Heaven is.


~Kelli Bachara, The Unraveling Blog


**Friends, If you are interested in any of my *printable* faith-based workbook to help with emotions, anxiety or body image, here’s the link❤️


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Wednesday, February 23, 2022

How Can He Use Your Past 01

 It’s comforting to think God can use our past for His glory. But I regret my nominal risks for Christ and my reluctance to be bold in my walk and talk. Would anyone have known if I was a follower of Christ a few years ago?


“We’re all afraid of being unrighteous. Self-justification is our default setting. And that is because we know deep down exactly what we are: the “ungodly.” We know what God requires of us and what it means to be righteous, to be godly, and to be responsible, loving, and just human beings. But often we do not do what we know is right when we’re up to bat. We’re afraid of losing something if we do the right thing. In other words,  we’re selfish. We don’t love God and our neighbor, and we show it not only by what we do but by what we fail to do.” -  Excerpt, Recovering Our Sanity by Michael Horton

God Created You and Me 28

 Rick Warren’s statement is counter cultural and mind blowing compared to today’s thinking:  “God planned every single day of your life. Before you took your first breath, God knew every single event of your life.” God’s sovereignty changes everything about us - our past, present and future. He is working in the details of our lives even though He gives us the freedom to be creative and make decisions for Him. Today’s reading is exactly what our culture needs in light of the declining mental health and rise in suicide rates. God’s love and pursuit of us is far beyond our understanding but worthy of our response.

“But the highest wisdom comes not from “looking around” or “looking within,” but from being driven outside of ourselves—what we feel, assume, imagine, or do—by just hearing God’s Word, especially his gospel. Here there is no speculation—no more chattering within ourselves about what we might believe. The gospel is a strange announcement of news brought from a herald. It’s based not on timeless principles but on the resurrection of the God-Man in history. “So faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ” (Rom 10:17). It is not something you ascend to attain or descend to bring up from the dead (vv. 3–16). Excerpt, Recovering Our Sanity by Michael Horton


Mother Teresa

 Nicky Gumbel - 

How to Make the Most of Your Life

‘People often ask me what Mother Teresa was like,’ writes Shane Claiborne in his book *The Irresistible Revolution*. ‘Sometimes it’s like they wonder if she glowed in the dark or had a halo. She was short, wrinkled, and precious, maybe even a little ornery, like a beautiful, wise old granny. But there is one thing I will never forget – her feet. Her feet were deformed. Each morning I would stare at them. I wondered if she had contracted leprosy. One day a Sister explained, “Her feet are deformed because we get just enough donated shoes for everyone, and Mother does not want anyone to get stuck with the worst pair, so she digs through and finds them. And years of doing that have deformed her feet.” Years of loving her neighbour as herself deformed her feet.’ When people are asked about the person whose life they most admire, so often the answer is ‘Mother Teresa’. She made the most of her life. It is a paradox, because her life was a life of self-denial, taking up her cross and following Jesus. Life is an extraordinary and wonderful gift. In the Bible we are constantly urged not to waste this gift, but instead to make the most of our lives.

Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Temptation’s Battles 25

 

We live in a culture that screams immediacy. We want things now with no delay or disappointment. Microwaves, cell phone apps, gps, and online shopping are just a few things that have morphed us into an impatient bunch. The temptation to be edgy and impatient is overwhelming. But Christ’s presence is the yoke of being hooked up to a patient Savior and Lord. Walking with the yoke requires stopping with patience, waiting for the Spirit to take the next step.   

But Rick Warren emphasizes: “The Bible teaches us to “fix our attention, not on things that are seen, but on things that are unseen. What can be seen lasts only for a time, but what cannot be seen lasts forever” (2 Corinthians 4:18). I need to remind myself all the time to live for eternal purposes, not for my immediate gratification.

  1. Quote:   “Grace doesn’t make it okay for you to live for you. No, grace frees you to experience the joy of living for One greater than you.” - Paul David Tripp, New Morning Mercies: A Daily Gospel Devotional

Is it worth it? 26

 Rick Warren states: “Paul realized that nothing — no status, no amount of money, no pleasure — is worth more than Jesus.”  

How could you and I sit through multiple sermons yet miss the main point? What can we do to insure we are maturing in Christ, not just playing the part of being a Christian? It is so easy to let our minds wander off track, getting fixed on issues that do not matter when compared to eternity. At times I think I should be diagnosed with Attention Deficit Disorder with my lack of disciplined focus. But maybe all of the distractions keep us humble as we seek His glory, not ours. If God removed the distractions, we might be tempted to think His grace and provision would be for our benefit, not His glory.


  1. “Our Lord does not promise to change life for us; He does not promise to remove difficulties and trials and problems and tribulations; He does not say that He is going to cut out all the thorns and leave the roses with their wonderful perfume. No; He faces life realistically, and tells us that these are things to which the flesh is heir, and which are bound to come. But He assures us that we can so know Him that, whatever happens, we need never be frightened, we need never be alarmed.” - Martyn Lloyd Jones

God’s Plan 27

 


‭‭Psalm‬ ‭139:13-16‬ (‭MSG‬‬)

“Oh yes, you shaped me first inside, then out; you formed me in my mother’s womb. I thank you, High God—you’re breathtaking! Body and soul, I am marvelously made! I worship in adoration—what a creation! You know me inside and out, you know every bone in my body; You know exactly how I was made, bit by bit, how I was sculpted from nothing into something. Like an open book, you watched me grow from conception to birth; all the stages of my life were spread out before you, The days of my life all prepared before I’d even lived one day.”


Each person’s identity is worth far more than we realize. God knows us far more than we know ourselves. I’m learning that our life’s mission is to glorify our Lord with who God made us to be.


“Between the pandemic and personal issues, I’ve come to realize that healing comes with sitting in an open, truthful relationship with the Lord. Not out of religion or requirement or anything other than dwelling in relationship with Him every single day. Relationships are built on honesty. Honesty about my pain, my disappointments, my expectations. Instead of pretending, I talk to God about the times I feel that He failed me or how it seemed like so many of those promises we proclaimed did not pass. If I feel that God let me down, I talk about it. To me, that’s true intimacy. I’m not acting like I’m okay and keeping it all inside because that’s the proper religious thing to do.” - Jonathan Evans

Monday, February 21, 2022

Suffering - Paul Tripp


 

Waiting on God doesn’t mean sitting around and hoping. Waiting means believing he will do what he’s promised and then acting with confidence. Waiting on God is not at all like the meaningless waiting that you do at the dentist’s office. You know, he’s overbooked, so you’re still sitting there more than an hour past your scheduled appointment. You’re a man, but you’re now reading Family Circle magazine. You’ve begun to read the article titled “The 7 Best Chicken Recipes in the World.” When you’re a man and you’re getting ready to tear a chicken recipe out of Family Circle magazine because the recipe sounds so good, you know that you have been waiting too long! But waiting on God is not like that. Waiting on God is an active life based on confidence in his presence and promises, not a passive existence haunted by occasional doubt. Waiting on God isn’t internal torment that results in paralysis. No, waiting on God is internal rest that results in courageous action. Waiting is your calling. Waiting is your blessing. Every one of God’s children has been chosen to wait, because every one of God’s children lives between the “already” and the “not yet.” Already this world has been broken by sin, but not yet has it been made new again. Already Jesus has come, but not yet has he returned to take you home with him forever. Already your sin has been forgiven, but not yet have you been fully delivered from it. Already Jesus reigns, but not yet has his final kingdom come. Already sin has been defeated, but not yet has it been completely destroyed. Already the Holy Spirit has been given, but not yet have you been perfectly formed into the likeness of Jesus. Already God has given you his Word, but not yet has it totally transformed your life. Already you have been given grace, but not yet has that grace finished its work. You see, we’re all called to wait because we all live right smack dab in the middle of God’s grand redemptive story. We all wait for the final end of the work that God has begun in and for us. We don’t just wait—we wait in hope. And what does hope in God look like? It is a confident expectation of a guaranteed result. We wait believing that what God has begun he will complete, so we live with confidence and courage. We get up every morning and act upon what is to come, and because what is to come is sure, we know that our labor in God’s name is never in vain. So we wait and act. We wait and work. We wait and fight. We wait and conquer. We wait and proclaim. We wait and run. We wait and sacrifice. We wait and give. We wait and worship. Waiting on God is an action based on confident assurance of grace to come.

It is dangerous to live without your heart being captured by awe of God, because awe of God is quickly replaced by awe of you.

There is no one we swindle more than we swindle ourselves. There is no one we run to defend more than we do ourselves. And like every other spiritually blind person, Joe was blind to his blindness.

Grace doesn’t make it okay for you to live for you. No, grace frees you to experience the joy of living for One greater than you.

Suffering confronts us with the fact that life is not about us but about God. It is not about our glory but his.
Suffering causes us to scan our lives and face the fact that we control very little. So we mourn not only our suffering but also what it has forced us to admit about ourselves. Our loss of the illusion of control also adds to the fear that accompanies suffering.
God’s grace often does its best and brightest work when things are the darkest and most difficult.
When you are exhausted, discouraged, overwhelmed, and barely holding on to hope, it’s tempting to work yourself into thinking that things are not as bad as they seem or that you’re better off than you actually are. But because denial doesn’t deal with reality but avoids reality, it never goes anywhere good. It will never give you what you need or help you be what you need to be when the unthinkable enters your door. But because Jesus walked in your shoes and faced what you now face, you’ve been forever liberated from the trap of denial. You’re free to be weak and to cry out in weakness and free from ever having to put on a spiritual act.
God’s honesty about life in this broken world is a welcome to each of us to be just as honest. In fact, an entire book of the Bible (Psalms) is a script of the honest cries of God’s people—cries of confusion, doubt, and fear in the midst of the painful trials of life. God never reprimands us for being afraid. He never mocks us in our weakness. He never minimizes what we’re going through. He never turns his back on us when we wonder what he’s doing or why we’re facing what we’re facing. Not only can your Lord handle every bit of your honesty, but his Word is a welcome to be honest.
Your suffering is not a sign that you’ve been forsaken; rather, it’s a sign that you live in a world that doesn’t function the way God intended and is in need of complete renewal.

Sunday, February 20, 2022

Education quotes

 "Life skills can never be measured on a standardized test." - Blunt Educator

"Be careful to leave your sons well instructed rather than rich, for the hopes of the instructed are better than the wealth of the ignorant." - Epictetus

Saturday, February 19, 2022

Authority 24

 I’m like most Americans in that I like to think I’m self sufficient and independent; that I do not anyone in authority over me. If I want to do something, I save up and do it. I have my rights and I want them protected. But the world’s standards do not represent God’s Kingdom. I’d like to think my intentions are always goid and noble but my sin nature manipulates my intentions for selfish gain. 

“I came to see that I was wired for awe, that awe of something sits at the bottom of everything I say and do. But I wasn’t just wired for awe. I was wired for awe of God. No other awe satisfies the soul. No other awe can give my heart the peace, rest, and security that it seeks. I came to see that I needed to trace awe of God down to the most mundane of human decisions and activities.” - Paul David Tripp, Awe: Why It Matters for Everything We Think, Say, and Do

“Our corrupt heart guides us to use our reason and sense observation for weaving webs of half-truths, distorted truths, and untruths. So we do not start with ignorance and come to truth, but begin with truth and, as Calvin put it, “deliberately befuddle ourselves.” Excerpt From Recovering Our Sanity Michael Horton

Gentleness - St John of the Cross

 

Purified by the Dark Night of the Soul

If God were to liberate beginner Christians from all annoyances, they would be in danger of pride and presumption.

By Saint John of the Cross

FEBRUARY 13, 2022

Beginners usually yearn for God to take away their faults not for God’s sake but for their own peace of mind. What they don’t realize is that if God were to liberate them from all these annoyances they would be in even graver danger of pride and presumption. They hate it when others are praised and love it when they are praised themselves. They are like those foolish virgins who sought oil from others when their own lamps went dead (Matt. 25:8).

Yet those on the true path to perfection walk in a special way through all this. They are assisted by their very humility, placing little importance on their own efforts and drawing little satisfaction from their accomplishments. They see everyone else as far better than themselves and may suffer some holy envy, longing to serve God as others do.

As their passion for God intensifies, they work harder for him, loving the service they are engaged in. But as their humility deepens, so does their awareness of how much God deserves from them and how inadequate everything they do really is. The more they do, the less satisfied they feel. So vast is their generosity and love toward God that nothing they could possibly offer him seems worthy.

Gentle souls, far from pretending to be anyone’s teacher, are open to the journey and will set out on a completely different road from the one they have been walking if that is recommended.

Absorbed, drenched, swept up by this loving anxiety, they do not take any notice of what others are doing or not doing, except insofar as they perceive that others are better than they are. They think little of themselves and only wish that others would dismiss them altogether. Even if others do value them and praise them, they cannot believe a thing they say; such compliments strike them as ridiculous.

With deep tranquility and humility, they yearn to learn from anyone who might have anything to teach them. This is exactly the opposite of those others who always consider themselves to be the teachers, the ones who pluck the words out of the mouth of someone offering some instruction as if they already knew everything.

But these gentle souls, far from pretending to be anyone’s teacher, are open to the journey and will set out on a completely different road from the one they have been walking if that is recommended. The never presume to be right about anything.

narrow, foggy alley lit by street lamps

Photograph by Morica Pham

They do not feel like talking about themselves, even to their spiritual guides, because they consider their religious deeds to be so insignificant that they’re not worth mentioning. They are much more interested in discussing their faults and transgressions than their virtues, eager to share whatever is wrong with them. They are inclined to seek direction from people who do not think much of them or of their spiritual accomplishments.

These are qualities of a spirit that is pure and simple and true. And this is what is pleasing to God. The wise spirit of God dwells within them, inspiring them to keep their treasures concealed and reveal only their imperfections. As he denies this grace from the proud, it is bestowed, along with all the other virtues, upon these humble souls.

God is For You 23

 Rick Warren teaches that we must counter the critical attitude of our day with the wisdom of God’s Word. How are God’s promises helping you deal with the negativity all around us?  What is an effective strategy to filter out the critic and listen to the powerful message through Scripture?  The negativity of the world is really a fear of man rather than a fear of our Creator  if our God is really who He says Heis, what do I need to fear other than Him  his righteousness and justice will rule all of His creation.  He will make things right and He has begun the process through the sacrifice of His son 


God will allow the levels of chaos to rise until He gets our undivided attention, not because He is cruel, but because He desires our wholehearted allegiance. - Tony Evans Romans 13:1 - There is no authority except from God, and the authorities that exist are instituted by God - Tony Evans

Priscilla Schier - I realize that all along the way I’ve been practicing who I would become. I have been working on me the whole time, through both good and bad decisions, and with the way I have handled successes and setbacks. The blessing of the small, everyday decision is that you don’t have to wait for major moments to change. You start where you are and move forward doing the next right thing. Lam 3:3. His mercies are new every morning. - Priscilla Shirer

Friday, February 18, 2022

Defining Verse by Wiersbe

 Hannah  p.125 Faith isn’t something we have to work up; it is something God sends down to let us know He is pleased with our prayer request. True faith is strengthened by the promises of God that the Holy Spirit shows us in Scripture. As we pray, there is a growing confidence in our hearts that the Bible calls “joy and peace in believing” (Romans 15:13) 

p.126 - One of the dangers of answered prayer is that we permit the gift to.become more important than the Giver, and this is idolatry. Whatever God gives us must be places on the alter and dedicated to Him, or it will become a stumbling block in our lives. Our lives, our lives ones and friends, our plans, our possessions, our opportunities and achievements, our abilities - all of these things and more must be places at the feet of Jesus before God can bless and use them for His glory. Like seeds, we must be. Irked and experience death before we can produce fruit (John 12/24), for it is out of death to self that we discover life for others. 

Defy Insanity

 


“The church is not a voting bloc in the dangerous game of identity politics. What at least some evangelical leaders apparently don’t recognize is that we lose everything not when we are fed to lions but when we preach another gospel. “For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world and forfeits his soul?” (Matt 16:26). We should not be surprised when a politician appeals to our fears; what should alarm us is when this appeal succeeds among those who profess faith in Christ. ”


Excerpt From

Recovering Our Sanity

Michael Horton

“Despair is another common response to the problems we see either in ourselves or in the world. Some of us assume that although I am a relatively good person, there are too many people who are not—and there’s no way that I can change them. Again, this is fed by hours spent in our preferred silo of so-called “news” and social media instead of actually rubbing shoulders with neighbors.”


Excerpt From

Recovering Our Sanity

Michael Horton

https://books.apple.com/us/book/recovering-our-sanity/id1574132636

This material may be protected by copyright.


“Karl Barth’s description of sin as, more than anything else, sloth. Most of our sins are in the “left undone” category I just mentioned. We’re lazy. Apart from God’s grace, we are not inclined to care about God or our neighbor. We don’t even really care about ourselves—at least not about our most important needs. We just want to have fun, make a splash, let a few people know we were here, and . . . whatever. Most of us are not even brave enough to be truly awful; mostly, we’re just indolent.  

“In Psalm 2, then, God laughs at the pretension of the would-be autonomous self. The powerful ones of this age are not living with the grain of reality. Insanity has gripped them. It just does not make sense that they would not acknowledge the Messiah as their lawful sovereign. It may seem a little off-putting that God’s response to all of this vaunted show of autonomy is to laugh. Once more we meet a God who is not necessarily the familiar one in our culture today. Yet his response makes perfect sense. Here are rebels God created in his image and still loves, running around on the ground like ants and spoiling their realms and natural resources. They think that they’re free and can make their own choices, but they don’t realize that only God’s fetters can liberate them”


“Like our first parents, we quickly realize that our prized autonomy is just a dream—a nightmare, in fact. It is not consistent with reality. We can  declare our independence, but that does not mean that we have succeeded in gaining it. We may cry out in elation, “I am free!”, but we are actually in bondage to lords which cannot liberate but merely seek to pull us deeper into their deathly depths”


“God’s laughing is not the sardonic cackle of a tyrant, but the head-shaking amazement of a liberating King at just how deluded we are as we seek to “burst [his] bonds apart.” We cannot actually do this, because we cannot choose or unchoose to be God’s creatures. But we try, however feebly, to resist anyone or anything that exposes our charade of autonomy. This is not power, but impotence; not freedom, but bondage; not authenticity, but vanity; not intelligence, but foolishness. Why would anyone want to cast off the bonds of this king, who said, “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light” (Matt 11:28–30)?”


“We’re all afraid of being unrighteous. Self-justification is our default setting. And that is because we know deep down exactly what we are: the “ungodly.” We know what God requires of us and what it means to be righteous, to be godly, and to be responsible, loving, and just human beings. But often we do not do what we know is right when we’re up to bat. We’re afraid of losing something if we do the right thing. In other words,  we’re selfish. We don’t love God and our neighbor, and we show it not only by what we do but by what we fail to do.”


“When we try to justify ourselves, nobody wins. God is offended that we think we can do better than the gift he has offered through his Son’s righteous life, sacrificial death, and glorious resurrection.”

Jesus is also a true and faithful human, the Last Adam, who is exactly the sort of person we were all created to be, God’s faithful covenant partner. And the evidence of his Spirit-endowed wisdom was the fear of God.

Fear is the beginning of wisdom and knowledge. If you come to know God, the true and living God, your first response will be fear. You are astonished at how unlike anyone or anything he is. You do not have the intellectual, psychological, moral, or emotional equipment to handle, much less explain, it. You are not in charge. You realize that you have not discovered God; he has discovered you. He knows you inside and out. You now know, not just intellectually but deep in your heart, that you are a sinner in the presence of the holy God. It’s disorienting because it’s not what your “little voice within” would ever tell you” Excerpt, Recovering Our Sanity by Michael Horton


“In sharp contrast with other religions (which sometimes even wear the Christian label), God does not frighten us into submission. Instead, he draws us by cords of love. Godly fear, in fact, turns out to be synonymous with love, as the first fruit of faith in God’s mercy and forgiveness: “But I, through the abundance of your steadfast love, will enter your house. I will bow down toward your holy temple in the fear of you” (Ps 5:7, emphasis mine); “but the Lord takes pleasure in those who fear him, in those who hope in his steadfast love” (Ps 147:11, emphasis mine). Through faith in Christ we no longer fear God’s anger, so that we can begin to “fear him” for his unchangeable and merciful promises, clinging to him alone and looking for no other savior. This is true worship and, with it, true sanity.” Excerpt, Recovering Our Sanity by Michael Horton


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“But the highest wisdom comes not from “looking around” or “looking within,” but from being driven outside of ourselves—what we feel, assume, imagine, or do—by just hearing God’s Word, especially his gospel. Here there is no speculation—no more chattering within ourselves about what we might believe. The gospel is a strange announcement of news brought from a herald. It’s based not on timeless principles but on the resurrection of the God-Man in history. “So faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ” (Rom 10:17). It is not something you ascend to attain or descend to bring up from the dead (vv. 3–16). Excerpt, Recovering Our Sanity by Michael Horton


“The slightest brush with God’s majesty fills us with dread, and this is the beginning of all wisdom. Then God condescends to reveal his favor—his gospel—and this is the consummation of all wisdom. Christ is the cleft of the rock in whom we are hidden to behold God’s grace in the preaching of the gospel. Veiling his glory in the humility of our flesh, he made it possible for people to see, hear, touch, and be touched by God himself. 


“God does not exist for my happiness, but I exist for his glory. And when I am glorifying God, I am also enjoying him. Worshiping God is the flourishing of ourselves and those around us. So it is only in communion with him that I find genuine satisfaction which can weather unhappy circumstances. I don’t naturally know this because I’m a sinner. Rather, I have to be confronted with God in his holiness and majesty, accept that I am the problem, and then flee to his mercy in his Son. And then he unites us also to each other as members of his body—gifts instead of threats. That is what Christians should be saying. Maybe I’m living on an island, but I just don’t hear enough of this” - Excerpt, Recovering Our Sanity by Michael Horton

“However, my thesis is that the fear of God drives out the fear of everything else. And, to begin, we will turn to God’s Word for wisdom. We do not have a stern Father who just tells us to brush off our wounds and move on. He binds our wounds—even ones he inflicts—to save us, like a doctor who cuts out a malignant tumor.” Excerpt, Recovering Our Sanity by Michael Horton

“I want to help us shift our whole focus from a human-centered obsession with saving ourselves through false securities and promises of immediate gratification to the “solid joys and lasting treasure [that] none but Zion’s children know.”23 From that perspective, we can be joyful even when we are unhappy, hopeful even when the hype fails us, and persevering and growing even in and through fearful trials.”


“The antidote to our fears is the fear of God. The proper fear of God leads us to Christ, our only mediator, so that the improper fear of God—anxiety about whether he is our terrifying Judge or merciful Father—can be settled once and for all.”

I have written elsewhere at length about how a human-centered society turns God into a supporting actor for our life movie. Whether as a personal therapist, life coach, entertainer, manager, or mascot in the culture wars, God exists for us.”

“Fear really is worship—we fear what we believe is ultimate, what we think has the last word over our lives.”


“Even in many churches, the biggest problem seems to be peace of mind or with ourselves, perhaps even with each other, rather than peace with God. When our greatest fear is subjective shame rather than objective guilt before God, or threats to a long life instead of everlasting life, we live in a flat world.”


“Our corrupt heart guides us to use our reason and sense observation for weaving webs of half-truths, distorted truths, and untruths. So we do not start with ignorance and come to truth, but begin with truth and, as Calvin put it, “deliberately befuddle ourselves.”3”


“Think of the top ten worst sins in today’s world that come to your mind. Like me, you probably picked symptoms, not the root illness. In the Bible, the worst thing that can be said about a people is that they “did not fear God” (Deut 25:18). Active rebellion against God is not the root but the fruit of failing to take God seriously: “Transgression speaks to the wicked deep in his heart; there is no fear of God before his eyes” (Ps 36:1, emphasis mine). “There is no fear of God before their eyes,” Paul repeats in his diagnosis of the human condition (Rom 3:18). Did you know that it’s possible to live an outwardly pious life, thanking God that you’re not like the godless secular humanists, without any genuine fear of God in you?”


“In the political sphere, false prophets profane God’s name by using it as a credit card for whatever policy, candidate, or party they believe best contributes to human flourishing. Yet the entire system is human-centered, using God to accomplish our own agenda. Here’s the key: The fear of God is not a means to an end, but the end itself. We don’t use the “fear of God” as a slogan for national revival, personal well-being (even spirituality), moral crusades, or social justice. We don’t use God to make a point—God is the point.”




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Thursday, February 17, 2022

Awe by Paul Tripp


How many believers really live a lifestyle that results from believing that God has graced them to be not just recipients of the work of his kingdom but instruments of the work of the kingdom as well? When you believe this, you live with a constant ministry mentality that results in an everyday ministry lifestyle.
Every awesome thing in creation is designed to point you to the One who alone is worthy of capturing and controlling the awe of your searching and hungry heart.

I came to see that I was wired for awe, that awe of something sits at the bottom of everything I say and do. But I wasn’t just wired for awe. I was wired for awe of God. No other awe satisfies the soul. No other awe can give my heart the peace, rest, and security that it seeks. I came to see that I needed to trace awe of God down to the most mundane of human decisions and activities.

Martin Lloyd Jones

 


Here is one great name - Jehovah-jireh. You will find it in the story of Abraham going up into that mountain to sacrifice his only son Isaac. He was on the point of striking his son when suddenly God stopped him and said, 'Do not strike him, I have another offering.' And Abraham found a ram in the thicket. The Lord had provided the offering and the sacrifice, so he gave that name, 'The Lord Will Provide'. And so, whenever you go into the presence of God, whatever your need may be, whatever form the need may be taking, remind yourself that you are praying to Jehovah-jireh, the Lord who has promised to provide. He will be with you for He says, 'I will not fail thee, nor forsake thee' (Josh 1:5).
Martyn Lloyd-Jones

If a man says that having thought about the matter and having considered all sides he has on the whole decided for Christ, and if he has done so without any emotion or feeling, I cannot regard him as a man who has been regenerated. The convicted sinner no more ‘decides’ for Christ than the poor drowning man ‘decides’ to take hold of that rope that is thrown to him and suddenly provides him with the only means of escape.
D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Preaching and Preachers

Always respond to every impulse to pray. The impulse to pray may come when you are reading or when you are battling with a text. I would make an absolute law of this – always obey such an impulse. Where does it come from? It is the work of the Holy Spirit (Phil 2:12-13). This often leads to some of the most remarkable experiences in the life of the minister. So never resist, never postpone it, never push it aside because you are busy. Give yourself to it, yield to it; and you will find not only that you have not been wasting time with respect to the matter with which you are dealing but that actually it has helped you greatly in that respect. You will experience an ease and a facility in understanding what you were reading, in thinking, in ordering matter for a sermon, in writing, in everything which is quite astonishing. Such a call to prayer must never be regarded as a distraction; always respond to it immediately, and thank God if it happens to you frequently." (Preaching & Preachers, 170-171)


The gospel commends itself to me because of its truth, because it does not just say, "Well now, let's forget our troubles and think of something beautiful." It says, "In the world you shall have tribulation..." (John 16:33). It says that in a world like this, dominated by Satan, there will be "wars and rumors of wars" (Matthew 24:6). It is psychology and not the gospel that just tries to ask us forget our troubles for the time being. The gospel of Jesus Christ always, therefore, of necessity annoys certain people, people who think that a place of worship is just a place where you listen to beautiful things, and therefore while you are sitting there, you forget your problems and the problems of the world. These people are certain to be annoyed.

The gospel confronts us with the facts. It is all based upon a person; it is based upon certain things that happened historically. It comes and tells me, "Let not your heart be troubled." But it comes in the light of Gethsemane and Jesus' trial and cruel death upon the cross, the broken body, the burial, the utter hopelessness, and despair. Then, and only then, it goes on to tell me of the Resurrection and the glory of the Ascension and the sending of the Holy Spirit that puts me in an entirely different position. It has taken me through the facts, through the tunnel of darkness to the dawn that lights the other end.
D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones

 

And—you can be very sure of this—all who belong to the Lord Jesus Christ; who have seen the all-importance of the soul; who have seen their dread condition under the condemnation of the law; who have believed in Christ and His sacrificial death; who have committed themselves to Him, taking upon themselves the scorn and sarcasm of the world; those who have counted all things loss for his sake, who have denied themselves and taken up their cross daily and followed Him; those who have said, “I care not what happens to me as long as all is well between me and Him”—these are they who will be with Him in the new heaven and the new earth and will share and enjoy His glory for ever and ever.
D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, The Quiet Heart
That, surely, gives us a picture of a great deal that is happening at the present time. This is one of the problems confronting the Christian Church today. This ‘affluent society’ in which we are living is drugging people and making them feel that all is well with them. They have better wages, better houses, better cars, every gadget desirable in the home; life is satisfactory and all seems to be well; and because of that people have ceased to think and to face the real problems. They are content with this superficial ease and satisfaction, and that militates against a true and a radical understanding of their actual condition. And, of course, this is aggravated at the present time by many other agencies. There is the pleasure mania, and television and radio bringing their influence right into the home. All these things persuade man that all is well; they give him temporary feelings of happiness; and so he assumes that all is well and stops thinking. The result is that he does not realise his true position and then face it.
D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Preaching and Preachers

Dealing With Critics 22

 Dealing with critics seems like a life long battle. Real or imagined criticism can destroy our inspiration and creativity as we live in fear of the next comment. Sometimes I’m my own worst enemy by magnifying what might be a source of negative trash talk. One critic can speak volumes louder than the five compliments by others. How should you and I handle criticism?   Nehemiah seemed to filter out the invitation to meet with his enemies. He kept his goal of rebuilding the wall foremost in mind and acted like a true leader. Our mission of following Christ, obeying Him no matter the cost, will filter out the noise of the world and minimize the noise in our thoughts.

“‎Stop praying about this particular fear, for while you are praying, you are reminding yourself of it. You must stop thinking about yourself in terms of fear. Never think about thunderstorms; turn your back upon that altogether. You must think of yourself as a disciple of the Lord Jesus Christ and as one who belongs to Him. You must concentrate upon positive Christianity, not upon a negative fear.” - D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Walking with God Day by Day: 365 Daily Devotional Selections


Wednesday, February 16, 2022

Dare To Be The Church

Several years ago, one of our senior leaders met with then Mayor Beutler. There were some things going on in our city and we just met to ask, “What can we do to help?” But it was very affirming that the first thing he affirmed is how much he appreciated, as the mayor, the many ways we, as a church, make our community better. That's what we want. As a result of who we are as the people 6


of God, we want to be better business owners. We want to be better employers. We want to be better employees. We want to be better neighbors. We want to be better teachers. We want to be better students. We want to be better citizens. So think of it this way. What we want is for every environment where someone from Lincoln Berean is, that that environment is better because you're there. These are hard times. There's a lot of conflict. There's a lot of anger. There are a lot of problems. But what would it be like if thousands of people in all these environments all over our community made those environments better simply because you're there?

Now part of the challenge is that we have a media and politicians who are determined to divide us up into sides and keep the conflict going. It's very frustrating because it is destroying people's lives. And sadly, a lot of Christians get sucked into that. And rather than those environments being better, they're just contributing to the problem. One of the challenges we've had as a church, for those of us who speak, is some people want to interpret everything we say, through the grid of COVID. So it doesn't matter what you say, they're trying to figure out, “What?” “Wait a minute.” “Did you say we should get the vaccine or shouldn't get the vaccine?” “Wait a minute, are you saying we should wear a mask or shouldn't wear a mask?” So just remember, there were lots of issues before COVID and there will be lots of issues after COVID. This is a difficult world.

Sadly, studies are showing many Christians today are choosing a church, not based on their theology, but rather on their politics. I just can't imagine how that grieves the heart of Jesus. I can say with great confidence, no one has stood on this stage over the last two years and told you what your opinion should be about vaccines or about masks. No one has! As a matter of fact, it’s just not how we do business. Let me explain it this way.

The vision is that we come together in order to know Jesus, in order to become like Him. That's what we're doing. We would call it discipleship. As a result, as you grow in your relationship with Jesus and become like Him—this is where it gets really crazy radical—we actually trust you. We trust you to go out into whatever environment you're in, to follow your conscience, to follow the leading of the Spirit, and you decide how to rightly represent Jesus in the environment you're in. There are lots of issues. Now we're not talking about things that are clearly biblically defined. There are just lots of issues that aren't. And part of what we have to accept is there is going to be quite a diversity of opinion. And that's okay. As a matter of fact, it's one of the things I love about Lincoln Berean. There is great diversity here. We've worked really hard to make this a safe environment for anyone to walk through the doors and pursue Jesus. As a result of that, you have quite a diversity of opinion. Good Christians can disagree on a lot of issues. The church has never been about uniformity. It's about unity—and we're unified in the person of Christ. It's not helpful to cast judgment on another Christian because they don't see something exactly the same way you do. Here's how those conversations often go. “Now I'm not judging...” but the very next sentence out of their mouth is a judgment. I guess we think if we say that, it's a pass to be judgmental. It's like you are judging. It's possible to be really good Christians and not necessarily see everything the same way.

 But there are two non-negotiables, where there is no wiggle room if we're going to be serious Christians. One is we must agree together that Jesus is the only hope of the world. I don't know how you could be a Christian and not understand that. And number two, our calling is to rightly represent Jesus in whatever environment we’re in. There's no wiggle room there. There's no margin.  - Bryan Clark


for disagreement there. As the church, we may have differences of opinion on lots of things, but we must agree together that Jesus is the only hope of the world. And we are called as a church to rightly represent Jesus in every environment we’re in. I can confidently say, if Jesus comes back next week, that's what matters most. There are lots of things that matter, but we can't lose sight of what ultimately matters most...if we're going to Dare to Be the Church.

Psalm 119 - Doug Shada

 7/23/17 The stability of God’s Word (Psalm 119)

Why do we take God’s Word so lightly?  It’s because we are so self sufficient and self focused. God’s Word provides the strength we need to defeat doubt, discouragement, disappointment and being disillusioned. Who has established His way of doing things? Who has given the truth we need to live in this world?  How can we be transformed and changed into the person who honors God? We must choose God’s truth. There are 15 benefits of knowing His truth:

  1. God gives wisdom (vs.97,98)

  2. He gives purpose (137-138) - to give glory to His name

  3. He gives comfort (50)

  4. He provides the right values to live by (14)

  5. He helps us to be pure in a contaminated world (9,11)

  6. He helps us to be fruitful in this life (25)

  7. We are loved (73) and do not need to struggle with self image

  8. We are refreshed and motivated to stay away from vane pursuits (37)

  9. We are strengthened during adversity and hard times (54)

  10. We are companions to like minded believers (63)

  11. We have true freedom from the bondage of sinful habits (4()

  12. We have peace through our trials (65)

  13. We have a steadfast stabilizing hope (49)

  14. He provides guidance and direction as we make decisions (77-100)

  15. We experience joy in His presence (11)

Psalm 23-12

 Our weakness and inadequacies show us that we need His strength. The chaos and trauma of this world cannot be handled by ourselves. How can...