This week I heard a great message on the subject addressed in Hebrews 4:11: "Let us labour therefore to enter into that rest, lest any man fall after the same example of unbelief." This is an interesting paradox, that we should have to labour to enter into the rest God has provided for us. There is a rest God offers which transcends the cessation of activity. This rest God speaks of can be intentionally entered no matter our circumstances, just like the peace God offers that passes understanding. We will never be perfectly at rest until we are free from the fetters of this body of flesh, yet we are called to labour to enter that rest today. It is not a fleeting mirage that taunts us, ever slipping from our grasp, but a state of heart and way of living we enjoy as we abide in Christ.
This touches on something I have been thinking about often of late, the contrast between being passive and submissive. Biblical submission is something often misunderstood. Some correlate submission and passivity, but they are complete opposites. These two responses are defined not by outward actions, but the condition of the heart. When someone is passive, it is defined as the absence of outward activity. When we submit to God and one another in love, at times it can look like passivity. Yet submission is the voluntary laying down of our will in obedience to the Father, purposing even in outward inaction to rely wholly upon God. "Submit" is a verb; it is an action we purpose to take. Submission to God is always intentional and impossible to accomplish without faith in God. Hebrews 11:6 says, "But without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him."
Submission is a labour of faith in which God is well pleased. Jesus gave His back to the scourge, His cheeks to the smiters, and His hands and feet to crude Roman nails in submission to the Father. The response of Christ to the buffeting of his tormentors may have appeared outwardly passive, but in reality it was nothing of the sort. His path to the cross was not as a passive sheep, ambling onwards in ignorance, but was purposeful, intentional submission as the Lamb of God sent to be a sacrifice for sin. Let us submit to one another in love, casting our cares upon Christ because He cares for us. All our burdens He has already bourne. We are also called to bear one another's burdens and so fulfill the law of Christ, to love one another as He has loved us.
07 October 2013
30 September 2013
Through the Keyhole
I am awed by the complexity of life on earth. When I turned on the TV the other day, there was a program about Emperor Penguins. How those creatures survive in such brutal conditions is nothing short of miraculous! The instincts within those created animals (all creatures are created by God) enable them to procreate, pass the egg gently from female to male, and then walk with the egg balanced carefully on the feet. After handing off the egg, the female heads off to hunt. I saw the show for less than five minutes, but my mind was blown by the amazing abilities and rare beauty of those majestic creatures.
From the smallest single-celled organism to the sprawling heavens above, all boldly proclaim the awesomeness of God's creative majesty. The stars displayed in the night sky twinkle from millions of light years away. It struck me that when we look up into the sky and admire the beauty of countless stars, we are simply peering through a keyhole to catch but a glimpse of God's majesty. That is how awesome and great God is. He is so beyond our comprehension, yet through nature His beauty can be seen. But God was not content simply to create matter, animals, humans, and spirits. He desired to be known by them and to be with them. Unwilling to remain apart from man because of man's rebellion, God saw fit to reveal Himself to us as a Man: Jesus Christ who is called Immanuel, God with us. He was not simply and orator or a proponent of social justice, but One who demonstrated divine love for all people through His sacrificial death. Jesus also revealed His power over death through His resurrection and ascension before many witnesses.
How great is our God! Moses sang in Exodus 15:11 after God delivered the Israelites through the Red Sea and destroyed their enemies, "Who is like You, O LORD, among the gods? Who is like You, glorious in holiness, fearful in praises, doing wonders?" Answer? No one! Nothing! Let us glorify, praise, and thank Him. May God open our eyes to behold Him so we might better appreciate His wonders!
From the smallest single-celled organism to the sprawling heavens above, all boldly proclaim the awesomeness of God's creative majesty. The stars displayed in the night sky twinkle from millions of light years away. It struck me that when we look up into the sky and admire the beauty of countless stars, we are simply peering through a keyhole to catch but a glimpse of God's majesty. That is how awesome and great God is. He is so beyond our comprehension, yet through nature His beauty can be seen. But God was not content simply to create matter, animals, humans, and spirits. He desired to be known by them and to be with them. Unwilling to remain apart from man because of man's rebellion, God saw fit to reveal Himself to us as a Man: Jesus Christ who is called Immanuel, God with us. He was not simply and orator or a proponent of social justice, but One who demonstrated divine love for all people through His sacrificial death. Jesus also revealed His power over death through His resurrection and ascension before many witnesses.
How great is our God! Moses sang in Exodus 15:11 after God delivered the Israelites through the Red Sea and destroyed their enemies, "Who is like You, O LORD, among the gods? Who is like You, glorious in holiness, fearful in praises, doing wonders?" Answer? No one! Nothing! Let us glorify, praise, and thank Him. May God open our eyes to behold Him so we might better appreciate His wonders!
25 September 2013
Only Christ Redeems
The world cannot provide the redemptive forgiveness and grace found only in God. There is no hope in mankind for salvation or comfort. Heap up money and riches, distract yourself with activity, and pursue everything your heart desires and your conclusion will be the same as King Solomon: "All is vanity and grasping for the wind." Successful building projects, laughter, abundance of wealth, wine, women, or song did nothing to satisfy the needs of his soul.
In the mornings this week I have been reading through the book of Ruth and continue to marvel over this beautiful story of redemption. Ruth, a foreign widow, "happened" to glean in the field of Boaz. He was a near kinsman, a man who was called to redeem her to raise up seed on behalf of Ruth's late husband so he would have an heir. This he delighted to do, and took his case before the men at the gate. There was a man who was a closer relative than Boaz, but when redeeming the land meant he must also marry Ruth he refused to do so. He claimed it would mar his own inheritance. Boaz rejoiced to make a covenant before those at the gate, and redeemed Ruth as his wife.
It is a wonderful picture of the redemptive work Christ has done for us. We are aliens and foreigners of the commonwealth of heaven, separated from God because of our sin. But He has been gracious to us and sealed a covenant with His own blood, claiming all who will repent and trust in Him as His own. What grace, mercy, and love He has demonstrated! How thankful I am that my life has been redeemed from sin, Hell, and death. Christ has paid my ransom and delivered me from everlasting destruction, providing through His sacrifice eternal life as it is written in Ephesians 1:5-8: "...having predestined us to adoption as sons by Jesus Christ to Himself, according to the good pleasure of His will, 6 to the praise of the glory of His grace, by which He has made us accepted in the Beloved. 7 In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace 8 which He made to abound toward us in all wisdom and prudence..."
There are things in this world which have redemptive value: scrap metals, plastics, even paper goods can be redeemed for the purpose of profitable use. I am a wretched sinner without any eternal value, yet God has seen fit to redeem my life to accomplish His divine purposes through me. This is a wondrous thing: God does not redeem me only because He wants to use me, but because He loves me as I am. He has made a distinction between me and my sin. He has forgiven me and chosen to remember my sin no more, and now uses me and all others adopted into His family through the Gospel by His grace. This is the example I am to follow, giving more grace, that His redemptive power will be at work in and through my life.
I was previously without hope or comfort, but God has done the impossible through the redemptive sacrifice of Christ. God is worthy of all praise and thanksgiving for all He has done, and I am eternally grateful!
In the mornings this week I have been reading through the book of Ruth and continue to marvel over this beautiful story of redemption. Ruth, a foreign widow, "happened" to glean in the field of Boaz. He was a near kinsman, a man who was called to redeem her to raise up seed on behalf of Ruth's late husband so he would have an heir. This he delighted to do, and took his case before the men at the gate. There was a man who was a closer relative than Boaz, but when redeeming the land meant he must also marry Ruth he refused to do so. He claimed it would mar his own inheritance. Boaz rejoiced to make a covenant before those at the gate, and redeemed Ruth as his wife.
It is a wonderful picture of the redemptive work Christ has done for us. We are aliens and foreigners of the commonwealth of heaven, separated from God because of our sin. But He has been gracious to us and sealed a covenant with His own blood, claiming all who will repent and trust in Him as His own. What grace, mercy, and love He has demonstrated! How thankful I am that my life has been redeemed from sin, Hell, and death. Christ has paid my ransom and delivered me from everlasting destruction, providing through His sacrifice eternal life as it is written in Ephesians 1:5-8: "...having predestined us to adoption as sons by Jesus Christ to Himself, according to the good pleasure of His will, 6 to the praise of the glory of His grace, by which He has made us accepted in the Beloved. 7 In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace 8 which He made to abound toward us in all wisdom and prudence..."
There are things in this world which have redemptive value: scrap metals, plastics, even paper goods can be redeemed for the purpose of profitable use. I am a wretched sinner without any eternal value, yet God has seen fit to redeem my life to accomplish His divine purposes through me. This is a wondrous thing: God does not redeem me only because He wants to use me, but because He loves me as I am. He has made a distinction between me and my sin. He has forgiven me and chosen to remember my sin no more, and now uses me and all others adopted into His family through the Gospel by His grace. This is the example I am to follow, giving more grace, that His redemptive power will be at work in and through my life.
I was previously without hope or comfort, but God has done the impossible through the redemptive sacrifice of Christ. God is worthy of all praise and thanksgiving for all He has done, and I am eternally grateful!
22 September 2013
Fear is a Choice
The perspective of the Bible reveals love is a choice. The divine love revealed through Jesus Christ springs of grace from the goodness of God. In obedience to the Father's will, Jesus rejoiced to demonstrate His love for sinners even through the suffering of the cross. This love is not seated on the rise and flow of the emotions, nor is it at the mercy of circumstance. It is a constant, active love that is ever reaching out to man from the sole pure source of love: God.
One of the commands Jesus gave to His followers is that we would love one another as He has loved us. We choose to love therefore on the basis of His active love, not on how we feel at any given time. Our motivation for loving others is not their worthiness, but out of the same grace God has shown us. Because the Holy Spirit resides within us, we are enabled to love as God loves. It is a conscious decision we are called to make to demonstrate this love to all regardless of their performance or views of us. This sacrificial love is a supernatural fruit of the Spirit within us that is bourne when we abide in Christ through faith.
This week God spoke to me so clearly about another choice we as Christians are called and empowered to make: the choice to fear. Did you know that fear - just like love - is a choice? You might think, "I can't help it if I am afraid." If you are not a Christian, I quite agree with you. I fear for you! But if you are a Christian, you have been given the strength and wisdom to walk according to God's perfect will. Anyone can be given a fright, but the fear I am speaking of can also be called dread, preoccupation, worry, or fearful uncertainty. As a Christian, we are given the power to refuse to sin and instead walk in righteousness.
To paraphrase Luther concerning sin, he said something to the effect of "You can't keep birds from flying overhead, but you can keep them from nesting in your hair." The temptation itself is not sin. It is our acquiescing response to the temptation which causes sin to be conceived and brought forth. Satan will surely send his fiery darts and temptations to sin our way, but the shield of faith has the power to block them harmlessly to the ground. When the idea of sin barges into our minds through our senses or a satanic suggestion, Christians have a real choice: to flee from the temptation and seek God, or choose to entertain the idea of sin. We sin when our sin nature is awakened by temptation and we choose to entertain it. Even before we put it into practice when we toy with the ideas conceived, we are in sin. Jesus said if someone looks at a woman with lust in their heart, he or she has already committed adultery.
When it comes to fear, we have a choice set before us. As soon as we recognise our preoccuption or worry, our call is to choose to be casting our cares upon Christ, committing our situation and the outcome into His hands. David wrote in Psalm 56:2-4, "My enemies would hound me all day, for there are many who fight against me, O Most High. 3 Whenever I am afraid, I will trust in You. 4 In God (I will praise His word), in God I have put my trust; I will not fear. What can flesh do to me?" Every person on the earth has very real fear, even as we have a sin nature by birth. David used fear as a trigger to cause him to seek God instead. He said, "Whenever I am afraid, I will trust in You." When David was struck with paralysing fear, he looked to God as his Saviour and Deliverer. This enabled him to maintain a godly perspective when fear struck his heart. Then he was no longer afraid because He trusted God and his Word.
Let us choose to flee from the temptation to fear. When the wind blows and the waves crash against us, when everything seems uncertain and frightening, let us look to Christ and the scriptures. His nail-scarred hands reach to lift us up, and His eyes are filled with love. When we see Him and recognise Him as Creator of All and Saviour of our souls, all fear melts away. Then we can love as He loves, for it is His love which is revealed through us.
One of the commands Jesus gave to His followers is that we would love one another as He has loved us. We choose to love therefore on the basis of His active love, not on how we feel at any given time. Our motivation for loving others is not their worthiness, but out of the same grace God has shown us. Because the Holy Spirit resides within us, we are enabled to love as God loves. It is a conscious decision we are called to make to demonstrate this love to all regardless of their performance or views of us. This sacrificial love is a supernatural fruit of the Spirit within us that is bourne when we abide in Christ through faith.
This week God spoke to me so clearly about another choice we as Christians are called and empowered to make: the choice to fear. Did you know that fear - just like love - is a choice? You might think, "I can't help it if I am afraid." If you are not a Christian, I quite agree with you. I fear for you! But if you are a Christian, you have been given the strength and wisdom to walk according to God's perfect will. Anyone can be given a fright, but the fear I am speaking of can also be called dread, preoccupation, worry, or fearful uncertainty. As a Christian, we are given the power to refuse to sin and instead walk in righteousness.
To paraphrase Luther concerning sin, he said something to the effect of "You can't keep birds from flying overhead, but you can keep them from nesting in your hair." The temptation itself is not sin. It is our acquiescing response to the temptation which causes sin to be conceived and brought forth. Satan will surely send his fiery darts and temptations to sin our way, but the shield of faith has the power to block them harmlessly to the ground. When the idea of sin barges into our minds through our senses or a satanic suggestion, Christians have a real choice: to flee from the temptation and seek God, or choose to entertain the idea of sin. We sin when our sin nature is awakened by temptation and we choose to entertain it. Even before we put it into practice when we toy with the ideas conceived, we are in sin. Jesus said if someone looks at a woman with lust in their heart, he or she has already committed adultery.
When it comes to fear, we have a choice set before us. As soon as we recognise our preoccuption or worry, our call is to choose to be casting our cares upon Christ, committing our situation and the outcome into His hands. David wrote in Psalm 56:2-4, "My enemies would hound me all day, for there are many who fight against me, O Most High. 3 Whenever I am afraid, I will trust in You. 4 In God (I will praise His word), in God I have put my trust; I will not fear. What can flesh do to me?" Every person on the earth has very real fear, even as we have a sin nature by birth. David used fear as a trigger to cause him to seek God instead. He said, "Whenever I am afraid, I will trust in You." When David was struck with paralysing fear, he looked to God as his Saviour and Deliverer. This enabled him to maintain a godly perspective when fear struck his heart. Then he was no longer afraid because He trusted God and his Word.
Let us choose to flee from the temptation to fear. When the wind blows and the waves crash against us, when everything seems uncertain and frightening, let us look to Christ and the scriptures. His nail-scarred hands reach to lift us up, and His eyes are filled with love. When we see Him and recognise Him as Creator of All and Saviour of our souls, all fear melts away. Then we can love as He loves, for it is His love which is revealed through us.
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