During a communion service today, I held a small cup of juice in my hand. The grape juice represented the blood of Jesus Christ, shed on the cross for the sins of the world - and mine too. Christians have not been redeemed by corruptible things, but as it is written on 1 Peter 1:19: "...but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot." It amazed me to think God would allow the precious blood of His Son to be poured out for any reason, much less to atone for cursed sinners.
We count precious things we own as treasures, treasures to be guarded, preserved, and cherished. Yet so great was God's love for fallen men, He poured out the blood of Jesus on the dust of the earth. The riches of God's glorious love and grace were displayed in God's sacrifice. It boggles the wildest imagination! Jesus Christ is in very nature God, and made in the fashion of a man - doubly precious! In light of God's expense, how highly should Christ and His blood be regarded.
I stared at the cup of juice in wonder. Marvelous, God's love! Romans 5:5 says, "Now hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out in our hearts by the Holy Spirit who was given to us." Life is in our blood, yet God has given the souls of Christians new life through the indwelling Spirit of God. Whilst in the wilderness David wrote in Psalm 63:3, "Because Your lovingkindness is better than life, my lips shall praise You." We cannot repay God for His demonstration of love through the precious blood of Jesus being poured out, but we can praise Him. We can trust Him and believe His Word. We are forever indebted to God for such love and acceptance. Glorify Him, you who have tasted and seen that God is good. He has taken away the bitterness of the curse of sin and replaced it with the sweetness of love and eternal life!
10 July 2014
04 July 2014
Taken as You Follow
"Then Amos answered, and said to Amaziah: "I was no prophet, nor was I a son of a prophet, but I was a sheepbreeder and a tender of sycamore fruit.
15
Then the LORD took me as I followed the flock, and the LORD said to me, 'Go, prophesy to My people Israel.'"
Amos 7:14-15
Amos is a great example of a man God called to enter His ministry step by step. God brought him out of a farming profession - breeding sheep and picking fruit - and called him to be a prophet for His people. He didn't have a pedigree which would have been valued in the Jewish community, but he was called a prophet nevertheless. Like Moses, he was taken from following a flock of sheep and was called to prophesy to the nation of Israel.
Jesus called fisherman, tax collectors, doctors, and educated Pharisees to follow Him. Jesus is our Good Shepherd who takes us from one pasture and moves us to another. He takes people from all walks of life and employs them in His service. Answering His call is a step by step process, as each step taken in faith in God. Sometimes God gives us the big picture without the little details, but He often reveals the very first step of a series of steps we see only as we go. Taking that first step in surrender to God's leading with a desire to see the process through enables us to see and pass through the open door.
Amos wrote of his career, and said "then the LORD took me as a I followed the flock." This is such an important point. Sometimes when we perceive the call of God there may be a fleshly impulse to stop what we are doing to pursue an ambiguous goal. But the key is to keep doing what you are doing faithfully unto the LORD and in His time and way He will take you and turn you loose: "Go, prophesy to My people Israel." The word from the LORD didn't come until God had taken Amos from the sheepfold and said "Go!" There is an order to the way God works, but it is unpredictable. God's horizons and purposes reach far beyond our limited view.
God has you where He wants you. And until He moves you, keep doing what He has called you to do as unto Him. The day will come when He will take you and move you to a new arena for His glory. He may change your profession, where you live, the ministry God has entrusted to you, or call you from your failing body into eternal glory. The good work He has begun in you He will be faithful to complete. Trust that He is in control and He has purposes and plans you will enter into as you follow Christ in faith.
02 July 2014
Proud or Humble?
The other day I was struck with a simple truth: things which tempt me to be proud are the very things which God desires to use to humble me. Pride comes from a high regard of self. Our flesh always seeks promotion and recognition. The basis for true humility springs from a high view of God. After being born again by faith in Jesus, our whole perspective changes through the indwelling presence of the Holy Spirit. Our chief satisfaction is found in service and glory of God instead of serving self.
Tonight I have a privilege of going to my dad's ordination at Calvary Chapel Santee and I have been asked to share a few words. From a fleshly standpoint, I have always been "proud" of my dad. He has always been my pastor, and has always been an godly example for me to follow. Should I be proud of him, however, it reveals I seek to promote myself through him. Instead of a feeling of pride, I am greatly humbled that God would grant me such a rich blessing in my dad. I find it humbling that I should be asked to speak at the service. It is not because I am a "spiritual" person, but simply the Holy Spirit has continued to transform the way I think and live, bringing my life into submission through God's Word. God has revealed to my mind and heart that pride cannot have a place in my life. The acceptance or cultivation of pride in anything cannot be justified in a believer, even if the world says it is man's just due.
The things which make us proud God desires would instead humble us. The things we view as great achievements and accomplishments are gifts God has provided us by His grace. I did not deserve a wonderful father nor a loving mother. In His infinite mercy God has provided these people in my life, and they would be the first to say that anything good in them comes only from God. Pride in my life will cause me to not see blessings from God as they truly are: gifts by His infinite grace. God resists the proud, thus short-circuiting grace I fall short of. Everything we have and all we are is a product of God's goodness and grace, and this should cause us to be humble, grateful, and thankful to God!
Tonight I have a privilege of going to my dad's ordination at Calvary Chapel Santee and I have been asked to share a few words. From a fleshly standpoint, I have always been "proud" of my dad. He has always been my pastor, and has always been an godly example for me to follow. Should I be proud of him, however, it reveals I seek to promote myself through him. Instead of a feeling of pride, I am greatly humbled that God would grant me such a rich blessing in my dad. I find it humbling that I should be asked to speak at the service. It is not because I am a "spiritual" person, but simply the Holy Spirit has continued to transform the way I think and live, bringing my life into submission through God's Word. God has revealed to my mind and heart that pride cannot have a place in my life. The acceptance or cultivation of pride in anything cannot be justified in a believer, even if the world says it is man's just due.
The things which make us proud God desires would instead humble us. The things we view as great achievements and accomplishments are gifts God has provided us by His grace. I did not deserve a wonderful father nor a loving mother. In His infinite mercy God has provided these people in my life, and they would be the first to say that anything good in them comes only from God. Pride in my life will cause me to not see blessings from God as they truly are: gifts by His infinite grace. God resists the proud, thus short-circuiting grace I fall short of. Everything we have and all we are is a product of God's goodness and grace, and this should cause us to be humble, grateful, and thankful to God!
27 June 2014
Heart and Bones
"A sound heart is life to the body, but envy is rottenness to the bones."
Proverbs 14:30
At Calvary Chapel Sydney, we have been taking an in-depth look at the book of Proverbs in the Bible. What richness is found for those who linger and receive of the wisdom they contain! They never grow old, and their truth shines undimmed by passage of time. They hold forth the unchanging, divine wisdom of God. As we increase in understanding, our love and knowledge of Christ expands because the Father has made Christ to be wisdom for us.
I found the above Proverb most delightful, for King Solomon through the power of the Holy Spirit made a connection between the heart and bones which was not understood by physicians until the 19th century! In the Hebrew, the word translated "sound" is "a curative, remedy, a medicine." We all know the heart is important to the overall health of the body, and when it is working efficiently it circulates oxygen-enriched blood to all the body, cleanses the blood through the liver, removes carbon dioxide, and allows white blood cells to attack disease, among many other functions. A strong heart promotes health of the entire body.
The contrasting point the proverb makes is most compelling. In an article written by Dr. Barry Cooper called, "The Origins of Bone Marrow as the Seedbed of Our Blood," he describes several early incorrect theories of what bone marrow was. Dr. Cooper writes, "The marrow is currently well defined as the seedbed of our blood, producing 200 billion red cells, 10 billion white cells, and 400 billion platelets on a daily basis. Yet, the role of the marrow was unknown in antiquity and only first experimentally defined during the latter 19th century." Although he lived in antiquity, through the Holy Spirit Solomon made a connection between the heart and bones - something not understood until almost 3,000 years later! It is a catastrophic condition when the marrow inside bones ceases to function properly. The entire immune system is compromised when the blood cell factory of the marrow fails, even if the heart continues to beat. Unless there is a transfusion of healthy bone marrow, the condition is a certain death sentence.
From a spiritual vantage point, Solomon describes the horrific effects of envy. It is a hidden, silent killer more deadly than leukaemia. It multiplies within our inmost being, concealed by the appearance of strength and stability. Envy in a person is like a house freshly painted, but all the timber has been eaten by termites. Envy can be described as discontent or resentment aroused by apparent success of others. It is a view of life focused on self and others, wishing we had what others do. Envy has taken hold in our bones when the blessings of others wounds us, and we begrudge benefits others receive.
So how do we undergo a spiritual bone marrow examination? It will happen only by the probing, piercing Word of God quickened by the Holy Spirit. Hebrews 4:12-13 says, "For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart. 13 And there is no creature hidden from His sight, but all things are naked and open to the eyes of Him to whom we must give account." Christians are called to guard their hearts, because from the heart springs forth all the issues of this life. We ought to have regular marrow check-ups as well, for envy is rottenness to our bones. Praise the LORD that He was wounded and pierced for our iniquities, and when the Great Physician pierces us it is for our ultimate healing and restoration - not our destruction!
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