18 December 2017

A Real Enemy

An enemy can be defined as one who is opposed to and hostile against another.  When King Saul realised the people cheered David, he was envious of the praise and saw him as a threat.  He became David's enemy and sought opportunity to kill him.  Murder lurked in the heart of the king who was lifted up with pride.  This unchecked pride led to other sins, such as consulting a medium for guidance when he had been tasked by God to rid the nation of such abominations.  Samuel's chilling response to Saul's inquiry include those found in 1 Samuel 28:16:  "Why then do you ask me, seeing the LORD has departed from you and has become your enemy?"

Because Saul opposed the righteous judgments of God and sought to murder the one chosen and anointed by God to replace him, God also became Saul's enemy.  Most who have basic Bible knowledge realise the devil, Satan, is an adversary and enemy with whom Christians must contend.  What we may not understand is the principle when we make ourselves enemies of God, He will oppose us as an enemy.  He will discipline us, even as a father the son whom he loves.  Many times God delivered His beloved people into the hands of their enemies and placed them under oppression because of their unrepentant sin against Him.  The Almighty God who is our refuge can also be as a real enemy against us when we are lifted up with pride and oppose Him.

Still not convinced?  Consider the words of Isaiah 63:7-10 concerning His dealings with His people:  "I will mention the lovingkindnesses of the LORD  and the praises of the LORD, according to all that the LORD has bestowed on us, and the great goodness toward the house of Israel, which He has bestowed on them according to His mercies, according to the multitude of His lovingkindnesses. 8 For He said, "Surely they are My people, children who will not lie." So He became their Savior. 9 In all their affliction He was afflicted, and the Angel of His Presence saved them; in His love and in His pity He redeemed them; and He bore them and carried them all the days of old. 10 But they rebelled and grieved His Holy Spirit; so He turned Himself against them as an enemy, and He fought against them."  God is loving to oppose His people when they work for their own ruin, and His opposition may actually be our salvation.

King Ahab reigned over the northern kingdom of Israel and did great evil in the sight of God.  For three and a half years God withheld rain so people would know He was the true God over all.  When King Ahab went to take possession of Naboth's vineyard after his wife Jezebel arranged his murder, the prophet of God Elijah was sent by God to speak with him.  1 Kings 21:20 says, "So Ahab said to Elijah, "Have you found me, O my enemy?" And he answered, "I have found you, because you have sold yourself to do evil in the sight of the LORD..."  Ahab viewed Elijah, a man of God, as his enemy when in fact it was Ahab who was an enemy of God!  He fought against God and therefore God opposed Him.  How foolish this proved to be, for who can fight against God and win?

Paul was right to ask the rhetorical question in Romans 8:31:  "If God be for us, who can be against us?"  God is able to deliver us from all evil and trample our enemies under His feet.  Yet it is not by virtue of our new birth or faith in Christ that God is for us:  God is for everyone who believes Him and walks in righteousness.  If we live in sin we are presumptuous to think He will support or deliver us.  When we chose to oppose God and His righteousness, the one who works against us is God Himself.  The devil is not to blame for all that "goes wrong" in our lives, for God is able to graciously work for our redemption through them.  The question is not if God be for us, but are we living against Him?  Only a fool is fine to remain an enemy of God.

17 December 2017

Speak the Word

"However, many of those who heard the word believed; and the number of the men came to be about five thousand."
Acts 4:4

A farmer who desires a harvest must first sow seed, and if we will see people converted to Jesus Christ we must preach the Word of God.  In the Parable of the Sower Jesus told, the seed represented the scripture sown into the hearts of listeners.  Some hearts were compared to a dusty footpath whilst others were prepared hearts where the Word of God produced much fruit.  After Peter healed a man in the name of Jesus Christ, he preached the Word to the people.  Many of them believed and became part of the Body of Christ, the church.

There is a quote commonly attributed to St. Francis of Assisi (though there is no factual evidence I know to support this claim) which is, "Preach the Gospel by all means. If necessary, use words.”  Though this quote is not authentic, it is a quote commonly quoted because many people like it.  I believe many Christians support the idea that our actions are significant and words alone are not sufficient to convey the Gospel.  The concern I have with people latching onto the quote is it can be a cop-out of the responsibility we have as Christians to boldly speak forth the Word of God.  The Gospel cannot be conveyed without words, and God's Word in particular.

How will people hear if God's Word is never spoken?  I have been convicted lately how I have not been as vocal concerning the Gospel as I should be.  I run the risk of being known as a "decent bloke" without anyone knowing it is only through Christ living in me anyone could possibly arrive at this conclusion.  It does very little for the sake of God's kingdom to be loving, kind, generous, or compassionate unless there is a clear correlation between doing good, proclaiming Jesus, and being loyal to Him.  I seriously doubt someone who does not believe in God after observing kindness in another person would muse to themselves, "Maybe I am a sinner.  I need to repent and trust in Jesus to be saved."

Peter's deeds and words worked together to bring many people to salvation by faith in Jesus Christ.  We too must be filled with the Holy Spirit to be God's witnesses wherever we go, speaking boldly the truth of God's Word when we have a willing audience.  Let us not hide behind quotes (false ones at that) to justify our reluctance to speak forth God's Word.  If we will see people converted to faith in Jesus Christ, they must hear the Word of God.  How can they hear if no one will speak the Word?

15 December 2017

God Dwells Among Us

"I will dwell among the children of Israel and will be their God. 46 And they shall know that I am the LORD their God, who brought them up out of the land of Egypt, that I may dwell among them. I am the LORD their God."
Exodus 29:45-46

The children of Israel were slaves in Egypt, and God promised Moses His people would be set free.  He tasked Moses to deliver a message to Pharaoh, to let His people go to serve Him and offer sacrifices a three-day journey into the wilderness.  It seems as long as they served Pharaoh baking bricks and building his cities they could not properly serve God.  Serving God is an exclusive task for Jesus said, "No man can serve two masters."

God would bring His people out with a mighty hand and show His wondrous power to the world through great plagues.  Though Egypt was destroyed, God preserved His people in their land.  He spared His people the afflictions visited upon the unbelieving oppressors.  God's intent was to dwell among His people, but it was not fitting for Him to dwell among His people in an idolatrous nation.  He would birth the Jewish nation out of bondage in Egypt and then dwell among them.  He said, "And they shall know that I am the LORD their God, who brought them up out of the land of Egypt, that I may dwell among them."

God knew and called His people unto Himself, and brought them out of Egypt so He might dwell among them.  The God who created the universe desired to dwell among people.  He wanted to be central in the lives of those He loved.  I find it remarkable God would choose to dwell in a tent in the midst of a stiff-necked people.  I find it even more unfathomable how God now has extended salvation to whosoever will come to Him in faith.  He desires to dwell within each of us.  That we would be filled with the presence of the Living God is beyond comprehension yet is realised through faith in Jesus Christ.  The children of Israel were not forced by God to leave Egypt, and no one is forced to leave a life of bondage to sin.  But if we desire fellowship with God leaving the old life marked by sin is necessary.

I am reminded of Paul's strong words in 2 Corinthians 6:14-18:  "Do not be unequally yoked together with unbelievers. For what fellowship has righteousness with lawlessness? And what communion has light with darkness? 15 And what accord has Christ with Belial? Or what part has a believer with an unbeliever? 16 And what agreement has the temple of God with idols? For you are the temple of the living God. As God has said: "I will dwell in them and walk among them. I will be their God, and they shall be My people." 17 Therefore "Come out from among them and be separate, says the Lord. Do not touch what is unclean, and I will receive you." 18 "I will be a Father to you, and you shall be My sons and daughters, says the LORD Almighty."  Jesus says we cannot serve God and money, and there are countless things which vie for mastery over us.  If we want fellowship with God we cannot embrace lawlessness, walk in darkness, or join ourselves with unbelievers.  If we will have God as our Father, then we must be obedient and loyal to Him.

In coming to God we are not moving from the dungeon to a chain-gang:  we go from bondage to joyful freedom.  We do not "give up" anything to leave Egypt, so to speak, but we only gain:  where our LORD is and Good Shepherd for our souls we lack no good thing.  It is true the Israelites often looked back to the food of Egypt with longing (conveniently forgetting the hard labour which caused them to cry out to God in the first place) as they were led by God through the wilderness, but remember they were stricken with unbelief.  This selective memory can affect us as well, causing us to lose sight of all we have in God, His promises, and presence.  Let us value God's love and presence over all, for in Him is life, light, and liberty for all who believe.

13 December 2017

Making His Mark

There is a longing in every person for significance, to make a lasting impression in the world.  No matter how much effort we put towards this end, however, will ensure success.  Absalom wanted to be remembered so he built a tomb which stands to this day, but it is an testament of his failure because he never was buried in it.  After he was killed for his villainy he was dumped in an unmarked grave.  Recently a surgeon was caught burning his initials into the liver of his patients - seriously.  Far more common is when people etch their names or press their palms into wet concrete, but even well-formed slabs aren't permanent.  Monuments, plaques, and tombs carry memories precious to some which fade over time.  It is as the Bible says:  our lives are as a breath, like vapour which vanishes without a trace.

As I walked around the oval during cricket training yesterday, I noticed a bare patch of silty dirt surrounded by turf.  This dirt had many impressions upon it:  I recognised the tyre treads of a truck, a bicycle, and and few shoe prints.  With a little wind, rain, or others trampling the surface these marks will be erased forever without memory.  I started thinking about how footprints in a sandy beach are noticeable at first but in moments begin to fade.  How many sand castles have been carefully formed which later were flattened by waves!  The great holes in the beach we dug as children have effortlessly been filled in over time, and not one person can tell exactly where (or why) they were dug.  This is the vanity King Solomon talked about, great effort and accomplishments with the passage of time seem meaningless.

While I pondered these things the question Jesus asked rang in my mind:  "What does it profit a man to gain the world and lose his own soul?"  Most people approach life without thinking about what happens after our life on earth is finished and therefore do not invest in what will endure.  Money, gold, silver, and Bitcoin all have their limitations and we cannot take what we acquire with with us.  Like any legacy we leave, it will be left for others to use, maintain, or waste.  The words Jesus said strike at the heart, for we all know this life on earth with someday end - the world itself has a limited life span.  We are all using borrowed money and a gift of time we have no idea when it will be rescinded.  The clock is winding down, and we have not the power to wind it again.  In choosing Christ we only have gain, though perhaps not as the world measures it.  But the gain the world is after will all perish;  it will all fade, be forgotten, and worthless to us when we are gone.

We all want to make our mark on the world, but sin has made permanent marks on us.  Not one of us measures up to God's standard of righteousness and our souls are doomed to destruction in hell forever.  But God has made a way of forgiveness and salvation through Jesus Christ through faith in Him and supplies the everlasting richness of God's kingdom.  Psalm 130:3-4 says, "If You, LORD, should mark iniquities, O Lord, who could stand? 4 But there is forgiveness with You, that You may be feared."  How glorious it is to be forgiven, to have our souls saved and cleansed forever!  This forgiveness can be obtained without money but through faith in Jesus and the precious blood of Jesus Christ shed on Calvary.  He has imputed His righteousness to each one who is born again through faith, and this mark is a permanent one.  We are sealed with the Holy Spirit and are guaranteed to live forever.  Better than making a mark in this world is when God puts His mark on us, claiming us as His very own.