06 April 2022

Life Out of Death

Today I walked through the Macdonald section of Tamborine Mountain and came across an enormous stump of a tree that fell some time ago.  It was of impressive size and a reminder that even the most seemingly solid, strong and longstanding specimens can only stand for limited time.

The almost solid canopy high overhead was broken where the large tree once stood, and light from above flooded the area.  I was surprised by the many smaller trees that were taken out when the great tree fell, gnarled and uprooted underneath.  The fall of the great tree impacted many other trees, a silent testimony of the damage a fall can have on others that spoke volumes.  As I walked the circuit there were many examples in various stages of decomposition.

But it was not all bad news:  the gap in the canopy allows direct sunlight which quickens other trees to sprout and grow towards the light.  This tree for many years had been likely suffering from an insect infestation that bored holes in the timber and reduced it to mush.  It was only a matter of time before the tree fell and made way for the regeneration of lush foliage that will grow high and strong.

The proof of revival was in the place where the tree fell, for trees large and small have begun to grow.  No tree could be the same one that fell, but the opportunity for others to reach such heights was now afforded all others that for some time had been overshadowed.  What is amazing is how God is able to bring revival to a stump like in the case of king Nebuchadnezzar.  His pride and subsequent fall did not mean he was destined to rot but to realise after 7 years the greatness and majesty of God.  His glory was restored to him.

Praise the LORD God is able to bring life out of death.  Jesus said in John 12:24, "Most assuredly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the ground and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it produces much grain."  What is seen in the natural realm is true in the spiritual realm as Jesus demonstrated by His death and resurrection.  His temporary death made eternal life possible, for Jesus brought forth new creations redeemed with His own blood.  The Light of the World Jesus has shone forth, and we thus are enabled to grow in grace and the knowledge of God by the Holy Spirit given to us.  Having slain death, Jesus is the Gate to eternal life opened to us.  He bids us to arise and stand by His side now and forever.

04 April 2022

Wealth and God's Word

God who remains the same yesterday, today and forever has provided perfect continuity in His word.  There are hints, shadows, allusions and types that reveal spiritual truth to mankind so we might know Him and rejoice in His goodness and salvation.  Unless God revealed the truth to us by the Holy Spirit, we could never make these critical connections.  Paul wrote in 1 Corinthians 10:1-4, "Moreover, brethren, I do not want you to be unaware that all our fathers were under the cloud, all passed through the sea, 2 all were baptized into Moses in the cloud and in the sea, 3 all ate the same spiritual food, 4 and all drank the same spiritual drink. For they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them, and that Rock was Christ."

This passage drips with divine purpose to connect God's miraculous works among the children of Israel to the work Jesus Christ does in the life of believers in the present.  God has done countless things in the past we are unaware of or forget about, and Paul reminded Christians how God delivered the children of Israel from slavery in Egypt.  Their passage through the Red Sea spoke of being baptised in obedience and identification with God who was faithful to save and deliver them.  They ate manna provided from heaven and drank the water that flowed from the rock--that pointed to Jesus Christ the Rock of Salvation who alone gives the Living Water of the Holy Spirit to all who trust in Him.

John came with a baptism of repentance from sin in the Jordan River, and the children of Israel cross the Jordan when the previous generation died in the wilderness for their unbelief and refusal to enter into the land God promised to give them.  Led by the presence of God and without getting wet they went from the wilderness side of the Jordan to the land flowing with milk and honey, their inheritance God graciously provided for them.  One thing believers often did as a first order of business under the new covenant of the Gospel was to be baptised in identification and obedience to Christ who saves us from sin, death and Satan.  Our baptism is one that identifies with Christ's death and resurrection and coming out of the water is a symbol of the glorious life and future we enter into by faith in Jesus today.

How rich is the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and what glorious truths are uncovered in God's word as we consider His faithful dealings with His people!  Knowledge of what God has done even in ancient history enriches our appreciation of God's goodness and character and strengthens our faith to trust God in all seasons of life.  We can follow Christ's leading today with confidence in the power of the Holy Spirit, for He is faithful and His mercy endures forever.  We are His inheritance, and He is ours.  What wealth is ours when we dig into God's word in faith!

01 April 2022

Peace With Us

"Then, the same day at evening, being the first day of the week, when the doors were shut where the disciples were assembled, for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood in the midst, and said to them, "Peace be with you." 20 When He had said this, He showed them His hands and His side. Then the disciples were glad when they saw the Lord."
John 20:19-20

Despite hearing multiple eyewitness accounts of the resurrection of Jesus, the disciples huddled behind locked doors for fear of the Jews.  To these unbelieving and hard-hearted disciples Jesus appeared in the midst and said, "Peace be with you."  Jesus identified Himself to them by revealing His pierced hands and side.  Never before had a victim who died by Roman crucifixion had the opportunity to scar because no one had ever risen from the dead.  Seeing the wounds of Jesus confirmed He was their Messiah who suffered on the cross and rose again.

I have found a tendency when talking about surgeries, scars, sport or work injuries, one story begets another.  While one person describes the pain or displays a scar, the onlookers connect what they hear with experiences or stories of their own.  One thing we do not see is one of the disciples weighing in with with a grin, "That's nothing.  Look at what happened to my leg when Peter gaffed me."  There was no comparison possible to what Jesus had gone through on Calvary and how He stood there before them and declared, "Peace be with you."  Jesus had already given His peace to them before His crucifixion, and there He was risen with a glorified body, peace, joy and everlasting life intact.

The disciples did not consider comparing their past pains or injuries with Jesus, yet it is possible for us to do so implicitly.  Jesus conquered sin and death and brought peace with Him as the Prince of Peace:  to refuse the sufficiency of His grace and peace is to wrongly claim our pain or suffering is greater than His or mightier than He.  Jesus lives and His peace remains without interruption for all those who believe, for all those who rejoice in His salvation.  Unbelief and hardness of heart is what led to the disciples sequestering themselves behind closed doors in fear, and we can suffer from the same sinful maladies.  We do not believe the peace of God that passes understanding is with or for us, and thus we cannot receive.

Praise the LORD Jesus came to them without invitation by His grace:  Jesus knew where they were, how they were feeling, what they needed and how to meet that need in Himself.  How we need Jesus, and how we ought to love Him!  In Him we have peace with God and a Saviour who loves us more than words can express.

30 March 2022

Our Strength is in God

It is good when we realise we need the LORD as much now as ever to guide, protect and strengthen us to do His will.  The life of a believer is marked by increased dependence and reliance upon God.  When we are born again we are not like new recruits starting their first job who are made to watch safety videos, fill out paperwork and are lined out with a job they learn to do independently themselves.  We raise our kids to learn to do chores and tasks without being directed at every step, yet it is the opposite for children of God.  We are the ones who imagine we can do things well ourselves until God opens our eyes to see our need for His strength and step-by-step guidance continually.

William Gurnall asserted the biblical doctrine that our strength is in the LORD.  He wrote in The Christian in Complete Armour:
"The strength of the general in other hosts lies in his troops.  He flies, as a great commanded once said to his soldiers, upon their wings; if their feather be clipped, their power broken, he is lost; but in the army of saints, the strength of every saint, yea, of the whole host of saints, lies in the Lord of hosts.  God can overcome his enemies without their hands, but they cannot so much as defend themselves without his arm.  It is one of God's names, 'the Strength of Israel' (1 Sam. 15:29).  He was the strength of David's heart; without him this valiant worthy (that could, when held up in his arms, defy him that defied a whole army) behaves himself strangely for fear, at a word or two that dropped from the Philistine's mouth.  He was the strength of his hands, 'He taught his fingers to fight,' and so He is the strength of all his saints in their war against sin and Satan...The Christian, when fullest of divine communications, is but a glass without a foot, he cannot stand, or hold what he hath received, any longer than God holds him in his strong hand." (Gurnall, William. The Christian in Complete Armour. Banner of Truth, 2002, pp. 18–19.)

The imagery of stemware without a foot is insightful, for unless the vessel is held in an upright position by a hand it is completely useless.  So it is for followers of Jesus Christ, for He said in John 15:5:  "I am the vine, you are the branches. He who abides in Me, and I in him, bears much fruit; for without Me you can do nothing."  A wine glass cannot hold wine without a foot, and a branch cannot bear fruit unless it is connected to the vitality of the vine.  Jesus identified Himself as the vine and those who have been born again are the branches joined to Him by faith.  Like the seemingly endless waves of pride that rise up within us, we must continually remind ourselves we are incapable of obeying God or being fruitful at all without active reliance and a personal connection to Him.  Our strength and fruitfulness is not due to us, but is all by grace through Him.

"Brethren, be strong in the LORD and in the power of His might," Paul exhorted believers in Ephesians 6:10.  All our strength and power comes from the LORD, and what is impossible for man is possible with God.  On his own mighty Samson was weaker than his adversaries who bound him.  God often uses our failures to correct our proud and self-confident perspectives, for though Samson was blinded he looked to God for strength who helped him become stronger than ever before.  We remain untroubled when we discover our strength is in God, and praise God He makes us very fruitful by His grace.