21 April 2022

All Confidence in Our Good God

"There is no wisdom or understanding or counsel against the LORD."
Proverbs 21:30

What confidence we have in God who is sovereign and supreme over all!  There is nothing that can be hidden from Him, no power to overrule Him or scheme to thwart His good purposes and plans.  Ultimately all things in heaven and earth must bow the knee before Him, for God rules and reigns over all.  He is so awesome and mighty nothing can be against Him, that is, to begin to present a challenge of any kind to Him.  Many have opposed God, been lifted up in pride against Him and sought to undermine or resist Him, but no one has ever done a thing to shift Him from His glorious position as KING OF KINGS and LORD OF LORDS Who was, is and is to come.

Wisdom could be described as "skill for life," and since God is the source of all life He enables those who trust in Him to live it to the full forever.  He has all knowledge and understanding of all things, and He needs no advice or counsel to know what He must do.  There is nothing He has not already considered fully, and an alternate plan is not necessary for the God who does everything.  Unlike people or their heroes, God has no weakness or limitation.  There will never be a reduction of his mental capacity or strength.  He is not like an old dog that sleeps a lot more now than he used to, preferring the shade over romping in the sun.  God is not like a man who is careless, forgetful or cannot remember what he said.  He is God without equal, good beyond all comprehension and any comparison. 

Undergirding the power and strength of the almighty, living God is His immutable goodness.  It would be an awful thing indeed if God had evil intent and there was no possible way to overcome it.  Knowing God loves sinners and cheers them on to repentance and righteous living by faith in Him moves us to rest in Him without fear.  Paul wrote in Romans 8:31-33, "What then shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us? 32 He who did not spare His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things? 33 Who shall bring a charge against God's elect? It is God who justifies."  God demonstrated His love for sinners by sending a Saviour Jesus Christ, so even when we were against Him His goodness was directed towards us.  Satan tried to overthrow Christ and God's intent was the death and resurrection of Jesus would provide eternal life for all who trust Him.  See?  There is no wisdom or understanding or counsel against the good LORD God.

Even when believers suffer many things, when enemies of God and His people rise up to thwart God's purposes and rob us of peace, we can rest confidently in the goodness of our God in the land of the living.  Romans 8:37-39 affirms, "Yet in all these things we are more than conquerors through Him who loved us. 38 For I am persuaded that neither death nor life, nor angels nor principalities nor powers, nor things present nor things to come, 39 nor height nor depth, nor any other created thing, shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord."  Since nothing can separate us from God's love, nothing can deprive us of the joy, peace and rest found for our souls in Him.  As the song says, "No fear of death, nor scheme of man can ever pluck me from His hand."  In our good God we can place all confidence.

20 April 2022

Owning Sinful Thoughts

 As children of God we ought not to be ignorant of Satan's deceitful tactics.  That father of lies craftily includes bits of truth so we will swallow down his destructive deceptions.  Whether he worked to tempt Eve or Jesus his approach was the same:  he appealed to human needs and desires coupled with rebellion against the almighty God.  Satan even quoted scripture to lure Jesus to transgress, but Jesus wisely saw through the paper-thin facade to the wicked being who would suggest He tempt the LORD God.

The devil has the power to tempt us, but no one can blame the devil for choosing to yield to him.  Satan can shoot fiery arrows at us, imaginations and thoughts that are wicked, but he cannot force our hand.  I suspect most of the time when someone says, "The devil made me do it"  it is a cop out to avoid repentance, a shift of blame from one whose actions condemn them as guilty to an entity a person has never actually met.  You see, we don't need to have spoken with the devil to adopt his carnality, deceit, selfishness and pride.  Our flesh naturally tends towards evil even as our bodies breathe without a thought.  If you are one who blames the devil for your faults, realise you have developed skill to do a flawless impersonation of him.

It is an exceedingly rare quality to admit and confess sin without blaming others or a caveat.  When he sinned Adam blamed Eve and God, and Eve blamed the serpent who deceived her.  After God confronted Cain for murdering his brother Abel he did not take the blame before the God who sees and knows all, for he denied all knowledge of his brothers blood crying out from the earth.  When David was called out for his sin in the circumstance with Urijah the Hittite he simply said, "I have sinned."  He did not blame Bathsheba, a moment of weakness or justify himself:  he owned the sins of adultery, theft, deceit and murder as his own and repented of them before the LORD, sins we do not see him later repeat.

At the end of holiday camps articles of lost property are held up before the group of campers and I am always surprised how much remains unclaimed.  Every hat, sock and towel was brought to camp by campers who are unwilling to admit the lost items are theirs.  Maybe they are embarrassed or perhaps the item is dirty or unrecognisable.  Maybe the campers simply aren't paying attention.  Whether the person left the item on purpose because it was soiled or forgot it isn't the point:  the point is it is theirs to claim.  The same is true when we have thoughts in our heads that are sinful according to the word of God.  These could be temptations to sin or indications our hearts are not pure before God.  Regardless, we do well to take each thought captive to the obedience of Christ and choose to honour and obey God.  Our sin, having been claimed or owned by a child of God, can be thrown into the rubbish like an old sock because Jesus has provided atonement.  It doesn't need to lie around in an old box any more.

Even if Satan himself puts a thought in your mind, there is wisdom and strength in Christ to stand firm on the truth of God's word.  Those who are preoccupied with how "under attack" they are in their minds by God's grace can switch this around and fix their minds on things above with eyes on Jesus Christ who has overcome, having secured the victory over sin, Satan, the flesh and death with His own blood once for all.  Let the attacks come:  does a warrior in body armour fear a caged, barking dog?  Nothing can separate us from the love of God, and He has bid us to be strong in the LORD and in the power of His might.  With the Holy Spirit within us we are protected and provision is made for us to walk in victory.  There was a time when we were without the Holy Spirit in our unregenerate state and looking back God was faithful to protect us during that season as well.

Rejoice, servants of the LORD!  When a venomous viper literally latched itself onto Paul's hand, he threw it into the fire and suffered no illness whatsoever.  Even as the venom injected into his body was neutralised miraculously by God, if Satan is permitted by God to flood your mind with temptation we need not submit to it for a moment.  There is no cumulative, negative effect upon us for all the thoughts brought captive to the obedience of Christ in an hour or day:  our problem is when we cease doing this and our will is worn down as we try in vain to do in the power of the flesh that which can only be done by the Holy Spirit.  Own that dirty sock, claim that temptation and admit the wickedness in your own heart without caveat and repent and thus walk righteously and sincerely with Jesus who put away our sin (2 Corinthians 10:1-6).

19 April 2022

Abide In Life

Having knowledge impacts our perspective.  If you were to walk into a trauma ward without understanding, you might imagine the staff were responsible for causing terrible pain and grievous harm.  One might even be incredulous and angry such painful abuse was rife anywhere.  However, knowing those who suffered pain were brought as patients for life-saving treatments by trained professional medical staff, this shifts the perspective dramatically.  One previously viewed in ignorance as cruel and the cause of suffering could later be seen as the one who supplies the only hope for healing and a full recovery.  The surgeon's scalpel cuts to restore to good health.

Proverbs 19:23 holds forth how the fear of God changes our perspective concerning trials and suffering:  "The fear of the LORD leads to life, and he who has it will abide in satisfaction; he will not be visited with evil."  The world ascribes to a concept of cause and effect, a secular karma that loosely aligns with sowing and reaping:  do good deeds and good will be returned to you.  One stumbling block people have is, "Why do bad things happen to good people?"  In the face of God being good it seems a contradiction to people who do not know Him that He could allow evil.  But that is like saying a doctor cannot be good who inflicted pain by cleaning or dressing a wound, caused discomfort by setting a broken bone, advised dietary restrictions the patient did not agree with or prescribed medication that had negative side effects.  A good doctor in the practice of medicine must honestly share bad news with the desire to do the most good in the long run.

There are countless people in the Bible who trusted and feared God who suffered much evil.  The point made in Proverbs 19:23 is knowledge of God who is immutably good, righteous, faithful, loving and sovereign shifts our perspective concerning trials and evils He allows us to suffer.  In Christ we know we are not at the mercy of Satan, sickness and this world steeped in sin.  The fear of God leads to abundant life made possible by the suffering and death of Jesus on Calvary who days later rose from the dead in triumphant victory.  Being crucified was a terrible evil, yet Jesus had faith in His Father who would accomplish redemptive purposes for all mankind through His righteous sacrifice.  The cross was not karma but love and grace poured out, as atonement for sinners was willingly made by Jesus who submitted Himself to His Father with joy.  God allowed Job to suffer terribly at the hand of Satan so he would be doubly blessed by God and realise He is compassionate and merciful (James 5:11).  Even when evil is allowed to visit us, faith in God in whom we abide in reveals He intends it for good.  We may not see the good in a situation, but there is no evil in God.

Those who fear the LORD will face trials and suffer, but we know we are kept by Him.  While we cannot understand when we or others feel overwhelmed by pain and troubles God has allowed, the fear of the LORD leads us to trust Him knowing death in His sovereign plan can lead to life, confinement to freedom, beatings and suffering shame to joy, separation to greater closeness, brokenness to healing, depression to exaltation, spiritual attack to double blessing, weakness to strength (in weakness), and cruelty to compassion.  The greatest evils seen in this world in the hands of God can be overturned and made beautiful in time because God is good, righteous, gracious, loving and sovereign over all.  We are satisfied in God who is our life as we abide in Christ without fear of evil.

18 April 2022

Examine Yourselves

In the concluding chapter of Paul's second letter to the Corinthian church, he exhorted them in 2 Corinthians 13:5:  "Examine yourselves as to whether you are in the faith. Test yourselves. Do you not know yourselves, that Jesus Christ is in you?--unless indeed you are disqualified."  Paul willingly subjected himself to scrutiny of his hearers, even to those who doubted his qualifications and motivation as he ministered unto them.  He had not come to them boasting in his credential or flashing letters of recommendation as others had after him, and thus he was not given the respect and honour of which he was deserving for his service unto Christ and the Gospel.

After affirming his faithfulness to God and explaining how he suffered for the sake of Christ, his abundant revelations, infirmities and weakness, Paul urged the believers in the church of Corinth to examine themselves as to whether they were in the faith.  Many times Paul referred to them as brethren and encouraged them with compliments:  yet if they questioned the sincerity and spiritual fitness of apostle Paul, shouldn't they also examine themselves with the same lens?  I like how Paul did not make a judgment about them but exhorted them to examine themselves.  The godly, loving pattern of their lives would bear a resemblance to Jesus Christ if they were in Him, for having been born again He was in them by faith.  If they were disqualified or "reprobate," however, they would be unwilling to undergo such searching.  Blinded by pride, hardness of heart and hypocrisy, they would be unable in that state to see themselves in truth.

This concept of being "reprobate" or false silver is seen in other places in the Bible.  In ancient times the value of money was in itself, the precious materials the money was actually made of.  In our modern times money has a representative value and is made of more common, less precious materials because it is far more cheap and convenient to produce.  Precious metals would leave a streak when rubbed lightly upon a touchstone.  This was one way among many that aided shopkeepers, bankers and traders to recognise the true from the counterfeit.  Through the prophet God spoke of His people who bore no resemblance to Him in Jeremiah 6:28-30:  "They are all stubborn rebels, walking as slanderers. They are bronze and iron, they are all corrupters; 29 the bellows blow fiercely, the lead is consumed by the fire; the smelter refines in vain, for the wicked are not drawn off. 30 People will call them rejected silver, because the LORD has rejected them."  God sought to refine the children of Israel through judgment but bronze, iron and lead are not silver.  No skill in metallurgy or mixing of chemicals can transform the basic composition of lead into silver.  God's examination revealed them not to be His people in spirit and truth.

When Daniel revealed the interpretation of the writing on the wall to Belshazzar, "tekel" meant:  "You have been weighed in the balances, and found wanting." (Dan. 5:27)  Gold is a heavy metal, and God held kings to a high standard to uphold righteous judgment.  Compared to gold Belshazzar was like aluminium that did not measure up.  Paul gave professing believers in Corinth that charge to examine themselves, and with the aid of God's word, the power of the Holy Spirit and their conscience the truth would be clear--whether or not they were willing to own their sin and repent was another story.  Paul had authority in the LORD to instruct, correct and discipline God's people, yet he urged them to take the opportunity to admit their own failings and repent before he arrived and set them straight using harshness with their edification in mind.

A fitting application when we read the Bible is to take the exhortations to heart ourselves, that we would also test ourselves, examine ourselves to see if we are walking in faith.  We in the church claim to believe and follow Jesus:  are our lives therefore marked by Christ's love, joy, peace with longsuffering?  Are we loving and forgiving one another as Jesus loves and forgives us?  Are we like dishonest merchants who attempt to pass off painted lead as gold or polished bronze as silver, walking in deceit and hypocrisy in our workplace or unfaithful in marriage?  If Christ is truly in us, then we will be changed from who we are in the flesh and more like Christ:  quick to listen, quick to humble ourselves in repentance, submit to God's authority, loving those who correct us rather than hating them, choosing to put off sin and walk in righteousness and grace.  It is a little thing to find faults in others.  A far more important discipline is to identify and address our own faults so we are not found reprobates by God.