07 December 2024

An Enriched Life

At a recent Bible study, we had a group discussion concerning specific ways God has enriched our lives.  Because we tend to associate riches with money or financial gain, it was good to consider changes God has ushered into our lives money cannot buy.  Of course God is able to provide for His people financially and He faithfully does, but money aside:  how would you answer the question?  Having been born again by faith in Jesus we can resemble children born into a family where we take much for granted and feel entitled to having what we want.

As I reflected upon many answers I could give, one answer to how God has enriched my life is a capacity to love and care for others as Christians are exhorted to do in Romans 12:15:  "Rejoice with those who rejoice, and weep with those who weep."  Being content with God's grace extended to us, we can rejoice with those who rejoice without envy.  We can be legitimately happy when others are glad rather than feeling bad we haven't experienced the success others have.  Their achievements they celebrate need not ruffle or annoy us, and we do not need to downplay their reason for happiness or be compelled to compete with them by informing them others have done better.  Even when we are dealing with the worst news possible, we can still rejoice with those who rejoice because this is God's will for us.

At the same time, Christians are given the capacity to weep with those who weep--to care deeply and sympathise with people who are doing it tough.  We can be disturbed by those who weep and we do not understand why; we wonder what could possibly justify such an emotional response.  In my hard-hearted youth I looked at tears with disdain when God was aware of every tear and why it fell.  At times in my life there were people I could not have cared less about, yet God has brought a change where I have shed tears for people I did not even know personally.  If I was someone who was easily moved emotionally, I never would have understood the profound change Jesus has brought into my life by His love.

Rejoicing with those who rejoice and weeping with those who weep are not my natural inclination, but by God's grace our lives can be enriched by the transformation Jesus brings.  Romans 12:14 is another change among many God intends to bring into our lives:  "Bless those who persecute you; bless and do not curse."  How profound it is that God does not merely forgive our sins, save us from hell and promise us eternal life, but He changes the way we think, feel and think--to bless us by making us a source of blessing to others.  How has receiving Jesus enriched your life?

05 December 2024

Answering God's Questions

When I watch reporters interview politicians, I admit I am often bemused how direct questions are rarely (if ever!) answered.  It is remarkable how questions are dodged as skillfully as Neo evaded bullets in The Matrix and replaced with rehearsed talking points that take shots at political opponents.  How non-sequitur answers became the acceptable norm, I'll never know.  Imagine asking your son, "What did you eat for breakfast?" and hear him answer, "13% of kids don't even eat breakfast."  I would respond, "Answer the question, please.  Why are you being evasive?"  An honest question warrants an honest answer.

If we would require our children to answer direct questions directly, we ought to be those who answer questions God asks us.  The questions God asks in the Bible are not "gotcha" questions, but are designed to deal with matters of our heart, life and faith.  "Good question!" we acknowledge when we hear it, but hearing the question does not mean we have bothered to answer it.  As long as God's questions remain questions we do not carefully consider and honestly answer, we will not receive the personal illumination God intend to provide through them.

I did a cursory search of questions Jesus asked, and I found many of them His disciples never directly answered--in public, anyway.  One might say there is no need to answer Jesus because He already knows the hearts of men, but then again people often refused to answer Jesus to avoid self-incrimination.  It would be impossible for Christ's enemies to avoid detection if they honestly answered the question, "Why do you seek to kill me?" (John 7:19).  Those who posed dishonest questions to Jesus were met with direct questions they could not avoid the implications of--much to the delight of onlookers.  Though we see Jesus ask questions that go unanswered in the Bible, we can know those questions are also for the reader to consider, answer, and take Christ's teachings to heart.

One example from the book of Matthew was when the disciples were afraid of perishing in a storm on the Sea of Galilee.  Matthew 8:26 reads, "But He said to them, "Why are you fearful, O you of little faith?" Then He arose and rebuked the winds and the sea, and there was a great calm."  Matthew 14:31 details the response of Jesus after Peter began to sink and cried out to Jesus to save him:  "And immediately Jesus stretched out His hand and caught him, and said to him, "O you of little faith, why did you doubt?"  Another example (which couldn't be answered immediately because it was in a sermon) is found in Matthew 6:30:  "Now if God so clothes the grass of the field, which today is, and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, will He not much more clothe you, O you of little faith?"  All of these questions are good for the child of God to consider:  why are we afraid when Jesus is with us?  Why do we doubt Jesus can save us?  Why is our faith so small in God's provision of clothing for us when God has provided even for grass that is here today and gone tomorrow?

Fellow believer, as you read God's word I encourage you to personally answer the questions God asks.  God's questions through Jesus, prophets and even random people in scripture may seem completely irrelevant to us, even as disciples who believed Jesus was the Son of God--were ironically asked directly by Jesus concerning their lack of faith in Him.  It is in answering these questions honestly the Light of the World shines in our hearts, and the Holy Spirit reveals unbelief, doubt and fears to be repented of so we might walk in the light as Jesus is in the light.  Questions Jesus asks are not to condemn or shame us but to draw us closer to Himself and increase our faith.

04 December 2024

Good that Never Ends

While driving yesterday, I read a sign that faced a busy intersection that announced the sale of property was almost over.  It read, "All good things must come to an end."  That was not the first time I heard that quote, and it dawned on me from a worldly perspective it was true.  One could debate if that particular sale of property was a good thing, but the world and all the things in it and of it are passing away.  Where the statement falls down completely is in relation to God and what is of God, for He is good without beginning or end.  Jesus identified Himself as the first and the last, the beginning and the end--not to suggest He has an end, for no timeline can contain or restrict His eternal, immortal attributes.

What Jesus said in Luke 21:33 is repeated several times in the Gospels:  "Heaven and earth will pass away, but My words will by no means pass away."  The word of God is timeless, good and will never come to an end.  God's word, even when fulfilled, remains a relevant, true and powerful declaration of God who is, was and will ever be.  Those who trust in Jesus Christ and receive eternal life will never die, even when their earthly bodies breathe their last (John 11:25).  It is written in 1 John 2:17, "And the world is passing away, and the lust of it; but he who does the will of God abides forever."  The good and abundant life Jesus gives us will never come to an end.

One thing I love about God's word is it is not a relic, fading words hidden away in dusty tomes.  Everything God said and says is in full force and powerful to instruct, convict, encourage and save.  Recently in Australia there was discussion around a possible "disinformation" or "misinformation" bill, that a government agency would be employed to determine what is true and false and to hold people accountable for intentionally misleading others.  Fraught with grave danger of overreach with opponents warning of potential Orwellian impacts and highly unpopular, the bill was scrapped.  But this desire to "control the narrative" extends beyond the government.  We who believe the word of God is true are on guard against theological heresies as well as humanistic distortions of the Gospel that fundamentally change it to no longer be the Gospel.

In Jeremiah 23, God spoke of dreamers and prophets who did not speak for Him but from their own hearts.  They passed off their own ideas as divinely inspired, yet God was not at all threatened by their folly.  God said in Jeremiah 23:28-29:  "The prophet who has a dream, let him tell a dream; and he who has My word, let him speak My word faithfully. What is the chaff to the wheat?" says the LORD29 "Is not My word like a fire?" says the LORD, "and like a hammer that breaks the rock in pieces?"  Though they grow together, the stalk of wheat is nothing like the grain that contains nutrition and potential for life.  Plant chaff or straw and it will not grow; plant grain and it will produce life.  God compared His word to fire that immediately consumes chaff, like a hammer that fulfills its designed purpose to break rocks in pieces.  God's word will always accomplish His will in giving it (Isaiah 55:11).  It will always, eternally accomplish what God pleases and will prosper for His purposes.

In this world all good things do come to an end, but we can know God, His word and His good purposes will endure forever without fail.  People come and go, they say this and that.  The best among men are only here for a short season, and the good they do will be forgotten, unappreciated or undone.  But God's word will by no means pass away, and he who does the will of God abides forever.  God is eternal, and His word is living and powerful to continue doing His work and perfect will.  Praise God He is good and will never come to an end!

03 December 2024

Giving More Grace

God has given every human being a unique personality and perspective.  Because patience is a fruit of the Spirit of God, it follows not one of us is naturally patient like God is.  There are likely many things that cause us to quickly run out of patience, grow frustrated, or we refuse to tolerate.  A person can be very patient towards a stray dog that lashes out when being fed but will not extend grace to their own spouse or child because they should know better.  We can be more gracious to unbelievers in rebellion against God than a sinning brother or sister in Christ because we expect them to do better.  Whether we are quick to run out of patience or are able to endure for a long season, our patience has an end.

We are blessed God is good and gracious, that He is always longsuffering and kind.  He is not at all like us, full of limitations, and our kindness is more of an exception rather than an unalterable rule.  James wrote of God's grace to believers in in James 4:4-6:  "Adulterers and adulteresses! Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with God? Whoever therefore wants to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God. 5 Or do you think that the Scripture says in vain, "The Spirit who dwells in us yearns jealously"? 6 But He gives more grace. Therefore He says: "God resists the proud, but gives grace to the humble."  Married couples who desire a monogamous relationship are not pleased or tolerant with their spouse committing adultery.  To willingly enter into the covenant of marriage and then seek other lovers would rightly be seen as unacceptable.  In a very direct way, James rebuked believers for their quarrels, lusts and love of the world that brought conflict in their relationships with one another and also provoked God to jealousy for their misguided affections and desires.

Jesus taught adultery is a matter of the heart the Law of Moses could not fully address.  It must have shocked Jewish hearers of Jesus who were versed in the Law when He said even looking at a woman with lust was as sinful as sleeping with her!  In God's eyes, adultery with the woman had already been committed because of the wayward heart.  If we were to apply this principle with friendship of the world--the love of money, lust of the eyes, lust of the flesh and the pride of life--it is apparent we have been guilty of spiritual adultery because we have not always valued or loved God as much as what we can see, obtain and experience.  Yet what was God's response all those times?  "But He gives more grace."  Though God is righteous and jealous for our love, trust and obedience, even after knowing this we have not always responded by faithfulness to Him.  We have put our trust in ourselves, in others and looked for hope in things other than God--even as an unfaithful spouse casts a wistful glance or seeks attention from others they find attractive.

God gives more grace, and He continues to be gracious despite our proclivity to unfaithfulness.  Like a good shepherd cares for the sheep of his flock, God convicts of us sin, pursues us, speaks gently to us and accepts us despite our foolishness.  It is important we realise grace is undeserved favour from God the humble are enabled by God to receive.  God resists the proud, and this resistance is also a revelation of God's grace.  God could destroy the proud without remedy in a moment, but He resists them so they might see their need for Him.  He gives grace to the humble--not because they are worthy or have earned the right to such grace--but out of His goodness and kindness demonstrated to all people.  Rather than being those who withhold grace from others until they show themselves worthy, let us be as God who gives more grace.  And when we have given grace, let us give more grace we humbly receive by faith from the inexhaustible stores of our Father in heaven.