11 January 2015

The Unmodified Seed


And the earth brought forth grass, the herb that yields seed according to its kind, and the tree that yields fruit, whose seed is in itself according to its kind. And God saw that it was good.”
Genesis 1:12 

In the beginning God created plants which brought forth seed after their own kind.  In simple terms, the seed of each plant is produced in the fruit.  Fruitfulness increases future fruitfulness as more plants grow to maturity.  Seeds produce plants which grow more plants which will bring forth additional fruit of the same kind.  Over the years, plants have been “engineered” or genetically altered to improve aspects of the fruit.  Seedless watermelons and mandarins, sweeter corn with more kernels, and firmer tomatoes are all examples of such efforts.  Whilst many of these engineered crops have various benefits, in many cases they are rendered unable to reproduce themselves.  The alterations have made seedless watermelons but removed the capacity for future fruitfulness from the same vine.

At camp this week, we have talked about the importance of answering questions by sharing the pure Word of God, the Bible.  In the Parable of the Sower, Jesus compared the Word of God to good seed which falls on different soil conditions which represent various conditions of the human heart.  Even as many plants and crops are genetically altered to make them more palatable or to remove those annoying seeds, the same can be done with the good seed of God’s Word.  If we alter the Word or the message, we strip the text of the power to be fruitful in the hearts and minds of others.  Pressure from scientifically minded people have sought to introduce man’s ideas into the biblical account of creation of the earth by God.  In doing so, the text may be more acceptable to our finite, biased minds and make it unfruitful.  The Gospel of Jesus Christ shared without the necessary seeds of man’s sinfulness, need for repentance and atonement, and that Jesus is the only way of salvation, rob souls of kernels necessary to spring into new life.

How important it is therefore to preach the Word without modification!  We live in a day where the tweaking of the Word and denial of literal interpretation is common.  2 Timothy 4:1-4 says, “I charge you therefore before God and the Lord Jesus Christ, who will judge the living and the dead at His appearing and His kingdom: 2 preach the word! Be ready in season and out of season. Convince, rebuke, exhort, with all longsuffering and teaching. 3 For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine, but according to their own desires, because they have itching ears, they will heap up for themselves teachers; 4 and they will turn their ears away from the truth, and be turned aside to fables.”  The Bible is not a platform for us to espouse our own beliefs or interpretations, but gives us a charge to hold forth the true doctrine of scripture even if it is mocked or wildly unpopular – get this – even amongst professing Christians.  Modify the scripture even so slightly to make it more palatable to the unbelieving soul, and our vain efforts work to rob it of saving power.

07 January 2015

Riding Along

During recent months I have been cycling for exercise and to strengthen my surgically repaired knee.  These days I am on the lookout for new routes to try.  While I usually stick to the bike paths, it is fun to take on new roads and challenges.  I have often quipped Jerusalem and Riverstone have some similarities:  regardless which way you came from, it seems you always "go up" to Riverstone!  Pushing hard up the hills provides a welcome challenge, but I still prefer racing down them!

The other day my sons and I went fishing with a good friend.  We headed down Boundary Road to Wiseman's Ferry, and the scenery was beautiful.  Cows lounged under the shade of spreading trees, and green fields stretched out for kilometres.  "This would be a good place to ride," I thought to myself.  There wasn't a true bicycle lane, but there seemed like enough room to comfortably stay out of the way of passing traffic.  The gentle rise and fall of the terrain would be a good challenge as well.  One the way back I had decided:  Boundary Road was my next cycling destination.

A few days later I embarked on my new path.  It wasn't very long before I was white-knuckling those grips!  The hills which seemed hardly to rise in the Toyota Kluger seemed to stretch on and on whilst cycling.  I am basically new to cycling distance and I had to concentrate furiously on the edge of the road.  Many areas had no room at all, and the drop off the edge of the bitumen was severe at times.  The ride also happened during afternoon peak hour, so cars and trucks whizzed past me.  It wasn't too long before I was a bit saddle sore.  Towards the end of the ride, I began to lose circulation in my right hand - likely gripping too hard due to intense concentration and physical exertion.  I actually experienced more adrenalin on that ride with "close calls" than ever before.  At the end of the 53 minute ride, the Strava cycling app on my phone told me I had traveled a distance of 18.2 kms and climbed 215 metres.  I am looking forward to improving on my time and distance.

As I cycled, I was amazed how different elevation seemed from when I rode along in a car.  It occurred to me we often "ride along" with others in their pain and struggles, the hills they are tackling gentle and easy - kind of like when my mate drove me along Boundary Road.  His car was doing all the work.  I enjoyed the comfort of air conditioning and was not winded at all.  Needless to say, it was a massive difference when I took to the road myself on my bicycle.  It was hot.  It was perilous and cars swerved around me and at times I was mere centimetres from sliding off the road into gravel.  One time I even threw the chain and had to stop and fix it.  There was pain and discomfort I experienced on that bike I couldn't have imagined from the plush seats of a vehicle.  This is the truth:  you never know what someone is going through until you are in the saddle yourself.  It is easy for us to dismiss the pain and struggles of others, thinking that our "ride along" gave us real insight concerning how they should cope or what tactics they could use.  It seems quite easy until we climb into the saddle ourselves and go through the exercise ourselves, as the road stretches on and the uphills seem to go on forever.

If you know someone who is going through a tough uphill experience - whether it be divorce, illness, depression, loss of a job, chemical dependency, or family strife - demonstrate compassion and loving support.  Even if we have driven down that road plenty of times, it takes climbing into the saddle to open our eyes and receive a deeper appreciation of a struggle we couldn't have grasped otherwise.  One aspect of the Christian life which is so lovely is whatever suffering God allows, He provides greater consolation and comfort still.  The comfort we receive by faith is not only for us, but to give to others when they suffer.  2 Corinthians 1:3-6 says, "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, 4 who comforts us in all our tribulation, that we may be able to comfort those who are in any trouble, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God. 5 For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us, so our consolation also abounds through Christ. 6 Now if we are afflicted, it is for your consolation and salvation, which is effective for enduring the same sufferings which we also suffer. Or if we are comforted, it is for your consolation and salvation."

We don't have to experience all the suffering in the world to offer the consolation and salvation we have in Jesus Christ and God's Word.  Jesus has suffered for our sakes, and when we share in the sufferings of one another as faithful friends, we can rejoice and endure through Him.  We can never know how much someone else is suffering or how they are doing it tough.  But God does, and He is able to deliver and save.  He is able to comfort, heal, and restore.  He's the One who protects us as we push up the challenging hills of this life.  Should we fall, it is He who will lift us up and bring brothers and sisters along to strengthen us in Him.  Let us bless the LORD, thanking and praising Him, for our God is the Father of mercies and the God of all comfort.  

05 January 2015

Losing and Finding Jesus

Yesterday I was reminded of when Joseph and Mary took Jesus to celebrate the Passover in Jerusalem for the first time.  After the days of the feast were completed, the passage in Luke 2 says they left with a company of other people.  They traveled for a day, assuming Jesus was somewhere with the people of the group.  When they realised Jesus was not in the company, they hurried back to Jerusalem to seek Jesus.  If you have ever lost a child even for a short time it is worrisome, but how much more when you have been entrusted to raise the Son of God!

Luke 2:46-49 states, "Now so it was that after three days they found Him in the temple, sitting in the midst of the teachers, both listening to them and asking them questions. 47 And all who heard Him were astonished at His understanding and answers. 48 So when they saw Him, they were amazed; and His mother said to Him, "Son, why have You done this to us? Look, Your father and I have sought You anxiously." 49 And He said to them, "Why did you seek Me? Did you not know that I must be about My Father's business?"  Joseph and Mary had "lost" Jesus, but Jesus wasn't lost.  His behaviour and choices were completely consistent with His divine character and purpose:  "I must be about My Father's business."  Joseph and Mary inferred Jesus had wronged them in some way because of their anxious feelings of losing Him.  But Jesus asked them, "Why did you seek Me?"  The truth is, they never should have lost sight of Him.  They should not assumed He was with them when it was they who left Him behind!

There is a picture we do well to meditate upon.  Joseph and Mary took Jesus to the temple in obedience to celebrate the Passover.  A time came when Joseph and Mary figured it was time to head home, but forgot to bring Jesus with them.  They simply assumed He would find His way home with them.  But on the trip back to Nazareth, they discovered Jesus was not with them!  Can Christians do the exact same thing?  Absolutely.  We go to church on Sunday mornings or to attend a prayer meeting or evening service and assume Jesus will be there.  We head off to work or a business meeting and expect because we are a Christian, the presence of Christ will be around us all the time.  Even though Jesus was born of Mary it did not mean they were inseparable.  You may say, "Wait a second!  Jesus said He would never leave or forsake us!"  And you would be right.  However, just because Jesus will not leave or forsake us does not mean we are unable to leave or forsake Him.  If we think by virtue of being born again God is "in" all that we say or do - that God's presence will rubber-stamp our actions or words with His approval because of our belief - we are making an assumption similar to what Joseph and Mary did.  "Oh, He must be around somewhere," we say.  The reality was Jesus was more than a day's journey away!  For three days there was great distance between them and Jesus.  But when they sought Jesus faithfully, they found Him.  When they finally found Him with great relief, He was about His Father's business.

Let us never lose sight of Jesus.  Stay close to His side.  He will always be about His Father's business.  One of the roles of a shepherd is to seek lost sheep.  I am grateful Jesus is my Good Shepherd, so when I lose sight of Him and cry out to Him, seeking Him with all my heart, I can always find Him.  Instead of blaming Jesus for not gracing us with His presence, we ought to put into practice James 4:6-10, "But He gives more grace. Therefore He says: "God resists the proud, But gives grace to the humble." 7 Therefore submit to God. Resist the devil and he will flee from you. 8 Draw near to God and He will draw near to you. Cleanse your hands, you sinners; and purify your hearts, you double-minded. 9 Lament and mourn and weep! Let your laughter be turned to mourning and your joy to gloom. 10 Humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and He will lift you up."

04 January 2015

The Candle of the LORD

"The spirit of a man is the lamp of the LORD, searching all the inner depths of his heart."
 Proverbs 20:27

This verse was in my Bible portion I read this morning and God has used it to illuminate me today.  The scriptures say God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all (1 John 1:5).  Jesus is the Light of the World, sent to bring light into the darkness.  Psalm 119:105 compares God's Word to a lamp which lights our path:  "Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path."  The Proverbs passage above in the KJV calls the spirit of a man "the candle of the LORD," something which we commonly call "the conscience."  Even as a flickering light shows us where solid footing is free from obstructions, so the conscience illuminates our hearts, minds, and motives.  It is not a pleasant experience when our conscience brings sin to light according to God's Word, but it is for the best.  In the end it is fruitful and a great blessing, even though it is hard for us to accept.

After a conversation I had today (which was light and friendly), the LORD used the light of my conscience to reveal sin in my heart.  He said something like, "Did you enjoy your little whinge today?"  Those from the UK or Australians will understand what this means.  For any Americans our there, a "whinge" could be compared to what is called "whining."  It is defined by the Oxford Dictionary as, "to complain persistently and in a peevish or irritating way."  Whilst I was speaking I did not thing myself as whinging at all!  But as the light of my conscience shone upon my words, I could only agree with God's assessment.  The majority of the conversation was me talking about how hard things were, all the work I had done, and how much I still had to do.  When I could have chosen to speak concerning the faithfulness or goodness of God, my focus was primarily on myself, and it disgusted me.

Call it whinging, complaining, whining, or whatever you like, but when motivated by pride and selfishness it is a foul stench in God's nostrils.  Just because it is natural or normal for people to whinge does not mean it is approved as righteous in God's sight.  Whinging always takes a view of problems apart from God's grace, goodness, and righteousness.  I have no right to trot out my accomplishments as if it's something I have done.  All I am and I have done is by God's grace.  When I complain it is a sign I am focused on myself rather than glorifying and praising God.  I don't need to whinge to people:  I need to cry out to God for strength, deliverance, and help!  I can rejoice and praise Him, knowing that God's grace is sufficient for me and His strength is made perfect in weakness.  Instead of focusing on myself, my feelings, or my efforts, how good it is to praise God and be content in all circumstances.  Pride loves to put self as the main course in a conversation, but humility and godliness holds forth the wonderful truth of God's love and power.

We are called to let our light shine before men, and this happens when we open our eyes to the light of our conscience, confess our sins, repent, and start walking in the right way.  We can be confident that God who began a good work in us will be faithful to complete it (Phil. 1:6).  I have resolved to put off the sin of evil speaking and choose to glorify God with my heart and mouth, so help me God.  In this God is well pleased!

31 December 2014

God Accepts Those Who Receive

Something I have been thinking about lately is a common term used among Christians:  "accepting Christ."  It is biblical to believe and receive the Gospel, and to place our trust in Christ.  But "accepting" Him?  The vast majority of times in the KJV this term is used is not man accepting God, but God accepting man and his sacrifices.  The term almost puts man in the place of God, in the role of a judge or ruler.  We trust Christ and receive the Gospel by faith, and then God rejoices to accept us.  It is only through Christ's righteousness we are made acceptable! 

There is a massive difference between accepting a truth in your mind and placing your faith or reliance in the thing.  The Gospel of Jesus is not simply to be accepted (to generally deem as valid or correct), but we are to put our complete reliance in Christ in how we live every day.  Paul wrote in Colossians 2:6-7, "As you have therefore received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in Him, 7 rooted and built up in Him and established in the faith, as you have been taught, abounding in it with thanksgiving."  Acknowledging the Gospel is not enough:  we must be born again.

I believe Satan accepts God is real, and that Jesus is the Son of God.  The demons tremble in fear before Christ, but this will not save them from eternal punishment.  It is important therefore people not only acknowledge or accept God's existence, rule, or promises, but receive the Gospel and the indwelling Holy Spirit through faith.  All who repent, believe in the LORD Jesus Christ and His resurrection, and place their trust in Him will be saved.  It is not we who accept God, but He who has graciously accepted us.  As it is written in Ephesians 1:3-6, "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ, 4 just as He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before Him in love, 5 having predestined us to adoption as sons by Jesus Christ to Himself, according to the good pleasure of His will, 6 to the praise of the glory of His grace, by which He has made us accepted in the Beloved."

30 December 2014

Empty Vessels Made Full

As 2014 draws to a close, this blog has passed a significant milestone:  50,000 views from all over the world.  It is a great blessing to be able to freely share the love of Jesus Christ and the truth of scripture with all who are interested.  My schedule 2015 looks to be busier than ever, and as God leads and provides I shall continue to regularly contribute to the blog.

In the last month, the top visitors to the blog came from the United States, France, Australia, Ukraine, and Germany.  Russia, China, the United Kingdom, and South Korea are also listed on the all time most viewed list.  I thank the LORD for the internet and the translation tools which allow people from all over the world to read with understanding.  Much to my surprise, the blog has been the means to connect me face to face in fellowship with Christians I never knew before.  My prayer is through these words God would be glorified and praised for His goodness and truth.

Dear Christian, I encourage you to follow Jesus Christ closer this year than ever before.  Joyfully spend and be spent for His glory, God's grace working in you to labour abundantly for Him.  He will supply all your needs, even as He did for the indebted woman through Elisha written of in 2 Kings.  She was desperate because her husband died and left her with a large debt she could not pay.  Her sons were at risk to become slaves and she cried out to Elisha for help.  He asked her what she had on hand.  All she had in the house was a jar of oil.  Things looked bleak and desperate.

2 Kings 4:3-7 reveals what followed:  "Then he said, "Go, borrow vessels from everywhere, from all your neighbors--empty vessels; do not gather just a few. 4 And when you have come in, you shall shut the door behind you and your sons; then pour it into all those vessels, and set aside the full ones." 5 So she went from him and shut the door behind her and her sons, who brought the vessels to her; and she poured it out. 6 Now it came to pass, when the vessels were full, that she said to her son, "Bring me another vessel." And he said to her, "There is not another vessel." So the oil ceased. 7 Then she came and told the man of God. And he said, "Go, sell the oil and pay your debt; and you and your sons live on the rest."  The woman and her sons were obedient to gather up all the empty vessels.  According to the command of the man of God they shut the door, and poured and poured.  The oil from the original vessel failed only when there was not another empty vessel to fill.  After all the vessels were filled, they went back to Elisha who bid them sell the oil, pay the debt, and live on the rest.

Are you willing to be an empty vessel God can fill with the Holy Spirit?  You may look inside and see your complete poverty of soul.  You may look at your life and wonder what you could possibly contribute of value for the kingdom of God.  The truth is, we are nothing and have nothing.  But when we are empty of self and obey God's Word in faith, He will supply all we need.  Our meager efforts can produce life-saving, transformational changes in the church and the world.  Will you lay down your will before the LORD this year?  How about today?  Will today be the day when you finally surrender in joyful obedience?

God asked Moses, "What is in your hand?"  He answered, "A rod." (Ex. 4:2)  It was that rod God used to do mighty wonders in Egypt and even prove Aaron was His chosen high priest.  Instead of lamenting what you do not have and why you cannot do as you wish, what is in your hand?  What is in your house?  Ask God how He would have you invest yourself in His work.  Even if it is only a little pot of oil or a stick, God will do miraculous wonders if we will trust and obey!

29 December 2014

Growing in Grace

"You therefore, beloved, since you know this beforehand, beware lest you also fall from your own steadfastness, being led away with the error of the wicked; 18 but grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To Him be the glory both now and forever. Amen."
2 Peter 3:17-18

Peter concluded his epistle with this exhortation to remain faithful to Christ.  Instead of being led astray with the error of the wicked, they were to "grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ."  For much of my early Christian walk, "grace" was an ambiguous term without any depth of meaning or personal significance.  The concept of "growing in grace" was equally as meaningless.  If I didn't understand what grace was, how could I possibly grow in it?

For me, understanding of God's grace awakened when I began to recognise how sinful I am according to God's righteous standard.  From my youth I understood and sang with gusto, "Yes, Jesus loves me!"  yet I did not comprehend that there was nothing in me deserving or worthy of this love.  He loved me with a divine love I could not earn.  The Law of God laid out in the Old Testament laid a death blow to my pride which was convinced I could merit God's favour through obedience.  Romans 3:19-20 reads, "Now we know that whatever the law says, it says to those who are under the law, that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become guilty before God. 20 Therefore by the deeds of the law no flesh will be justified in His sight, for by the law is the knowledge of sin."  God gave the Law to Moses to establish His perfect standard and to prove to the proudest soul there is none worthy before God.  Break His Law in one tiny aspect and that man is guilty of all.

The Law of God opened my eyes to the grace of God.  I am a guilty sinner deserving of wrath and eternal judgment.  But God in His great love had compassion on me and offered me grace, salvation by faith in Jesus Christ.  Christ does love me, but not because I love Him.  He loved me first and always, and I love Him back.  I can only respond to His love already lavished upon me, an unchanging love not based upon my performance or perceived worthiness.  It is this knowledge of our poverty of soul which causes us to grow in grace.  Our growth is not one to measure against others, but only against the perfect standard established by Jesus Christ.

Paul wrote in 1 Corinthians 15:9-10, "For I am the least of the apostles, who am not worthy to be called an apostle, because I persecuted the church of God. 10 But by the grace of God I am what I am, and His grace toward me was not in vain; but I labored more abundantly than they all, yet not I, but the grace of God which was with me."  Paul embraced the grace of God from a position of complete unworthiness.  Everything praiseworthy in Paul's life was a product of God's grace at work in Him.  I believe there is a misunderstanding of grace today which justifies sloth concerning our sanctification.  We see our unworthiness or lack and shrug our shoulders and say glibly, "By the grace of God I am what I am."  Paul did not use God's grace as a cloak for carelessness, but to glorify God for the goodness at work in and through His live.  God's grace did not justify Paul being served, but compelled him to greater labours for God.  He was an unworthy minister, yet Paul laboured more abundantly than all others.  He did not just see himself as unworthy.  Oh no, my friends.  He was unworthy, and I am too.  We all are!  Unless we admit we are unworthy, we will never know God's grace nor grow in it.

It is knowledge and acceptance of our unworthiness before God which opens our understanding to receive God's grace.  Growing in grace is not that we are doing more now for God than we used to, but to confess He is doing more in and through our lives according to His grace.  How great is our God, and how wondrous His grace!  James said his faith in Christ was revealed by works, and Paul's growth in grace was accompanied by abundant labour.  It's not so much "What are you doing for God?" but "What has God done and is doing for you?"  May all God's people see their unworthiness and joyfully grow in grace as God's Spirit labours in and through us.

26 December 2014

God the Deliverer

I have heard people describe David as a "giant killer."  Some have made the point that many of David's mighty men who hailed from lowly backgrounds were also giant killers.  One fact which should not be ignored is David killed Goliath and delivered Israel solely by the grace and power of God.  Like Joseph who admitted the ability to understand and interpret dreams was not in him yet through God was able to do just that, so was David's ability to fight.  God had delivered him from lions and bears, and He would certainly deliver David from the hand of the blasphemous Philistine Goliath.  With God on David's side it was Goliath who was the underdog.

Perhaps so we don't place David on a giant-killing pedestal, there was recorded another and lesser known account of David with a giant.  David was unable to kill the giant, and barely escaped with his life.  2 Samuel 21:15-17 tells us, "When the Philistines were at war again with Israel, David and his servants with him went down and fought against the Philistines; and David grew faint. 16 Then Ishbi-Benob, who was one of the sons of the giant, the weight of whose bronze spear was three hundred shekels, who was bearing a new sword, thought he could kill David. 17 But Abishai the son of Zeruiah came to his aid, and struck the Philistine and killed him. Then the men of David swore to him, saying, "You shall go out no more with us to battle, lest you quench the lamp of Israel."  Though David defeated Goliath as a youth, he was not perpetually a strong warrior.  Likely due to advancing age, in the heat of a battle with the Philistines David became faint.  David still trusted God, and God remained faithful to deliver him.  God used a different means to deliver David from the second giant:  a brother in arms who rushed to his aid.

We like to think if we are strong today, we will be strong tomorrow.  Perhaps we assume like Moses we will go through life without our eyes becoming dim or our natural strength being reduced.  But alas, this is rarely the case.  This situation with David becoming faint in the battle demonstrates that no matter the great victory he experienced in the past, he needed help from others.  This teaches us regardless of how God may have used us to deliver others, it is good to acknowledge we need faithful brothers and sisters today in the fight by our side.  We need help from God and from men.  God at times allows His faithful warriors to "lose a step," so to speak, so others can step up and be used by God as well.  I don't know what was more humbling for David:  to defeat Goliath with a sling and stone or to be helped by his cousin Abishai to escape the fury of the giant.  It was God who delivered David on both occasions, and it is good to recognise all victories we enjoy are by the power of His gracious deliverance.

David wrote of God in Psalm 18:29-34, "For by You I can run against a troop, by my God I can leap over a wall. 30 As for God, His way is perfect; the word of the LORD is proven; He is a shield to all who trust in Him. 31 For who is God, except the LORD? And who is a rock, except our God? 32 It is God who arms me with strength, and makes my way perfect. 33 He makes my feet like the feet of deer, and sets me on my high places. 34 He teaches my hands to make war, so that my arms can bend a bow of bronze."  God's strength is often revealed in weakness.  God had made David strong and skilled for battle, but over time God allowed David's physical prowess to wane.  Yet even in David's weakness God remained his shield.  God's ways were still perfect.  When David fainted, God brought along a brother to help David and lift him up.

David lost his physical strength, but he only grew stronger in faith.  On his deathbed, David described God as the one who delivered him from all distress (1 Kings 1:29).  It was not his faith or bravery, his trusty sling and stone, and it was not Abishai who received the credit.  David gave all glory to God for delivering Him, and He will deliver all who trust in Him - regardless of age, physical ability, or social standing.  Both young shepherds and aged kings are invited to trust the LORD, whose ways are perfect.  Trust the LORD, and He will deliver and guide you into rest for your soul.

23 December 2014

Little Things, Big Difference

Little things can make a big difference.  Whether the context is baking, building a house, or the composition of the human body, small things can be the difference between life and death, good quality or a disaster.  There many parts of the body which are necessary for life, and therefore it is impossible to say what is more important.  It would be useless to debate over whether the brain or blood is more important to the body.  Without either one you could not survive!  They are both necessary and therefore both critical for the healthy operation of the body.

Paul wrote to Christians concerning their church meetings in 1 Corinthians 14:26:  "How is it then, brethren? Whenever you come together, each of you has a psalm, has a teaching, has a tongue, has a revelation, has an interpretation. Let all things be done for edification."  In verses following, Paul set limits as two or three people at the most speaking in turn with tongues (with interpretation) and prescribed the same limits on prophesy.  Paul did not set any limits on psalms, teachings, or revelations.  The Holy Spirit, love for God and others, and the benefit of the whole church was to govern all their interactions for the edification of the whole Body.  God's infinite, everlasting love supplies the motive to minister and speak.

A baker understands the need for quality ingredients to be carefully measure and mixed at the proper time to ensure correct consistency.  Just because there is much more flour than baking powder in a cake recipe does not mean the baking power could or should be omitted.  When believers of a church gather in fellowship and worship, all things are to be done decently and according to God's prescribed order.  All gifts and power of the Holy Spirit are necessary to produce the correct consistency and resulting fellowship God desires.  While we may have different tastes in cooking or baking, our feelings or opinions should not dictate the overemphasis of some gifts to the neglect or refusal of others.  If God has seen fit to give gifts, He will provide the guidance, discernment, leading, and opportunity to use them.

God does not give unnecessary gifts.  We are to be faithful to glorify God and edify others with the gifts God has given us, yet we must also be willing and expectant to receive edification from the gifts God has given others.  This is hard for our flesh.  It is hard for us to receive edification from a gift we do not possess, understand, and in some cases approve of!  We can be so focused on using our gift we do not think we need anything from others.  But we have been made of a Body, a group of followers of Jesus Christ unified in His love and service.  We are edified as we are obedient, yet it is for the edification of others we should seek to excel.

Whatever your role or gift in the church, realise obedience in using your gift according to the Spirit and the parameters set in God's Word is necessary for the edification of the Body of Christ.  As important as it is to use your gift, it is vital to see your need for edification through the gifts of others.  God has graciously supplied them for that purpose.  What you see as a very little thing God can use to make a big difference!

21 December 2014

Window Shoppers

As Christmas draws near, there is no shortage of people bustling through the shops.  I suspect a vast majority of people are only at the shops because they have an express purpose to buys food or gifts they need before Christmas.  For some the shops is a time to socialise, eat, window shop, and enjoy the air conditioning, but that has no appeal for me at all.  Perhaps I show my age in that I am glad to wake up early and sacrifice a little sleep to do my shopping away from the crowds.  It is hard for me to imagine there are some people who will go to the shops during the busiest times of day and days of the year to enjoy a coffee, people watch, or window shop.

I remember talking to a woman at church years ago who freely admitted without apology that she brought her family to church because they didn't have air conditioning at home.  I found this admission startling.  It opened my eyes to understand there is a variety of reasons people come to church, even as there are different purposes for people spending hours at the shops.  At church this Sunday I asked the question:  "Why do you come to church?"  Do you go to church primarily to receive or to give?  Unless we attend church with the express purpose of giving to others balanced with receiving from God and others in the Body as well, it's likely we will accomplish neither.

If people go to the church and the shops for the air conditioning, perhaps people window shop at church too.  A window shopper is active to go to the shops, find a parking space, and walk around.  But the window shopper is not there to buy anything.  Perhaps short on money and without any commitment to spend, the window shopper is content with merely seeing new items on display or what is on special.  They want to taste free samples, but they have no intent to buy the products.  Their knowledge grows of new devices and products, as does their fantastic wish-lists.  The truth is, the window shopper displays a poverty of new possessions or gifts, exhibiting a fruitless use of time.  The window shopper, because he observes but does not buy, does not leave the shops with a item for personal use or a gift for others.

There is nothing wrong with window shopping, but there is a serious issue when a Christian takes this approach to their church fellowship.  There is a potential many who attend church are more curious about gaining knowledge or seeing what is on offer than committing to follow Jesus Christ at any cost.  They are very interested in learning about spiritual gifts or hearing someone speak in tongues with an interpretation or a experiencing healing.  But interest or curiosity does not mean that there is any desire or warmth of heart towards being baptised with the Holy Spirit or using spiritual gifts for the edification of the church and the benefit of others.  They merely attend for new knowledge or experiences, social interaction, a coffee, maybe even some air conditioning.  Friends, shops do not exist to supply you with knowledge leading to covetousness, and God did not establish the church to appease your curiosity.  The church exists to glorify Jesus Christ, make disciples, and edify the Body of Christ.  It is all about complete commitment to inner transformation, not merely the transfer of information.

Following Jesus results in being changed - not a fantasy that we might change.  Even as you must be willing to pay the price listed on an item to legally take it home with you, so we must be willing to meet God's conditions supplied according to His grace.  It is the servant who shows himself faithful and obedient to whom God gives greater responsibility, not the one who only turns up when the master is around.  Those who approach Bible study, spiritual gifts, or their role in the Body of Christ like browsing window shoppers who need no assistance - "No need for help, I'm only looking" - deny the power of the Holy Spirit and the edification of others God has supplied in the local church to supply strength, encourage, and accountability.

Commit to spend and be spent for God, dear Christian.  A window shopper is at best a half-hearted shopper, one who is content with longing when he ought to commit to buying and start saving.  Even when we have wandered from the LORD and feared full commitment of our life to Him, He will gladly receive us when we return to Him with our whole hearts.  Deuteronomy 4:29-31 says, "But from there you will seek the LORD your God, and you will find Him if you seek Him with all your heart and with all your soul. 30 When you are in distress, and all these things come upon you in the latter days, when you turn to the LORD your God and obey His voice 31 (for the LORD your God is a merciful God), He will not forsake you nor destroy you, nor forget the covenant of your fathers which He swore to them."  Don't be content to know God is a merciful God, but receive of His mercies which endure forever.  Obedience is often God's requirement before we can receive His mercy and goodness.  Make a full commitment today to obtain God's will at any price, and you will receive the blessing from the LORD.

19 December 2014

Seeing Sin As It Is

"And he who curses his father or his mother shall surely be put to death."
Exodus 21:17

I live in Australia, a nation where the death penalty has been abolished.  1967 marked the last time anyone was executed for a crime.  There is no shortage of opinions or rationale concerning pros or cons of the death penalty.  But whatever your opinion, I would be willing to wager the preceding verse seems a bit excessive to you.  "C'mon," you might protest.  "That is the most ridiculous thing ever, to face execution for any crime - much less for cursing your father or mother."  In my culture, the suggestion mere words are a capital offense is beyond bizarre.  This view only proves our need for God's Law.  Otherwise we would never even imagine the scope of our sin, how heinous it is before a holy, righteous God, and our desperate need for grace.

Don't allow the subject matter to trip you up.  My point in writing this is not to say we must implement the death penalty for the foul mouthed, but to show how our standards of righteousness and judgment is light years away from reality.  The fact is, deep down we don't see sin as that bad.  Proverbs 20:6 says, "Most men will proclaim each his own goodness, but who can find a faithful man?"  Understand that the God who created the heavens and earth out of nothing with His voice is righteous, holy, and just.  Every punishment according to His judgment is absolutely just.  Being an imperfect man or woman, you likely don't agree.  If God is righteous, holy, and just, if God's punishments always "fit the crime" (which they do), it is not God who has His wires crossed on this one:  it is us.  Man likes to play god on the basis of feelings or his own opinion, but man is no god at all.  Either we are right and God is wrong, or God is right and we must bow the knee to His truth.

Since God is absolutely perfect in every way, this verse should be a stark warning of the grave danger of sin which appears innocuous.  It is we who are unjust.  It is not that God has a distorted view of justice, but we have a twisted view of sin.  Sin is more evil, wretched, and terrible than any man ever imagined.  This punishment is merely a foreshadowing of what the unrepentant sinner will face in the eternal flames of hell.  To curse your father and mother was a verbal demonstration of an ungrateful heart which rejected God's established authority.  Leviticus 20:9 affirms, "For everyone who curses his father or his mother shall surely be put to death. He has cursed his father or his mother. His blood shall be upon him."  Hopefully these verses drive home the point of the horrible, destructive consequences of sin.  These verses should shock and shake us to our core, how sin is worse than we ever imagined.

Praise the LORD that He is just.  Yet He is also merciful and gracious, not willing that any should perish.  He sent His son Jesus Christ to provide atonement for lost sinners with His own blood on the cross.  Should God judge you against such a strong standard of holiness, how would you fare?  No man could endure this judgment, for there is none good, no not one.  If cursing the imperfect parents who helped bring you into the world is a capital offense, how severe will the penalty be for cursing and rejecting the God who breathed into you a living soul and sent His own Son to save you?  To trample the precious blood of Jesus underfoot through unbelief is more than reckless.  Rejecting and denying Christ has eternal consequences.  May God open all the eyes of men to see their own wretchedness that we might seek refuge, forgiveness, and salvation in Jesus Christ!  There is hope for you, even if you have cursed your parents or done worse still!  Jesus said in John 5:24, "Most assuredly, I say to you, he who hears My word and believes in Him who sent Me has everlasting life, and shall not come into judgment, but has passed from death into life."

18 December 2014

The Brightest Light

"For the commandment is a lamp, and the law a light; reproofs of instruction are the way of life..."
 Proverbs 6:23

I believe the Law of Moses today largely has a bad rap.  The Old Covenant of the Law is seen by some as bad or unnecessary because the New Covenant given by grace is better and built on better promises (Heb. 8:6).  The pendulum has swung so far in opposition to "Law" that the purpose and righteousness of the Law has largely been forgotten, ignored, or lost.  I also believe one of the reasons for this is an emphasis on the New Testament resulting in a neglect of reading and study of the Old Testament.  They are both the inspired Word of God and should be read, studied, believed, and personally applied.

There is a unbiblical concept in the church that because we are "no longer under the Law" the Law has served its purpose and has no real significance for believers or unbelievers today.  The Bible says the Law is important and valuable for both groups.  A fundamental truth is every human born in whom God has breathed a living soul is under the Law.  The lives of all men will be measured according to the righteous, unalterable standard of the Law on the Day of Judgment.  Romans 3:19 says, "Now we know that whatever the law says, it says to those who are under the law, that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become guilty before God."  I wish to God that every soul in the church knew this as Paul did!  The commandment is a lamp, and the law a light.  It reproves, corrects, and displays the brilliant perfection of God.  When measured against such a immaculate standard, the thoughts, deeds, and hearts of men look foul indeed.

If you were asked to say what you would compare the Law of Moses to, what would you say?  I would be willing to bet many of the comparisons would be drawn from the New Testament.  You might say it is like a schoolmaster to lead us to Christ (Gal. 3:24-25).  But I suggest you would tend to call it a grievous burden.  Perhaps you associate the Law with legalism or a return to bondage.  If you fed entirely on the New Testament, I can see why you would say this.  However, the Bible says the commandment is a lamp and the law a light.  When Paul railed on the Galatians for their foolishness in returning to the Law, it was more their departure from grace and the true Gospel which was the central issue.  They forsook the living water of the Spirit and chose water dipped from their own cisterns dug with their own hands.  To forsake the saving grace of the Gospel for the Law which can only condemn was folly indeed.  But this fact does not mean the Law is a restrictive fetter, useless, burdensome, or bad in any way.  Read the whole Bible and see what it says about the Law!

The Law is good, compared to a lamp and a light.  Light came when God spoke.  The unformed world was formless and void when Christ's voice boomed:  "Let there be light!" and there was light.  In a dark room, a lamp that illuminates is a good thing.  We are all born into a world of darkness, and our hearts are black as the void of an empty universe.  It is the Law and the light of the conscience which causes a person to realise he is a sinner, having transgressed the righteous commands of a Holy God.  Falling on his knees in repentance and hope in Christ, it is as if the sun rises on such a soul.  It is Jesus who breaks our chains and brings us out of the dungeon in which we were condemned, awaiting eternal wrath and punishment according to God's Law.  Christians are brought into the light of the Son of God.  In the light of the sun, a small oil lamp would be of little significance indeed.  The lamp of the commandment and light of the Law was most necessary and remains good - albeit overwhelmed by the power of the sun in the sky.  Should we find ourselves in a dark place, Psalm 119:105 says, "Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path."  Jesus is the Light of the World, the One who has fulfilled the Law and shines ever brighter!

Jesus said in John 8:12, "I am the light of the world. He who follows Me shall not walk in darkness, but have the light of life."  Jesus had many negative things to say of legalists who taught as the Law of God the traditions of men.  There are no shortage of people who forsake the light of the sun to tend their lamps in darkened rooms, choosing like the foolish Galatians to forsake the grace and true Gospel in their return to the Law.  The Law was like a lamp, in that the flickering flame could be manipulated to exalt men rather than glorify God.  The Law was incapable of changing the hearts of men.  To seek transformation through behaviour modification is futile.  We need the Holy Spirit to regenerate us and come upon us so we might be led by Christ in all things.  If we are in Christ, we have all the light we need.  Yet we also need the Word of God, don't we?  That's the primary way God speaks to His children.  We also can benefit from the light of the Law.  For those with eyes to see, God has demonstrated His righteousness, love, grace, goodness, and mercy in His commands.

Since we have such great a Light in Jesus Christ, let us never forsake Him and return to the lamp of the Law for salvation.  At the same time may we value, study, and allow God to shine His light into our hearts through the light of His commands and Law.  Those who follow Jesus shall not walk in darkness, but have the light of life.  Let us not leave or forsake this Light!

16 December 2014

God Corrects

The behaviour and choices of children are not always clear indicators of their parent's efforts or quality.  Because no one is perfect, there is not one perfect parent.  Despite our experience and apparent successes, we all have room to grow.  God is a perfect Father, yet the wanderings and rebellious nature of His children should not be attributed to His neglect or character flaws.  The fact I am not perfect and my children are not perfect do not provide license for apathy, but should encourage me to further imitate my Father's perfect example - despite my flaws and folly.

One consistent aspect of God's character is He chastens and disciplines those whom He loves, even as a father corrects a son in whom he delights.  God has given everyone a conscience, and a troubled conscience is a good indicator of something in our life which is not at peace with God.  I remembered recently how David's heart on multiple occasions "smote him" for something he did wrong.  He didn't feel conflicted or bad before he did something, but it was after the event that strong conviction came.  His heart smote him after he cut Saul's robe, and also after he numbered the people.  One instance was before his reign, and the second was towards the end.  Correction and an obedient response to conviction is something Christians need throughout our walks with Jesus.  A heart made sensitive through the Holy Spirit will experience this conviction.  It is not the feeling of remorse that matters, but our obedient response to God's correction which is key.

David was a man after God's own heart, but this was no guarantee David always followed God's example. Our conscience prompts us to consider our thoughts or actions, admit we have been wrong, and align ourselves in obedience with God in the future.  1 Kings 1:5-6 reveals the tragic consequence of the lack of correction on those we love:  "Then Adonijah the son of Haggith exalted himself, saying, "I will be king"; and he prepared for himself chariots and horsemen, and fifty men to run before him. 6 (And his father had not rebuked him at any time by saying, "Why have you done so?" He was also very good-looking. His mother had borne him after Absalom.)"  Adonijah was David's son, and he loved him very much.  The same self-exaltation seen in the usurping Absalom was evident in his younger brother, Adonijah.  The passage explained David never questioned or rebuked Adonijah in his whole life!  It was the proud heart of Adonijah which would lead to his destruction, for David's inaction did not force Adonijah to do such wickedness.  Would rebuke as a child have saved Adonijah as an adult?  Only God knows.

What we can know is God corrects His children.  His Word probes and searches our hearts and minds.  The Holy Spirit convicts of sin, righteousness, and judgment.  Jesus calls out to us, and bids all to love one another as He loves us.  We are more like Adonijah than we would like to think.  We justify ourselves with worldly opinions and selfish rationale, even as Adonijah gathered up an entourage to run before Him.  Unlike David, God makes it His business to ask us:  "Where are you?  What have you done?'  When Adam sinned by eating from the forbidden tree, after Cain killed his brother Abel, God spoke in this fashion.  He asked questions which zeroed in on motive.  Honestly answering the question "Why have you done so?" is one of the best practical ways to avoid future sin.  This way we do not make our focus with a particular behaviour itself, but the sinful motives of the heart which prompted the behaviour.  Sin hidden in our heart reveals itself in an infinite amount of ways, heads of a wicked hydra which will grow again.  For this reason we must examine our motives, repent, and lay our will down humbly before our God.

Proverbs 3:11-12 says, "My son, do not despise the chastening of the LORD, nor detest His correction; 12 for whom the LORD loves He corrects, just as a father the son in whom he delights."  Have you heard God ask you lately, "Why have you done so?"  Don't ignore the question.  God does not correct us because He hates us, but out of His love, grace, and mercy.  Respond to His correction obediently.  Let us not be as Adonijah, who exalted himself.  Humble yourself before the LORD and He will lift you up!

14 December 2014

Muscle, Not Machine

I am grateful to be part of the Body of Christ, the church.  1 Corinthians 12:12-14 says, "For as the body is one and has many members, but all the members of that one body, being many, are one body, so also is Christ. 13 For by one Spirit we were all baptized into one body--whether Jews or Greeks, whether slaves or free--and have all been made to drink into one Spirit. 14 For in fact the body is not one member but many."  The world beckons all to celebrate diversity in the vacuum of individualism.  The contrasting beauty of God's design of the church is our celebration of the unity of diverse individuals in Christ.  It is not our differences or unique talents which make us useful, but Jesus Christ who unites us.  It is the Holy Spirit who leads and empowers us as one.

I have found free weights to be the most useful and thus my favourite type of training.  Over the years I have experienced a few injuries, and the vast majority of injuries were the direct result of weight machines.  Interestingly enough, the machines which led to injuries were designed to target specific muscles - like a curling machine, for instance.  Instead of needing to pick up the weights from the ground and involve the whole body in lifting, all I needed to do was adjust the amount of weight with the placement of a small pin.  Convenient, yes.  But it was only a matter of time before I tried to lift more weight than I could physically handle and hurt myself.  Without strengthening connective tissues and all those little important ligaments and tendons, the convenience of machines led to injury and a decrease of fitness for the whole body as I recovered.

In His wisdom, God did not make the church a machine.  He designed it to be a living expression of His love, a united body comprised of many members with Jesus Christ as the Head.  Paul wrote in Ephesians 4:15-16:  "...speaking the truth in love, may grow up in all things into Him who is the head--Christ-- 16 from whom the whole body, joined and knit together by what every joint supplies, according to the effective working by which every part does its share, causes growth of the body for the edifying of itself in love."  People are not machines.  We need much more than an occasional adjustment or oiling.  We need to be fed, washed, trained, taught, encouraged, convicted, corrected, and strengthened by our Saviour.  God uses other people in the church to accomplish this daily task.  We need rest, guidance, forgiveness, love, and intimacy with our Saviour.  Muscles require protein and strenuous activity to grow, and we need the milk and meat of the Word of God to be strengthened.  People are not cogs in a wheel that can be replaced with a bolt and a little elbow grease.  When we approach ministry like a machine, it can lead to severe injury.  Labouring in isolation from God or apart from true fellowship with others is always destructive.

How important it is to understand God created the church to be a community, a interdependent group of people who are individually fully dependent upon Him!  Do you see your constant need for Jesus just like at the first?  Or has knowledge or responsibility in ministry weaned you away from complete reliance upon Him?  That is a most dangerous place to be.  Proverbs 18:1 says, "A man who isolates himself seeks his own desire; he rages against all wise judgment."  Jesus is for us wisdom, yet isolation is a sure path to injury of self and potentially others.  Praise the LORD for the accountability, strength, encouragement, and gifts He has given others so the church can be edified and Jesus glorified!  We need to be like the power lifter whose whole body is involved in the lift, not just using a machine trying to grow bigger arms.  I am not the Body, but a part made viable through the Holy Spirit.  How I need Jesus and my brothers and sisters in Christ!