Posts

The Limits of Accountability

A word I hear concerning the benefits of Christian fellowship is "accountability."  It seems to be part of being a disciple of Jesus to be held or "hold others accountable."  This can be little more than keeping tabs on someone else, to watch over their shoulder to confirm they are doing the right things or avoiding sin.  The more I think about this concept of what passes as a need for serious discipleship from a biblical vantage point, I wonder if we can actually stand in the way of spiritual growth and maturity.  With a desire to be accepted by others we can seek the favour of an accountability partner rather than seeking God and relying upon His strength to overcome sinful desires of the flesh.  Accountability without the governance of God's love has the potential to become prescriptive, controlling and suggests to find favour with God people must labour to please man. The Bible does speak about giving an account of ourselves, and the context typically conce...

Remembering God

" When you reap your harvest in your field, and forget a sheaf in the field, you shall not go back to get it; it shall be for the stranger, the fatherless, and the widow, that the LORD your God may bless you in all the work of your hands. " Deuteronomy 24:19 God is able to use forgetfulness or being absentminded as an opportunity for blessing.  God knows that we who remember also have the capacity (and even tendency!) to forget.  If a farmer forgot a sheaf of grain in the field, he was not to go retrieve it:  that would provide food for the stranger, the fatherless and the widow.  I wonder if this happened to farmers as often as I forget a pot on the stove that needs cleaning when washing dishes!  The sink being empty of dishes, I often remove the drain plug only to see another pot or dish to wash I had forgotten about. A forgetful farmer was to be always mindful of the God who commanded him to leave the forgotten sheaf in the field.  He was to remember...

Rest in God's Grace

Zerubbabel was a Jewish governor of Judea who came out of the Babylonian captivity and was used by God to rebuild the temple in Jerusalem.  Haggai and Zechariah were prophets and contemporaries of Zerubbabel who encouraged him in the work.  Great difficulties and obstacles were prevalent:  the busyness of the people in their own affairs, opposition of enemies, and even satanic attacks.  Zerubbabel had a massive task before him that loomed like an impassable mountain.  The foundation had been laid, but how would the work be completed? In the face of great discouragement and his own inability to do the work, an angelic messenger said in  Zechariah 4:6-9 :  " So he answered and said to me: "This is the word of the LORD to Zerubbabel: 'Not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit,'  s ays the LORD of hosts. 7 'Who are you, O great mountain? Before Zerubbabel you shall become a plain! And he shall bring forth the capstone with shouts of "Grac...

Jesus Proclaims Peace

" When you go near a city to fight against it, then proclaim an offer of peace to it. 11  And it shall be that if they accept your offer of peace, and open to you, then all the people who are found in it shall be placed under tribute to you, and serve you ." Deuteronomy 20:10-11 God commanded His people to proclaim peace to distant cities, thus providing an opportunity for lives to be spared.  Those who responded to the offer of peace from Israel and chose to open their doors to them would be spared.  Cities who refused to accept the offer of peace would be beseiged and every male would be slain.  The choice of life and death was placed before the enemies of Israel according to God's grace, and this reminds me how God is not willing any should perish.  In light of God's warning that judgment will someday come to this world,  2 Peter 3:9 says, " The Lord is not slack concerning His promise, as some count slackness, but is longsuffering toward us, not wi...

Kept From Stumbling

During my pilgrimage of following Jesus, I have received bad news at times which shocked me deeply.  Most specifically, I have been dismayed over allegations and scandals concerning Christians.  I don't know what is more hard to process looking back:  how a Christian or pastor could be in sin or that I felt the sins of which they were guilty were beyond the realm of possibility.  Many times Christians and I have been left with the broken pieces of a shattered testimony of God's faithfulness by stumbling saints.  How easy it is to assume the ones who have the words of life will always follow them without fail! One of the blessings that come from these tragic moments is the chance to pause for self-examination:  if a pillar of the faith could topple, who can say that could not have been me?  Peter was quick to say he would not be scattered, stumble or deny Jesus but that very same night he did all three.  No man is without faults, and unless these a...

The Sin of Suspicion

Suspicion may not be listed among the works of the flesh, but it is certainly a product of the flesh seasoned with the fear of man.  A close relative of Worry and Anxiety, Suspicion causes a person to perceive grave danger which exists only in his own mind.  Those given over to suspicion have lost focus on the sovereignty, protection and power of God, convinced it falls to them to outsmart their enemies.  Praise the LORD He has provided deliverance from this vice that torments all who justify it.  In Lectures To My Students by C.H. Spurgeon, a chapter titled "The Blind Eye and the Deaf Ear" contains a wealth of insight on the matter which all circumspect people ought to take to heart for themselves: " It would be better to be deceived a hundred times than to live a life of suspicion.  It is intolerable.  The miser who traverses his chamber at midnight and hears a burglar in every falling leaf is not more wretched than the minister who believes that plots a...

God Was Pierced

How blessed are the children of Israel, the people God covenanted with on Sinai!  God brought the Hebrews out of Egypt with a mighty hand, revealed Himself in power, destroyed their enemies and spoke to them.  God chose Moses to lead His people out of Egypt as they followed the visible presence of God through the wilderness to the promised land.  After Moses God raised up many judges and priests who upheld God's laws and sent prophets to speak to His people.  Idols and graven images have mouths yet cannot speak, and the God of Israel stands alone as the Supreme Being who speaks. God has spoken through the Bible, and He still speaks to this day.  Words spoken through prophets who spoke for God are still being fulfilled and provide innumerable insights for how to live today.  I wonder what people thought when the prophet spoke the words recorded concerning what God would do in  Zechariah 12:10 :  " And I will pour on the house of David and on the in...