17 September 2018

The Implications of Definitions

The English language is filled with nuances which impact our perspective.  So many words we commonly use have a range of meaning, and learning the definitions of words enriches our understanding.  It is very possible we limit the meaning of a word to one facet and miss the implications.  Take as an example the word "commit."  The vast majority of times the word is used is in a negative sense, for instance to "commit" murder or adultery.  There are positive uses of the word as well, like in Psalm 37:5:  "Commit your way to the LORD, trust also in Him, and He shall bring it to pass."  The implication of the word is to roll away, give, or entrust.

To illustrate the wide range of meanings of this word "commit," here is the definition from the Webster's Dictionary 1828 edition (punctuation and spacing edited by me to save space):
COMMIT, verb transitive literally, to send to or upon; to throw, put or lay upon. Hence,
1. To give in trust; to put into the hands or power of another; to entrust; with to; "COMMIT thy way to the Lord." Psalms 37:5; "The things thou hast heard of me, commit to faithful men." 2 Timothy 2:2.
2. To put into any place for preservation; to deposit; as, to commit a passage in a book to memory; to commit the body to the grave.
3. To put or sent to, for confinement; as, to commit an offender to prison. Hence for the sake of brevity, commit is used for imprison. The sheriff has committed the offender; "These two were committed, at least restrained of their liberty."
4. To do; to effect or perpetrate; as, to commit murder, treason, felony, or trespass; "Thou shalt not commit adultery." Exodus 20:14. 
5. To join or put together, for a contest; to match; followed by with; a latinism; "How does Philopolis commit the opponent with the respondent?"
6. To place in a state of hostility or incongruity. Committing short and long words. But this seems to be the same signification as the foregoing.
7. To expose or endanger by a preliminary step or decision which cannot be recalled; as, to commit the peace of a country by espousing the cause of a belligerent; "You might have satisfied every duty of political friendship without committing the honour of your sovereign."
8. To engage; to pledge; or to pledge by implication; "The general--addressed letters to Gen. Gates and to Gen. Heath, cautioning them against any sudden assent to the proposal, which might possibly be considered as committing the faith of the United States." And with the reciprocal pronoun, to commit ones self, is to do some act, or make some declaration, which may bind the person in honour, good faith, or consistency, to pursue a certain course of conduct, or to adhere to the tenor of that declaration.
9. To refer or entrust to a committee, or select number of persons, for their consideration and report; a term of legislation; as, the petition or the bill is committed. "Is it the pleasure of the house to commit the bill?"
People are commonly encouraged to "commit" their lives to Jesus as LORD and Saviour.  Making the decision to follow Jesus is undoubtedly a commitment, but this word does not necessarily convey faith or trust.  I remember a friend who used the term "commitment" in relation to a pledge he made to his local church to give so much money over the next four years.  In his mind he made this pledge and therefore he was covered - for lack of a better word.  It is scriptural we would commit our lives to Jesus as He did into the hands of the Father, to entrust ourselves entirely to His covenant and will.  But I do find it interesting Jesus never asked the disciples to commit before following Him.  He was not interested in them pledging their loyalty before they were permitted to be His disciples.  In most cases recorded in scripture He simply said, "Follow Me."  Their faith was not conveyed by words alone but through obedience.  Our pledges mean nothing if they are only words or promising to give money or assent:  faith in Jesus and spiritual rebirth through the Gospel is needed for salvation.

So friends, crack open those dictionaries!  Language is a complex challenge to navigate, and our much improved access to information does not necessarily mean we understand the nuances of our mother tongue!  Words are powerful because of the meaning behind them when properly understood.  This is why I steer away from recent translations tailored for modern speakers, for stripping away language reduces meaning and significance.  Reducing language to today's common vernacular tends to dilute rather than distill.  God saw fit to give us His words written down which have been faithfully translated - not only so we could analyse and repeat them in our language - but so we could know Him and walk in light of His revelation and truth.

16 September 2018

Well Pleasing to God

No one likes the feeling of being judged, especially when perceive judgments are unfair.  Negative opinions others have about us can be hurtful and impact us deeply.  How can we balance caring for people without trying to please them?  Paul was a follower of Jesus who set a great example of how to do this because he primarily lived to please God.  He was not careless about the feelings of others, for he loved deeply and served others sincerely.  But even when he was judged negatively by people inside or outside the church, he pressed on in faith in pursuit of Christ without regrets.

Paul wrote to people in the Corinthian church, and many in that fellowship had a low view of him.  They questioned his motives; they downplayed his leadership.  They admitted he wrote powerful letters, but his bodily presence was weak and his speaking contemptible - which means they despised it!  Paul knew well he would one day stand before the judgment seat of Christ and would receive according to all he had done or said, good or bad.  He wrote in 2 Corinthians 5:9-11, "Therefore we make it our aim, whether present or absent, to be well pleasing to Him. 10 For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, that each one may receive the things done in the body, according to what he has done, whether good or bad. 11 Knowing, therefore, the terror of the Lord, we persuade men; but we are well known to God, and I also trust are well known in your consciences."

The apostle Paul aimed to be well pleasing to God, and he realised God knew him perfectly.  On the Day of Judgment God was not going to take into account the opinions or judgments of men concerning Paul's actions or motives:  God already knew them.  Paul, in a sense, examined his heart and made his decisions in light of the impending judgment he would face before the righteous, holy God.  Therefore the opinions or judgments of men (negative or positive) had minimal impact whatsoever on him.  He was not buoyed by a sense of success from adulation, nor was he waylaid from obedience to God by harsh censure.  Paul was not in the habit of walking according to his shortsightedness but had a singleness of mind in following and obeying Jesus.

Because Paul feared God he sought to persuade men to be well pleasing to Him.  Paul didn't want people discipling one another and walking uprightly only when he was around but also when he was not able to oversee the ministry in Corinth.  He did the best he could in person or through letters to convey instruction and rebuke seasoned with grace, to exhort and encourage all to continue steadfastly in the faith.  He warned them with many tears, not caring if they judged him weak and contemptible.  He did not speak with wisdom of words but with fear and trembling, seeking to impact the church for God's glory.  Not all received or appreciated what Paul had to say, and the same could be said about His LORD and Saviour Jesus Christ.  Jesus lived to do the will of the Father, and as His servants we should do the same.

The supreme courts of men do not have authority which extends above the throne of God which is above all.  If we in a clear conscience can stand boldly before God's throne of grace, then we do not need to worry about the opinions of men.  Paul stood because God enabled him to stand, and praise God that is His will for us too.  Take to heart the words of Galatians 6:9-10: "And let us not grow weary while doing good, for in due season we shall reap if we do not lose heart. 10 Therefore, as we have opportunity, let us do good to all, especially to those who are of the household of faith."  Receiving a "Well done, good and faithful servant" from the lips of my King will be sufficient.  God is well pleased to say this to His redeemed.

12 September 2018

Receiving the Reward

God rewards those who trust and diligently seek Him (Hebrews 11:6), and the life of Enoch is cited as an example.  Enoch pleased God, and without faith it is impossible to please God.  He was translated to heaven and never saw death, and what a great reward eternal life is for all who place their faith in Jesus Christ.  Heaven is not the only place where God rewards His people, for we are abundantly blessed with God's presence, love, forgiveness, peace, and fullness of joy even now.

The rewards supplied by God by His grace come to us in unexpected ways.  God has set aside for us a "full reward" John alludes to in 2 John 1:8.  There are ways we can miss out on the rewards God intends to give us.  Paul revealed when followers of Jesus are judged for our stewardship before the judgment seat of Christ we could potentially suffer loss (1 Corinthians 3:15).  Perhaps a little story might help this make sense.
There was once a man who worked for his wealthy father as long as he could remember.  He toiled away day after day because it was expected of him as the oldest son to set a good example.  Before the sun he rose to his duties, but often his heart wasn't in it.  He felt he was hard done by, for what did he have to show for his labours?  All it did was increase his father's wealth.  Let's say he didn't feel there was much upward mobility.
When the season to plow and sow arrived, the father supplied his son with an abundance of seed, farm equipment, and provided access to a well-watered plain.  "Feel free to sow all you want," the father said with a gleam in his eye.  "No doubt it will be a bountiful harvest."  Well, needless to say the son was not impressed.  Fine for him to say, the man thought to himself.  The rich get richer and the workers just keep slaving away, and for what?  What do I have to show for decades of work?  The son was glad for his pay and benefits, but could not be bothered to apply himself.  His father already was rich and lacked nothing.  To rub it in, he was going away on a long holiday as well!
As he continued day after day, the son became increasingly bitter.  It struck him how poorly he was being treated, even taken advantage of!  He felt under pressure by this expectation of a good crop!  So what did he do?  He decided to teach his old man a lesson for taking him for granted.  His days still began before dawn, but he sowed rusty nails instead of seed.  He took long breaks when he should have been clearing new fields, and napped when he could have repaired the irrigation system.  Month after month this continued.  A meagre crop sprang up from old seed, but it was a pitiful amount, a fraction of previous years.  Man, when dad finds out he'll learn his lesson.  The look on his face will be unforgettable.  He smiled thinking about it.
Having returned from a holiday, the man's father gathered the family for an announcement.  He said, "It's no secret I am a wealthy man.  Because I value and rejoice over my eldest son who has served me these many years, instead of harvesting and selling this year's crops for my benefit, in addition to his wages as his reward all that grows in all my land is to be sold for his profit.  At my own expense I have provided soil, seed, equipment, and will even employ harvesters to ensure none of it is lost.  Congratulations, my boy:  you will receive all you deserve."
If you could look at the son's face, I imagine he wore an expression so full of regret and disappointment we do well to consider always.  The earth is the LORD's and the fullness thereof.  We are unworthy to be numbered among God's children, but He is gracious and good.  He has provided everything pertaining to life and godliness.  He has a full reward set aside for us that is better than money that perishes.  The question is, are we working in a way worthy of receiving it?  Paul wrote in 1 Corinthians 4:1-2, "Let a man so consider us, as servants of Christ and stewards of the mysteries of God. 2 Moreover it is required in stewards that one be found faithful."  May we be faithful sons and daughters that persevere in obedience, faithful to serve our Saviour as He did the Father.  Jesus said in John 9:4, "I must work the works of Him who sent Me while it is day; the night is coming when no one can work."  Let our lives be marked with integrity for God's glory, for such will receive a full reward.

11 September 2018

Faith and Victory

The Bible is full of truth, layer upon layer.  The more I consider and study it, the basic and fundamental themes grow more profound.  I find myself increasingly amazed by the power and simplicity of the Gospel.  God's love and grace is a revelation of not only His goodness towards us, but to guide how we live.  The world has hijacked terms like "love" and "peace" for worldly pursuits, and these feeble caricatures bear no resemblance to the abundant provision God supplies for those who trust in Him.

After Jesus miraculously fed a crowd of thousands, they returned the following day hoping for more food.  Jesus told them not to work for food which perishes but for what would provide them eternal life.  The Jews asked Jesus, "How can we do the works of God?"  John 6:29 says, "Jesus answered and said to them, "This is the work of God, that you believe in Him whom He sent."  The good work Jesus spoke of was to believe Jesus was indeed the promised Messiah, the Bread of Life come down from heaven:  all who partake of Him through faith will be born again and have eternal life.  Men are not saved by good works, but those who trust in Jesus are to enter into the good works He has prepared for us, that we would love God with all our hearts and love others as He loves us.

Walking in God's love is a good work all believers are called to, and it should be no surprise the list of the fruit of the Spirit in Galatians 5 begins with love.  It is not a coincidence we need to breathe oxygen to live on earth, and God created an atmosphere on earth with the perfect balance of oxygen to support humans and all living things.  One percent less oxygen and the air would be deficient of oxygen, and one percent more and the atmosphere would be oxygen enriched and volatile!  God is wise to supply all our needs through the Holy Spirit who indwells and enables us to do what we are called to.  It requires faith in God to obey Him and forgive others, to exhibit love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, gentleness, meekness, and self-control.  Faith in Jesus is not just the starting point but what enables us to continue and persevere.  Paul wrote in Roman 14:22, "...whatsoever is not of faith is sin."  Simple faith in God works and overcomes all.

See the prevalence of love and faith in the Christian experience in 1 John 5:1-5:  "Whoever believes that Jesus is the Christ is born of God, and everyone who loves Him who begot also loves him who is begotten of Him. 2 By this we know that we love the children of God, when we love God and keep His commandments. 3 For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments. And His commandments are not burdensome. 4 For whatever is born of God overcomes the world. And this is the victory that has overcome the world--our faith. 5 Who is he who overcomes the world, but he who believes that Jesus is the Son of God?"  The victory provided by faith in Jesus is not by might, nor by power, but by the Spirit of grace.  Jesus has given us the command to love others as He loves us, and He is the Way, the Truth, and the Life.  With the Holy Spirit within us we overcome the world - not because of our might, power, love or wisdom - but by faith in Jesus.  Selah!

10 September 2018

Angry At God?

"Be angry, and do not sin": do not let the sun go down on your wrath, 27 nor give place to the devil."
Ephesians 4:26-27

Anger is a natural response for people, and it is not always a sinful one.  It is possible to be angry without sin, but the occasions are very rare.  Paul makes clear the connection between remaining angry and giving place to the devil - which makes us exponentially susceptible to sin.  When Jonah became angry after God relented from destroying Nineveh, God asked Him a question we do well to consider when we are angry:  "Is it right for you to be angry?"  If we would answer honestly, much of our anger has nothing to do with God or righteousness at all.  The driver behind much anger we experience is pride and self.  It is fuelled by perceived infringement on our rights or desires, and it is nothing about God being robbed of His just due or being sinned against.

Is it possible to be justified in anger towards God?  No, for there can be no righteous indignation directed towards a righteous, holy God.  In his book Respectable Sins, Jerry Bridges wrote this:
"Let me make a statement loud and clear.  It is never okay to be angry at God.  Anger is a moral judgment, and in the case of God, it accuses Him of wrongdoing.  It accuses God of sinning against us by neglecting us or in some way treating us unfairly.  It also is often a response to our thinking that God owes us a better deal in life than we are getting.  As a result, we put God in the dock of our own courtroom...I acknowledge that believers can and do have momentary flashes of anger at God.  I have experienced this myself.  But we should quickly recognise those occurrences as the sins that they are and repent of them." (Bridges, Jerry. Respectable Sins. NavPress, Published in Alliance with Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., 2016. pg. 123)
I don't know I have ever heard it put the way Jerry Bridges did when he asserted, "Anger is a moral judgment."  This is very perceptive and helpful to deal with the source and reason behind anger we experience.  It is good to recognise there are moral judgments I accept as right and wrong and these do not necessarily always line up with God's righteous judgment.  I have been angry before at people I believed were in the wrong, but my anger revealed it was really I who was sinning.  When we are offended it can often be another way of saying we are angry.  Being "offended" pins the blame of our anger on someone else, but we still must own it.  Feelings of frustration or annoyance can also be anger in disguise.  Praise the LORD He knows our hearts better than we do, and better yet God is able to cleanse them!

Brothers and sisters, let us not give place to the devil in our lives through anger - especially when we are angry towards God.  He is altogether righteous and good, and we are not.  We can always bring our anger to God in repentance, and He is able to help in profound ways sowing to the flesh through exhibiting our anger could never accomplish.  How good it is to be set free from the bondage of anger and bitterness!

08 September 2018

LORD God of Hosts

"O LORD God of hosts, who is mighty like You, O LORD? Your faithfulness also surrounds You. 9 You rule the raging of the sea; when its waves rise, You still them."
Psalm 89:8-9

The LORD God of hosts is supreme over all, and all power and authority is His.  The One who created the sea can rule it, and His might is incomparable.  The psalmist Ethan the Ezrahite asked, "Who among God or man can compare with the LORD?"  Man is at the mercy of the power of a raging sea, but God has the power to still the waves.

This passage reminds me of when Jesus and His disciples sought to go to the other side of Galilee in ships.  Mark 4:37-41 reads, "And a great windstorm arose, and the waves beat into the boat, so that it was already filling. 38 But He was in the stern, asleep on a pillow. And they awoke Him and said to Him, "Teacher, do You not care that we are perishing?" 39 Then He arose and rebuked the wind, and said to the sea, "Peace, be still!" And the wind ceased and there was a great calm. 40 But He said to them, "Why are you so fearful? How is it that you have no faith?" 41 And they feared exceedingly, and said to one another, "Who can this be, that even the wind and the sea obey Him!"

What a contrast between Jesus and His disciples as they travelled in a boat which rapidly filled with water!  Jesus slept soundly whilst the disciples feared for their lives.  When they roused Him with cries, wondering if He cared their lives were in danger, Jesus rebuked the wind.  He did not shout; He did not need to.  He said to the sea, "Peace, be still!" - and the sea immediately was calm.  The disciples were amazed beyond measure, wondering who Jesus could possibly be.  Psalm 89 penned by Ethan the Ezrahite had already identified who Jesus is:  the LORD God of hosts!

How wonderful is this, that the storms we face are under the rule of our LORD and Saviour Jesus.  The Good Shepherd of our souls is altogether faithful and will not forsake His little ones.  He does not fear as we do, and He does not help like we might expect.  Perhaps the disciples wanted Jesus to bail water out of the sinking ship or grab a rope, but Jesus stilled the storm with a calm voice.  Only God rules the raging of the sea, and Jesus identified Himself as God by the miraculous signs He did.  Let us place our faith in and glorify the LORD of Hosts, for there is no one mighty to save as He.

06 September 2018

Give God Thanks

Following Jesus isn't easy, but it is an abundant life worth living.  Faith in God brings a fulfilling sense of purpose and hope nothing else in this perishing world can provide.  Though we have comfort, help, and rest in our God, at times we can be bombarded with bad news, devastated by circumstances, and be drowning in sorrow.  Over the last couple of days I have felt like I cannot cast my cares upon Jesus because they are casting me.  When the burdens are suffocating and we are too weak to move a muscle, praise the LORD He can lift us up for He stands by to save.

After prayer and reading Psalm 88 in the Bible (which was extremely relevant) this morning I flipped open Respectable Sins by Jerry Bridges.  The passage in the book that I read was exactly what I needed to hear and be reminded of.  Allow me to share it with you:
In 1 Thessalonians 5:18, Paul writes, "Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you."  This command is different from the command in Ephesians 5:20, where we are to give thanks to God for everything.  I believe, considering the context, that in Ephesians Paul is exhorting us to develop a habit of continual thanksgiving for all the blessings God so graciously pours out on us; that is, one characteristic of a Spirit-filled life is a thankful heart.
 In the Thessalonians passage, however, Paul is instructing us to give thanks in all circumstances, even those we would not feel thankful about.  Is Paul asking us to give thanks through gritted teeth by sheer willpower when in our heart of hearts we are truly disappointed?  The answer to the questions lies in the promises of God found in Romans 8:28-29 and 38-39:  "We know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose.  For those whom he foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, in order that he might be the firstborn among many brothers...For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord."
Verse 28 tells us that for those who love God, all things work together for good.  The meaning is that God causes all things to work together for good; for "things" - that is, circumstances - do not work together for good themselves.  Rather, God directs the outcome of those circumstances for our good.  The "good," however, is defined in verse 29 as our being conformed to the image of God's Son.  In other words, Paul is telling us that God intends all our circumstances, both good and bad (but in the context Paul has in mind, especially the bad ones), to be instruments of sanctification, of growing us more and more into the likeness of Jesus.
So in situations that do not turn out the way we hoped, we are to give God thanks that he will use the situation in some way to develop our Christian character.  We don't need to speculate as to how he might use it, for His ways are often mysterious and beyond our understanding.  So by faith in the promise of God in Romans 8:28-29, we obey the command of 1 Thessalonians 5:18 to give thanks in the circumstances.
Further, as we are in the midst of the difficult circumstance, we have the promise of Romans 8:38-39 that nothing, including the situation we are in, can separate us from the love of God.  Again we must cling to this promise by faith.  So we have a dual assurance to enable us to give thanks in the circumstance.  First, by faith we believe God is using or will use the particular difficulty to conform us more to Jesus.  Second, we have the assurance that even in the midst of the difficulty we are enveloped in God's love. (Bridges, Jerry. Respectable Sins. NavPress, Published in Alliance with Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., 2016. pages 81-82)
How blessed we are to have an almighty God who loves us beyond compare!  My love perishes with me, but the love of Jesus endures forever.  We might not always feel loved but we can know we are by the love demonstrated by Jesus when He willingly suffered and died on Calvary for sinners.  Who Jesus is and all He accomplished through His death and resurrection are eternal, and nothing that happens in our lives or even things we do cannot rob Him of victory.  Therefore, let us bless and thank our LORD Jesus Christ, for the God who gives also takes away - and gives good again in double measure.  Instead of being bitter through disappointment or angry with perceived injustice, let us in brokenness cry out to our Saviour who loves us and stands by us ready to save. 

05 September 2018

Godly Emphasis Matters

Good teaching of God's Word to a degree depends upon emphasis.  Undue emphasis on a minor point can draw away attention from the primary purpose of a passage, and this potentially leads to bad interpretations.  There is always a danger of reading into a text and arrive at conclusions which appeal to us.  The interpretation of the scripture can become increasingly narrow until we can only see the point we want to make - and limit or discount the full range of God's truth.

In reading Tozer's The Crucified Life, he uses an example to show it is possible to believe the truth but place our primary focus in the wrong place.  He had some very strong things to say about what he saw as misplaced empahsis in regards to our salvation.  Tozer held little back when he wrote:
"What a bunch of unworthy people we evangelicals have become, daring to stand up on our feet and preach to an intelligent audience that the essence, the final purpose and the cause of Christ is to save us from hell.  How stupid can we get and still claim to be followers of Christ?  The purpose of God is not to save us from hell; the purpose of God is to save us to make us like Christ and to make us like God.  God will never be done with us until the day we see His face, when His name will be on our foreheads; and we shall be like Him because we shall see Him as He is.
What a cheap, across-the-counter commercial kind of Christianity that says, "I was in debt, and Jesus came and paid my debt."  Sure, He did, but why emphasize that?  "I was on my way to hell and Jesus stopped me and saved me."  Sure, He did, but that is not the thing to emphasize.  What we need to emphasize is that God has saved us to make us like his Son.  His purpose is to catch us on our wild race to hell, turn us around because He knows us, bring judgment on the old self and then create a new self within us, which is Jesus Christ.
The most beautiful verse in the Bible is found in Psalm 90:7:  "Let the beauty of the LORD our God be upon us."  How wonderful is the beauty of the LORD our God?  The sharp contrast to the beauty of the Lord our God is the ugliness of I, myself...In the great divine exchange, God offers to trade our old selves, which have brought us so many problems, for new selves, which are Christ.  The apostle Paul says, "And the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me." (Tozer, A. W., and James L. Snyder. The Essential Tozer Collection. Bethany House, 2017. The Crucified Life, pages 164-165)
I am glad God has given us the freedom to have different viewpoints and opinions concerning emphasis.  Tozer obviously believed with great vigour the best point of emphasis concerning salvation was the work God desires to do within a person, to make us like Himself.  It is perfectly valid and true at the same time to draw attention to the fact Jesus has saved us from hell, called us to be His witnesses today, and He has saved us for heaven too.  A point of emphasis not mentioned here is that Jesus came to earth to draw us near to Himself so we could have an intimate relationship now and forever for His glory.  Needless to say, what we emphasise has a great impact on how we live.  for example, if my focus is limited on Jesus saving me from hell, I would be grateful but ongoing personal sanctification would likely not be a intentional consequence.

As I read through the passage in Tozer's book, it dawned on me how God created man in His own image.  God desires for people - not angels, insects, or animals - to be made like Christ.  There is no other living creature apart from humans in all creation the Holy Spirit comes upon and indwells.  It is amazing to know God put on human flesh and became our Saviour so His redeemed can say "we will ever be with the LORD."  We rejoice to affirm the truth of 1 John 3:1-3:  "Behold what manner of love the Father has bestowed on us, that we should be called children of God! Therefore the world does not know us, because it did not know Him. 2 Beloved, now we are children of God; and it has not yet been revealed what we shall be, but we know that when He is revealed, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is. 3 And everyone who has this hope in Him purifies himself, just as He is pure."  What a privileged place we have amongst the wondrous things God has made, that the love and beauty of the LORD could be and is upon us.

03 September 2018

Our Sun and Shield

It is good to meditate on the Word of God, to take it in beyond the eye and ear and turn it round in your mind.  The food we eat is quickly stripped of nutritional value by our bodies, but not so the scriptures:  they remain just as practically useful and spiritually vital as ever.  God's Word will never pass away, and therefore as we feed on it we are renewed continually.  The Living Bread (who is Christ) which comes down from heaven does not grow stale or old but teaches us to live by every word which proceeds from the mouth of God.

I jotted down thoughts yesterday concerning a passage which God is still using to work in me.  Psalm 84:11 says, "For the LORD God is a sun and shield; the LORD will give grace and glory; no good thing will He withhold from those who walk uprightly."  I truly enjoy spiritual metaphors and similes contained in scripture, and I remain intrigued by what the psalmist said:  "the LORD God is a sun and shield."  He is not "like" a sun or a shield but wrote metaphorically that God is a sun and shield.  Often when I come across a statement like this it is good to pause and consider the implications of what is being said.  Knowledge of the functions of the sun and a shield sheds light on the nature of God and His relationship to us.

The sun brings light to our planet and life for plants and animals alike.  Without the heat of the sun all would be a frozen wasteland.  The sun governs the day and the orientation of it in the heavens changes during each season.  The sun consistently rises in the east and sets in the west, and many travellers have oriented themselves according to its ordered position in the heavens.  A sunrise and sunset can be breathtakingly beautiful, and no camera can adequately capture such brilliance.  As the sun is critical for life on this planet, so is God indispensable as our Creator.  He smiles down upon us in every season, for He has established the days, weeks, months, seasons, and years of our lives.  He gives light to men who live in darkness, and warms us with His presence.  He is ever faithful, revealing Himself in splendour and glory for all who have eyes to see.  No one can look directly at the sun for its brilliance without potential eye injuries, and no one can look upon the face of the Almighty and survive.  He is ever glorious and causes His light to shine upon all.

The psalmist wrote God is also a shield.  Shields were objects designed for the purpose of personal armour.  Small shields were used actively to fend off attacks, whilst large shields provided passive protection from projectiles.  A shield was a distinguishing feature of warriors carried for defence in battle.  The material and design of shields carried by ancient people aid archaeologists to determine rank or class.  Some groups employed the shields together in protective formations.  Unknown to the one who penned the Psalm, the word "shield" has expanded due to technology, like "shielded cable" or a "heat shield" on spacecraft - but the designed function of the shield to protect remains the same.  God is a shield for us, our protector and provider.  He is our defence and refuge, the One who is greater than all.  As chicks huddle beneath their mother for protection, so we seek comfort and grace in our LORD.  He has even provided us the shield of faith through the Holy Spirit which extinguishes all the fiery darts Satan throws at us.

God is a sun and shield, and in light of what follows we can rejoice:  "the LORD will give grace and glory."  The sun can burn our skin and scorch plants, and shields can be heavy and tiring to wield:  yet God will give grace and glory.  He has power to consume as well as power to give life.  We are not deserving of God's presence or protection, but He has chosen us by His grace.  He as invited us to behold His glory in our crucified and risen Saviour Jesus Christ who is the Light of the World.  God's glory fills the heavens, and this declaration transcends all human language.  God is gracious and glorious, but He also gives grace and glory.  Which king on earth ever freely gave his glory to any but his own son?  God did make Jesus Christ His only begotten Son glorious, but He will glorify us with Him.  He says to those who trust and fear Him, "Friend, come up higher!  You are not only a guest but a beloved child I have adopted as my own."  Praise the LORD, our Sun and Shield who gives grace and glory.