31 August 2020

God's Favour is Life

"Sing praise to the LORD, you saints of His, and give thanks at the remembrance of His holy name. 5 For His anger is but for a moment, His favour is for life; weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning."
Psalm 30:4-5

God is worthy of all praise and thanksgiving.  How marvelous is God's grace to make redeemed sinners His singers, servants, and saints!  The remembrance of His holy name ought to prompt celebration and awe in His power, wisdom, and goodness.  Words fail to adequately describe His immutable goodness and righteousness.  The living creatures around God's throne do not rest day or night as they repeat continually, "Holy, holy, holy, LORD God almighty, who was, and is, and is to come!" (Revelation 4:8)  God is the sovereign LORD of all, and one day all will acknowledge this.

In my Bible the description of the psalm says, "A song at the dedication of the house of David."  David praised the LORD who had established him as king over Judah and all Israel, gave him victory to take the stronghold of Jerusalem, and favour with King Hiram who supplied cedar for his palace.  David endured many hardships, sleepless nights, and painful trials before and after he became king, but God remained the same.  His anger, though fierce, was not without a just cause or without a swift end.  God who created man in His own image is gracious and His favour is for life that endures beyond our time on earth.  Jesus came to earth in human form (as the Life) to give His life as a ransom to make sinners God's saints.

Praise, thanksgiving, and rejoicing are the hallmarks of God's saints.  Our guilt and need for repentance brings sorrow, being chastened for our iniquities is painful, but joy comes in the morning.  The darkness of the night flees away at the rising of the sun.  The joy of the LORD is more predictable and enduring than the light of the sun which can be obscured by clouds.  The sun that shines today will not shine forever, but the light of God's favour will eternally shine upon our souls.  After affirming by the power of God He was faithful to keep His people, Peter wrote in 1 Peter 1:6-9:  "In this you greatly rejoice, though now for a little while, if need be, you have been grieved by various trials, 7 that the genuineness of your faith, being much more precious than gold that perishes, though it is tested by fire, may be found to praise, honour, and glory at the revelation of Jesus Christ, 8 whom having not seen you love. Though now you do not see Him, yet believing, you rejoice with joy inexpressible and full of glory, 9 receiving the end of your faith--the salvation of your souls."

In the storm Jesus cared about His disciples, and in our trials God has not forgotten about us.  Even in the midst of persecution and grievous circumstances believers are exhorted to greatly rejoice because God employs such things to prove the genuineness of our faith.  Peter said, "if need be" meaning there is a divine purpose behind our pains.  If gold could feel pain it would seek to avoid the fiery crucible, yet the melting of the precious metal is needed to bring greater purity and value.  David endured a long seasons of trials which only seemed a night in comparison to the greatness of the joy he experienced through His gracious Saviour and Deliverer.  So great is our fullness of joy through faith in Jesus Christ we are enabled to praise, honour, and glorify God night and day.  Even as the grace and goodness of God is beyond description, so our joy is inexpressible and full of glory knowing our God whose favour is life.

29 August 2020

God Knows Why

It is easy to feel discouraged when we step out in faith and the result is unexpected.  God appeared to Moses and directed him to go to Egypt because God heard the cries of His oppressed people and would deliver them.  After Moses and Aaron confronted Pharaoh he made life harder for the Hebrew slaves.  He accused them of being idle, refused to provide straw for bricks, and kept their quota the same.  When the Hebrews were unable to meet the daily demands they were beaten.  This was not what Moses was expecting, though God told him beforehand Pharaoh would not let his people go.

The rulers of the people came to Moses with their complaints for the trouble he caused them.  "The LORD judge between you and us," they said.  It is evident they already formed their judgments of the involvement of Moses in their affairs and it was not a positive assessment.  Instead of arguing with them, Moses questioned what God was doing in Exodus 5:22-23:  "So Moses returned to the LORD and said, "Lord, why have You brought trouble on this people? Why is it You have sent me? 23 For since I came to Pharaoh to speak in Your name, he has done evil to this people; neither have You delivered Your people at all."  I appreciate the honesty and candor in Moses before the almighty God who knows the hearts of all men.  He wondered why God would allow trouble and why God sent him.  At the time Moses felt like God had not done what he promised and told Him so.

This interaction gives me pause.  How often have you felt like Moses?  I certainly have.  You have done what you believed God instructed you to do but only hardship and difficulties arose.  The problems people have are overwhelming and out of your control.  Knowing God knows about our troubles doesn't explain why He allows them.  It is a good thing Moses had faith in God and did not lose heart despite the troubling circumstances and reactions of his fellow Hebrews.  This is why it is so important for believers to keep trusting God whatever befalls us, knowing nothing happens to us beyond God's control and He will ever be faithful.  God would deliver His people in a miraculous way which no man could have predicted or known.  Isn't that what a miracle is, God working in a way that transcends human ability and expectation?  When things looked like they couldn't become worse (and still did!), and Moses already was dealing with feelings of insecurity and ineptitude, God remained faithful.

Take heart, believer!  Don't allow trying times or unanswerable questions keep you from seeking the LORD and trusting in Him.  The next chapter begins, "Then the LORD said unto Moses..."  God knew what He was doing and His people were safe in His hands through oppressed, overworked, beaten, and confused.  Our hopes often rise and fall based upon what we can see or feel at the time, yet the one who looks to God will be established on solid ground like a house built on the rock.  Our expectation and desire is for God to deliver sooner than later, yet every day of our lives are known by God.  He knows what He doing despite our pains that will result in deliverance, freedom, salvation, and rest.  When we wonder why God knows the answer, and more important than why is who God is and our relationship with Him.

26 August 2020

Living Water Today

When Jesus walked and taught as He passed through Israel, He always drew a crowd.  People pressed near to hear His wisdom and see the miraculous deeds which caused His fame to spread like the light of the sun when it rises over hills dotted with flocks of sheep.  Jesus went to the lost sheep of Israel to seek and save the lost, to people who had entered into a covenant with God.  Through the Law of Moses and the prophets the God of Israel was revealed and known.

What I find fascinating is how people familiar with the scriptures didn't recognise Jesus though they could have.  This was all part of God's divine plan, that unbelief in Jesus would cause blindness in the Jews and salvation through the Gospel would come to both Jew and Gentile.  Just last night I read concerning how the glory of God would break forth with salvation in Isaiah 35:5-6:  "Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped. 6 Then the lame shall leap like a deer, and the tongue of the dumb sing. For waters shall burst forth in the wilderness, and streams in the desert."  Jesus did these things with regularity:  He caused people born blind to see, opened deaf ears, healed the lame, and at His command the mute spoke plainly.

Beyond the physical healing Jesus ushered in a spiritual revival by offering the Living Water of the Holy Spirit to those who trusted in Him as Messiah and Son of God.  Souls that were parched wastelands would be flooded with the presence of God who brought eternal life and spiritual fruitfulness.  This scripture also has a future fulfillment in the millennial reign of Jesus Christ after His return in person to Jerusalem, having taken vengeance upon His enemies.  Water will flow from Jerusalem to the Dead Sea and cause it to become an oasis teeming with life (Zechariah 14:8; Ezekiel 47:8-10).  The waters of the Dead Sea are currently receding at a great rate, but this trend will someday be miraculously reversed.

What we see foretold in scripture is what can be the spiritual reality right now in the hearts, minds, and lives of people through the Gospel.  The spiritually blind, deaf, lame, and mute can be miraculously made to see, hear, leap with joy, and praise the LORD with song.  Only God knows times and seasons which are in His own power concerning the future, but in a spiritual sense blind eyes and parched hearts need wait no longer:  Jesus Christ has come and offers Living Water to all who thirst springing up into everlasting life (John 4:13-14).  He provides salvation for the condemned and heals the brokenhearted.  May God open our eyes to our need for Him, that He is the only means of quenching our thirst for love and belonging, and Jesus is the Messiah we have long sought.  Like the old song goes, "Flow, river flow. Flood the nations with grace and mercy.  Send forth your word, LORD and let there be light."

25 August 2020

Jesus is a Wise Foundation

How important it is to maintain a God-centred perspective, to humbly seek God in good and in hard times.  It is easy to allow news reports, bad feelings, or our own thoughts to shape our mindset and outlook instead of being grounded in God's word and our unchanging God who was, is, and is to come.  Since God is the source of all wisdom, He is always able to guide and direct us.  The one who has an established relationship with God by faith in Him is like a tree planted by rivers of water that is fruitful and evergreen.  Those who mock and scorn God and the scriptures David in Psalm 1 compared to chaff the wind drives away and is no more.

There is a huge difference between a fruitful tree and chaff blown by the wind.  Chaff is at the mercy of even a gentle breeze which sweeps it away and it is lost forever, while a tree with roots deep in the earth is solid, secure, and so predictably in place it makes a good landmark.  Trees like the giant sequoia, olive, and eucalyptus are hearty and can survive a fire and continue to grow but chaff is consumed in a moment.  Jesus made another contrast between those who hear His words and do them with those who hear and do not put them into practice:  one is like a house founded securely on a rock, and the other is a house built on sand.  Enduring storms reveals the soul fixed securely to Christ in faith will endure forever.

Paul wrote to followers of Jesus in 1 Corinthians 1:30-31, "But of Him you are in Christ Jesus, who became for us wisdom from God--and righteousness and sanctification and redemption--31  that, as it is written, "He who glories, let him glory in the LORD."  Having been born again through faith in Jesus, He has become for us wisdom from God.  Jesus spoke to disciples who had been exposed to the wisdom of the world, the teaching of parents and religious rulers, and lived in a society that was a complete contrast to the nature of Jesus Christ and what He taught.  His hearers were amazed at His doctrine because it was shockingly different than what they thought and how they lived.  There was no doubting the wisdom of His teaching, but who could live up to that standard of perfection?  Those who would build their life on the Rock of Salvation Jesus Christ needed to trust Him as His words exposed their lives as flimsy shelters cobbled together with cardboard, twine, and tin without a foundation:  if they wanted to experience a relationship with God, it could only be on Christ's terms.  Would they trust Him enough to pull those shelters down and built their lives and outlook upon Him alone?

You've heard of Jesus, but have you heard Jesus?  Have you considered His words and surrendered to His divine wisdom in agreement and obedience?  A strong wind blows today not of the Holy Spirit but of the world and humanism, a breeze chilled with worries, fears, and doubt.  Jesus Christ who is wisdom for us remains steadfast and true, and those who look to Him in faith can be unmoved like a giant sequoia in a grove.  Lightning strikes do not need trouble us, and we can continue growing all our days.  It takes the heat of fire to open the cones of a giant sequoia for seedlings to sprout, and God at times employs trials to test our faith, strengthen it, and makes us fruitful for His glory.  Keep your eyes on Jesus and seek Him always, for He in His wisdom will never lead us astray.