11 September 2023

Coming To Ourselves

There are a passages in scripture where people "came to themselves," and they were suddenly, even miraculously, convinced of a reality they knew was true.  This realisation is a gift of God.  One such occasion happened after Peter found himself in the street after being led out of prison, and at first he thought it was a dream or vision.  He was joyful over what had done and Acts 12:11 says, "And when Peter had come to himself, he said, "Now I know for certain that the Lord has sent His angel, and has delivered me from the hand of Herod and from all the expectation of the Jewish people."  Encouraged and excited by God's deliverance, he went to a house where he discovered Christians were literally praying for his release.

In the Parable of the Prodigal Son, Jesus described what happed to a man who wasted his inheritance in a foreign land and during a famine found himself in want.  The poor man was so desperate to survive he took on a job feeding pigs and was so famished the pods he fed the swine started looking tasty.  Luke 15:17 reads, "But when he came to himself, he said, 'How many of my father's hired servants have bread enough and to spare, and I perish with hunger!"  The realisation his father's servants ate to the full, coupled with the grim reality he was starving, compelled him to humbly return to his father to beg for a hired position.  He did not only realise he was hungry and his father was generous:  he realised his grave sin and was desperate to be forgiven and accepted again.

Divine revelation and personal realisation are required to begin the process of repentance and restoration before God.  The LORD has revealed plainly many sins in the Bible of which we have been guilty, and whether by ignorance or neglect we may not realise it.  Since God has also given us the Bible and a conscience, plus parents, teachers, government authority and laws, the majority of the time it is not a lack of revelation of what is right or wrong but our unwillingness to receive personal revelation that leads to wilful blindness.  Our sin can be clear as day, yet we are insensible to it:  we deny or deflect blame, justify ourselves, point out how others are worse than us, imagine the good we have done cancels our guilt, or we just don't care.  We can pretend sin isn't there when it has us by the throat and is choking the life out of us.  It might not be until we have suffered poverty, loss and loneliness like the prodigal before we accept God's wisdom of what is sin, realise we are wrong, and desperately need to change.

When we drift from God from carelessness or stubbornness in sin, we might wonder how it all came to this.  We are overwhelmed at the prospect of retracing our steps to try to find our way back to God over the years of disobedience, rebellion and folly.  We have no clue where or when things went so wrong.  But what did the prodigal do after realising his sin?  He realised he had sinned and humbled himself and simply went by foot to his father.  He left the pigs and his boss who never gave him anything and went with a heart willing to do anything his father asked because he had nothing.  1 John 1:9 shows the way of repentance and restoration to God for believers, "If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness."  When we come to ourselves and realise we have sinned, let us confess our sin to God and repent, knowing God promises to cleanse us from sin through the Gospel.  We are also to confess our faults to those we have wronged and pray for one another.

An incident in Ephesus made a positive impact when imposter exorcists were beaten up by a demon who knew Jesus and Paul.  Acts 19:17-20 says, "This became known both to all Jews and Greeks dwelling in Ephesus; and fear fell on them all, and the name of the Lord Jesus was magnified. 18 And many who had believed came confessing and telling their deeds. 19 Also, many of those who had practiced magic brought their books together and burned them in the sight of all. And they counted up the value of them, and it totaled fifty thousand pieces of silver. 20 So the word of the Lord grew mightily and prevailed."  The passage tells us there were believers in Jesus who continued to practice witchcraft, and God used this situation to reveal their need to confess and repent of sin.  Part of the process of repentance was to destroy their books, and this is a good example we should follow for anything that leads us to sin.  There are a great many things we may have continued reading, viewing or following after coming to Christ that are sinful.  These sins include (but not limited to!) habits, desires, language, attitudes and thinking patterns that have no business being in our lives because we are in Christ.  The result of burning the books of magic enabled the Good Book to expand and it prevailed--to a far greater degree than the evil spirit prevailed over the sons of Sceva.

Having come to ourselves over the realisation of our sin, let us return humbly to our Saviour Jesus in repentance.  Feeling guilty or sorry for our sin is not repentance.  If our sorrow for sin is not mixed with faith in Jesus that is marked by obedience to Him, such sorrow leads to despair.  Paul wrote in 2 Corinthians 7:9-10 to believers he rebuked for sin, "Now I rejoice, not that you were made sorry, but that your sorrow led to repentance. For you were made sorry in a godly manner, that you might suffer loss from us in nothing. 10 For godly sorrow produces repentance leading to salvation, not to be regretted; but the sorrow of the world produces death."  God and all heaven rejoices over one sinner who repents, and every Christian is a sinner.  God does not only rejoice the first time we repented but every successive time our coming to ourselves results in us returning to God in humble faith and repentance.

09 September 2023

The Willing Giver

Christians who have received the Gospel can view life under the Law of Moses as a extensive list of oppressive, unwelcome demands.  While the Law did contain statutes and judgments that people who feared God submitted to best they could, people were willing to go beyond the letter of the Law to bless God by giving to Him Who had blessed them.  The almighty God heard their cries, freed them from bondage in Egypt, destroyed their enemies, and prepared a good land to enter into.  He also desired to dwell in their midst, and they were given the opportunity to give and labour to that end.

After Moses received God's plans for the tabernacle, he spoke to everyone in the Israelite community to bring an offering to the LORD of whatever they had--and the caveat is they were to be willing, for God loves a cheerful giver.  Exodus 35:20-21 says, "And all the congregation of the children of Israel departed from the presence of Moses. 21 Then everyone came whose heart was stirred, and everyone whose spirit was willing, and they brought the LORD'S offering for the work of the tabernacle of meeting, for all its service, and for the holy garments."  In the Old Testament we have this wonderful example of God moving in the midst of His people, stirring their hearts to willingly give.  They were not to give because the Law required them to give a particular percentage or amount, nor was a guilt trip laid on them for all God had given them and their obligation to return the favour.  The passage is marked by an incredible willingness in God's people to present offerings to God of what they had of their own free will for His service.

The people were willing to generously give offerings to God and also were willing to come and do the work, to follow the lead of Bezalel and Oholiab to construct the sanctuary.  I am reminded of what happened many years later when the ruined walls of Jerusalem were rebuilt under the leadership of Nehemiah (a cupbearer!), and a diverse group of people who were not masons or even skilled at manual labour who successfully built the wall in a matter of weeks.  The people were so willing to give it came to a point more materials than were necessary for building the tabernacle had been accumulated, and thus the people were restrained from giving.  They had to be commanded by Moses to stop bringing valuable and precious goods to the workers because there was already enough to do the work.  This passage illustrates the willingness to give that marks the people whose God is the LORD.

May the LORD stir our hearts and make us willing to offer ourselves as living sacrifices unto the LORD, and this includes our possessions, skills and abilities.  The raw materials brought to Moses were crafted into a dwelling place of the LORD, and by the work Jesus did on the cross each believer is the temple of the Holy Spirit who dwells within us.  In light of all God has given us, we should be moved to generously give as unto Him when opportunities to meet needs arise.  2 Corinthians 9:7-8 says in the context for providing for ministry to believers, "So let each one give as he purposes in his heart, not grudgingly or of necessity; for God loves a cheerful giver. 8 And God is able to make all grace abound toward you, that you, always having all sufficiency in all things, may have an abundance for every good work."  How blessed we are by the riches of God's grace that is always sufficient in all things to give and contribute to His glorious testimony.

08 September 2023

Learning Obedience

A child shares a unique relationship with their parents, having been conceived by them and born subject to them.  Infants and young children are completely reliant upon their parents for survival, and as they develop they learn to understand communication by tone, facial expressions and words.  Parents train their children to do basic tasks themselves, and often children learn to obey by trial and error, failing again and again until they finally succeed.  It takes a lot of effort and coordination for a child to learn to walk, to tie their shoes or dress themselves.

When it comes to obedience, to young children their parent is the authority.  While there are likely exceptions to this, should there be a conflict between what a pre-school teacher or friend says and what mum or dad says, the child will tend to side with their parents.  In that tender age they have no reason to think their parents, who have provided for them and helped them through every season of life, would deliberately mislead them.  It is when they grow older and more independent they question, doubt and even oppose what their parents said, buoyed by the pride and passion of youth.  A combination of faithful training, loving discipline, life experiences that include negative consequences, and exposure to biblical truth help guide people of all ages to mature.

The writer of Hebrews used the relationship Jesus (as the Son of God) had with His heavenly Father to instruct and encourage those who have been born-again to learn obedience.  Hebrews 5:7-10 says of Jesus, "...who, in the days of His flesh, when He had offered up prayers and supplications, with vehement cries and tears to Him who was able to save Him from death, and was heard because of His godly fear, 8 though He was a Son, yet He learned obedience by the things which He suffered. 9 And having been perfected, He became the author of eternal salvation to all who obey Him, 10 called by God as High Priest "according to the order of Melchizedek..."  Small children in trouble instinctively run to their parents for protection, and Jesus cried out to God His Father Who heard Him.  Jesus did not learn obedience by making mistakes that required correction but by the things He suffered.  Jesus learned obedience to His Father in a relationship with God, and as born-again children of God by faith in Jesus we learn to obey Him.

Salvation is not earned by obedience, but genuine faith that saves is marked by obedience.  As Jesus learned obedience, so we also are called to learn to obey God our Father.  The payment Jesus has made for our sin inspires us to walk righteously, and the negative consequences experienced for our sin provides valuable lessons that work to sanctify.  Since the righteousness of God has been imputed to us by faith in Jesus, the loving relationship we share fosters our desire is to please Him by obedience.  Our obedience to Jesus Christ is an indication we have a genuine relationship with God even as a child has with their loving parents.  We too can learn obedience by the things which we suffer, and God provides consolation for our suffering.  Obedience is not always binary but by degrees, for even our best efforts to obey often fall short of God's perfection.

If Jesus Who was without sin needed to learn obedience, it follows we need to learn to obey God as well, to learn to keep our vessels in honour.  Obedience to God may lead to temporary suffering, yet consider the eternal benefits of Christ's obedience to go to the cross to atone for lost sinners!  Death was swallowed up in victory; pain and shame was dissolved with eternal joy and perfect peace.  The benefits of obedience are glorious rewards the wise desire, and to identify with Christ through joyful obedience to God is evidence of our eternal salvation.  Because Jesus is our Saviour, we delight to learn to obey Him.  One day we will be perfected even as Jesus is, and we thus presently offer up prayers and supplications to Him who is able to save us from death and provide eternal salvation.

06 September 2023

Good Lessons from Bad Examples

The context of the book of Judges is a time marked by everyone doing what was right in their own eyes.  The focus is primarily on God's people who lived just like the heathen nations round about them.  Chapters 17-18 of Judges tell the story of Micah, a Levite from Bethlehem, and men from the tribe of Dan.  All the characters in the passage are unethical and immoral in their relationship to God and one another, everyone aiming to benefit themselves at the expense of God or their fellow man.

Micah's religion was what we call in Australia a "dog's breakfast" because from a biblical perspective it was an absolute mess.  Micah embraced what many people still do today, imagining God would bless and benefit him because of his twisted efforts to honour Him.  Because he did not know God, Micah did not walk in the way God laid forth in the Law of Moses.  He made idolatrous images in violation of the law along with an ephod and consecrated one of his sons as his priest--until the Levite came along.  Micah hired the drifter and grifter Levite, believing God would certainly do him good because he had a Levite as his priest (who was not a qualified priest at all!).

Micah was looking for God to do him good, and the Levite who wandered to find a place (and was treated like a son by Micah) was only too glad to take a better deal with the tribe of Dan after they stole Micah's gods.  The men of Dan were pleased to steal Micah's idols and illegitimate "priest" after he had extended hospitality to them, and then they attacked Sidonians to take their land for themselves.  Every person and group was out for their own interests without thought of others or God, and the heart of mankind has not changed at all.  One of the best sermons I ever heard was taken from these scriptures, titled 10 Shekels and a Shirt by Paris Reidhead.  He used this passage to point out the utilitarian appeal of a modern presentation of the Gospel that is like a Levite pretending to be priest--the offer of forgiveness without repentance, salvation without faith marked by obedience, and appeals to selfish motives rather than the glory of God simply because He is worthy.

How different things would have been if Micah had trusted and believed in the one true God Who is good!  Instead of looking for a place the Levite could have been blessed to serve at the tabernacle where the presence of the LORD dwelt among His people.  The tribe of Dan could have been content to receive their land by lot as an inheritance from God's hand, be satisfied in abundance, and give rather than steal.  How different for the better we would be if we learned from their bad example!  It is good for us to understand that in the worst examples in scripture we can catch glimpses of ourselves so we might repent of our sin and choose to do what pleases God.  And if you haven't heard that sermon yet, it is well worth your time.  Not only will it provide insight into Judges 17-18 but challenges all to examine our hearts so we might humble ourselves before God and by faith and obedience to be more like Jesus.